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- THE WEEK, Page 18NATIONGamesmanship
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- To debate or not to debate? That depends on who asks the
- questions
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- Both George Bush and Bill Clinton say they are anxious to
- debate. But each insists on his own terms, which is why, with
- six weeks to go before the election, no debates have been
- scheduled. And it's possible that none will be held at all.
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- The debate about the debate format has itself become a
- test of a candidate's resolve. Clinton backs the bipartisan
- Commission on Presidential Debates proposal for a single
- moderator, in part because it allows for more give-and-take
- between principals. Two weeks ago, Bush agreed to two debates
- before a panel of three journalists and a moderator, seeking to
- exploit his ability to match wits with reporters while avoiding
- a single moderator's power to focus on a single issue, like the
- economy. The Bush camp gave Clinton until last Friday to agree
- to its terms. The deadline passed. Both sides agree on one
- point: unless someone relents, the debates may not occur.
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- Still 10 to 12 points ahead in most polls, Clinton can
- better afford to hang tough. Aside from differences on format,
- Bush is delaying in part to give his attacks on Clinton's draft
- record time to sink in with the public, putting Clinton on the
- defensive in the first debate while taking some pressure off the
- incumbent. But if Bush can narrow Clinton's edge in the polls
- quickly, officials say, he may not need to debate at all. Said
- a White House official last week: "If we were within 5 points,
- I'd say we shouldn't debate. But if we aren't, we may need to
- debate."
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- As if the two-way maneuvering weren't complicated enough,
- Ross Perot rejoined the game again last week, making an
- appearance on NBC's Today show to reaffirm his unhappiness over
- both Bush's and Clinton's economic plans. With Arizona becoming
- the 50th state ready to put the Texas billionaire on the
- November ballot, Perot appeared on the edge of re-entering the
- race. "I'm trapped," he told his TV audience last Friday. "They
- won't sell [TV airtime] to me unless I declare as a candidate.
- So I may be the first guy in history that had to declare as a
- candidate so he could buy TV time." No telling where this ploy
- ends.
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