In this exceedingly tight election, Republican Ohio Sen. JD Vance and Democrat Tim Walz are serving up one of the most consequential vice presidential debates in U.S. history that could make or break their respective tickets in the final five weeks of the fight for the White House.
The running mates typically host a snoozy undercard, but polls show a seesaw contest in each of the battleground states and given that Tuesday’s meeting in New York is likely the final debate of the 2024 campaign, this marks one of the last chances for either campaign to score a decisive blow against the other.
More: Will Vance and Walz draw audiences like the record-breaking Biden-Palin debate?
And as much as Walz and Vance differ, politically speaking, both have advertised themselves as the everyman who better represents Midwestern values and spotlighted their rural, working-class roots in an attempt to win over undecided voters.
“The clash between their very different personas makes the debate quite interesting,” said Robert Rowland, a former national champion college debater and professor of communication studies at the University of Kansas.
“I think the core political conflict in the debate is a battle for which campaign actually represents working people in the country,” he added.
Vance, known as a policy wonk, has dived head first into his role as 2024 Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s attack dog by throwing culture war barbs that animate their MAGA-fueled base, particularly when it comes to immigration.
The sharp elbows of the 2024 contest have left their mark on the Ohio senator who grew up in Middletown and lives in Cincinnati, however. He has seen his poll numbers nosedive since receiving the VP nomination.
An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey released this month finds about half of registered voters have a somewhat or very unfavorable view of Vance, compared to the roughly 3-in-10 voters who have a negative view of Walz.
As of late, he has been scorched by liberal critics for spreading unfounded claims about Haitian migrants eating pets in his state and past comments criticizing childless Americans.
As Walz has taken the national stage, he’s tried to position himself as Vice President Kamala Harris’ plain spoken messenger, whose energetic and quick-witted style caught voters’ attention after he dubbed the GOP “weird” in the weeks before he was put on the ticket.
The Minnesota governor, however, isn’t without weaknesses that Vance could exploit in an effort to show that the Democratic ticket is too liberal, namely Walz’s progressive record since taking office in St. Paul in January 2019. He has faced similar scrutiny for making misleading statements, such as embellishing parts of his past military service record and criticism from conservatives on how he handled the 2020 riots sparked by a police officer murdering George Floyd.
With early voting underway in some states and another presidential debate unlikely, here’s what to look for ahead of Tuesday’s showdown.
Hot mics allowed
How Walz and Vance interact — handshake, eye rolls, cross-talk bickering, etc. — at Tuesday’s debate will depend in part on the debate rules, and a significant difference from the Harris-Trump faceoff will be CBS News allowing hot microphones.
The Harris campaign wanted a rule change from the June debate on CNN between President Joe Biden and Trump by having the mics turned on even when a candidate was not speaking.
Many political observers thought the reason Harris wanted this during the September presidential debate hosted by ABC News was to catch Trump in a viral moment. Harris’ team ultimately folded to have the mics be muted when a candidate is not speaking, however.
Under these conditions, CBS News is reserving the right to mute either candidates’ microphones but otherwise each and every word between the two will be heard by the viewing audience.
Springfield’s Haitian migrants and the immigration fight
Vance’s stiffest questions from the moderators, CBS’ Norah O’Donnell and Margaret Brennan, could stem from his willingness to spread unfounded rumors about Haitian migrants in Springfield eating household pets.
The city has been thrust into the national spotlight and faced threats in recent weeks, but thus far the Republican senator has been unapologetic about publicly airing these claims, which include that Haitians are causing tuberculosis and HIV to rise in the area. He maintains it is about bringing attention to voter’s concerns about immigration to the forefront even in the face of threatening calls and bomb threats in the area and racist rants by members of Congress.
“Kamala Harris calls anyone a racist if they complain about her open border,” Vance said in a Sept. 23 post on X.
“You’re not a bad person for wanting to stop the flow of mass illegal immigration and deadly fentanyl,” he added. “Americans who want a secure border have nothing to be ashamed of, but Kamala Harris sure does.”
Walz and his military service record
One area Walz might be vulnerable to attacks are questions circling around his 24 years of service in the National Guard.
In 2018, for instance, Walz spoke in favor of stricter gun laws after a mass shooting in Florida by asserting how the firearms used in that incident were similar to the weapons he “carried in war.”
However, the Democratic governor was never deployed for combat, and he dodged a question about this misleading claim during his first sit-down interview since earning the VP nomination with CNN.
The Harris campaign later told USA TODAY that Walz “misspoke” in 2018 before defending how he did “handle weapons of war” while in the guard.
Vance, a retired Marine and Iraq war veteran, has accused Walz of ducking deployment by strategically retiring to run for Congress before his unit was called up in 2005.
Walz’s unit received its alert order to mobilize for Iraq in July 2005, which was about two months after he had retired. But he appeared to know as early as March 2005 that his battalion could be sent to Iraq, according to past press statements.
Instead of responding, Walz has thanked Vance for his service on the campaign trail – but how he responds on the debate stage will be telling should he be pressed on the topic.
Two versions of the American everyman
Call it the everyman debate, but much of the 2024 campaign has been about the gender divide and the two campaigns’ dueling views on the role men play in U.S. society that are embodied by their respective VP picks.
Vance, in particular, has been at the center of this discussion mostly for his previous comments describing women without biological children as “childless cat ladies” who have “no direct stake” in America.
Younger women are far more liberal than in years past, polling shows, and Harris often says the 2024 election is a referendum on the loss of abortion access after the Supreme Court in 2022 overturned Roe v. Wade.
Her campaign isn’t subtle about it, such as employing actor Sam Elliott in an ad encouraging guys to “be a man and vote for a woman” and holding a livestreamed town hall hosted by Oprah Winfrey that was reminiscent of her hit talk show, which made her an icon among women TV viewers.
Walz, similarly, has positioned himself and lauded by Harris supporters as the caring “coach” or protective “dad in plaid,” a foil to those who would deny women reproductive rights.
The Trump campaign, on the other hand, has been heavily courting younger male voters since the GOP convention.
The former president often appears at male-centered events, such as attending UFC fights with singer Kid Rock, and joining podcasts hosted by figures such as influencer Logan Paul, comedian Theo Von and online streamer Adin Ross.
A survey by Blueprint, a Democratic polling firm, released findings this past week showing 55% of men think the Democratic Party has, “moved too far to the left.”
“What really seems to be pushing them away from the Democratic Party are economic issues,” said Evan Ross Smith, the pollster who conducted the survey. “Men seem to be just drifting rightward on things like tax cuts and and all sorts of economic things where they just don’t think the Democratic Party can can deliver as much anymore.”
That plays out in how men and women view Harris’ and Trump’s running mates too, the survey finds.
Of the roughly 1,200 men polled, Vance’s net favorable ratings broke even, whereas Walz had a negative 4% rating, the poll shows. Among the approximately 580 women respondents, Vance had a negative 15% net favorable versus Walz, who held a positive 17% net favorable.
Andrew T. Walker, a professor of Christian ethics and public theology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said Vance in particular will be looked to defend the traditional family and gender roles in a way that doesn’t offend, but also by pushing back at language around “toxic masculinity” that he said a portion of men resent.
“There is a male population that feels like they have been told that they are the problem of society,” Walker said. “And (Vance) is trying to tap into this of silent male majority that feels elite cosmopolitan liberalism or progressivism has tried to scapegoat and accuse them of being guilty of all of these social crimes and social sins.”
Linking ‘Hillbilly’ bio to Harris record, economic woes
Vance’s chief goal will be casting the Democratic ticket too far to the left on a host of issues, namely inflation and illegal immigration.
Part of that will be calling out Harris for changing her position on key issues but also anchoring the incumbent vice president to the Biden administration’s record, especially by convincing poor and working-class voters they were better off four years ago when Trump was in the White House.
Rowland, the debate expert, said rather than launching into attacks at the outset, the senator’s own life story, covered in-depth in Vance’s best-selling book, “Hillbilly Elegy,” could provide a softer approach that works in the first exchanges.
“Vance was picked in large part because of his biography and his narrative of overcoming poverty and familial dysfunction through hard work,” he said.
Vance is expected to call out Walz, like Harris, as someone who has pretended to be a moderate while leading one of the most liberal states in the country. His mission is to do that while also avoiding his own gaffes.
“Vance needs to not come across as weird and stay out of the ‘whoa that dude is stuck in 1950’ on social issues,” Republican consultant Liz Mair said.
Warning of Trump’s return, but fleshing out Harris’ goals
Walz is largely expected to frame the 2024 election as most Democrats have this year, as a last chance to halt Trump from coming back to the White House.
Repeatedly on social media, the governor ties the GOP nominee to the Project 2025 plan, authored by the Heritage Foundation with help from more than 100 other conservative groups.
But what Walz is expected to do most on Tuesday is help Harris flesh out her agenda for voters still unsure about her goals and specific policy prescriptions.
Democratic strategist Adrianne Shropshire, executive director of BlackPAC, said Walz may have a more difficult task than Vance in that regard.
“He does have to play to a much broader audience and set of voters because they are trying to build a new coalition,” she said.
On the campaign trail, Walz has managed to combine strong attacks against Trump and portray himself as a caring everyman by his skillful use of humor as a strategy.
Rowland said he expects the Minnesota Democrat to outline how Harris cares about ordinary people and explain how her policies would actually work, while also portraying Trump as someone “who never cared about anyone but himself.”
“Given his affable persona, I think there is less risk of Walz saying something truly horrible that shifts public opinion of him,” Rowland said.
“But one reason debates are interesting is their unpredictability,” he added. “Either candidate could say something egregious that ends up shifting the race.”
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: JD Vance and Tim Walz debate Tuesday. 6 things to watch
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