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You’ve been overwhelmed with headlines all week – what's worth a closer look? One Thing takes you into the story and helps you make sense of the news everyone's been talking about. Every Wednesday and Sunday, host David Rind interviews one of CNN’s world-class reporters to tell us what they've found – and why it matters. From the team behind CNN 5 Things.

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Trump Takes the Bait
CNN One Thing
Sep 11, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump faced off for the first time Tuesday night in the ABC News Presidential Debate. In this episode, we head to the spin room in Philadelphia to break down the big moments from a contentious night and look at where the race goes from here. 

Guests: Priscilla Alvarez, CNN White House Correspondent & Alayna Treene, CNN Political Reporter

Episode Transcript
David Muir
00:00:00
Thank you for watching. Here in the US and all over the world and from all of us here. at ABC News, goodnight.
David Rind
00:00:07
All right, that's it. The ABC News presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump has just wrapped up and the surrogates are making their way into the spin room here at the Pennsylvania Convention Center. There's a lot to break down. Remember, the last presidential debate on CNN was perhaps the most consequential in American history. President Biden did so badly, he was basically forced off the ticket. So how is this debate going to impact the race going forward? I'm going to go find CNN White House correspondent Priscilla Alvarez and CNN's Alayna Treene, who covers the Trump campaign to find out. From CNN in Philadelphia, This is One Thing. I'm David Rind.
David Rind
00:00:58
Priscilla. Hello.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:01:00
Hi.
Alayna Treene
00:01:00
Alayna. Hi.
Speaker 2
00:01:02
Hi.
David Rind
00:01:02
So we are here. It's midnight on the dot here in the spin room, and we just watched this debate. So, Priscilla, let me start with you. For someone who didn't watch, like what's the big picture take away in your mind from what just happened?
Priscilla Alvarez
00:01:14
The vice president's team had spent a lot of time preparing her to go try to needle him on a number of issues, be it reproductive rights on the economy and Aids, or were very pleased about how the debate went, because they felt that every time that she tried to needle him not only on issues, but also on his rallies, that he took the bait.
Vice President Kamala Harris
00:01:41
And I'm going to actually do something really unusual, and I'm going to invite you to attend one of Donald Trump's rallies, because it's a really interesting thing to watch. You will see during the course of his rallies, he talks about fictional characters like Hannibal Lecter. He will talk about windmills cause cancer. And what you will also notice is that people start leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion and boredom. And I will tell you, the one thing you will not hear him talk about is you. You will not hear him talk about your needs, your dreams and your and your desires.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:02:13
And I was getting messages for the entire the entire time from aides and allies who were just gushing over her performance. And, you know, with any big moment, there is some anxiety. This was a high risk, high reward moment for her. And they are all walking away feeling as though she did what she needed to do.
David Rind
00:02:37
Glenn, is this We know Trump has had issues staying on message, but to his point, it did seem like any time there was just a little opening for something, he would go off somewhere completely different.
Alayna Treene
00:02:49
You know, it's interesting because as much as Priscilla just said that the Harris campaign had been kind of pushing her and prepping her to try and got him into these attacks, the Trump campaign was doing the opposite. They were preparing him and urging him not to fall for that, too. To not take the debate, to stay restrained, really, you know, talking overall about the tone and temperament, a lot of advisers had told me, you know, they were more concerned about that than they were, the substance of the answers. But, you know, I think it was clear watching it that he did fall for that at points. And one person close to Trump even acknowledge that. To me, that said that it was clear that she was successful at times with getting him to do that, particularly that answer where she went after him about people leaving his rallies early. We know that that is something.
David Rind
00:03:37
To really take him off.
Alayna Treene
00:03:38
Yeah, that's something that Donald Trump cares a lot about. You hear him all the time talking about crowd size. I think that particular line of attack landed with him and and caused him to to kind of go off script a bit.
David Muir
00:03:51
Well, let me just ask, though, why did you try to kill that bill and successfully so that would have put thousands of additional agents and officers on the boarder.
Former President Donald Trump
00:03:57
First I'm gonna responded to the rallies. She said people start leaving. People don't go to her rallies. There's no reason to go. And the people that do go, she's busing them in and paying them to be there and then showing them in a different light.
Alayna Treene
00:04:11
So, look, I wasn't having Trump advisers text me unsolicited, nonstop. I had to reach out to them and get their responses, which I think can speak for itself.
David Rind
00:04:23
Right. And the the the optics of this, these two had never met face to face before. So we got a handshake at the start, which was kind of interesting the way they handled that and intentional.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:04:39
She wanted to do that. Their campaign had been getting questions about whether or not she would go for that handshake. Of course, that was also a question on former President Donald Trump met President Joe Biden on the stage in June and she wanted to do that. And that was actually one of the first ones where I started getting messages because she walked over to the former president to give him that handshake. It was not clear that he was expecting it in that moment.
Alayna Treene
00:05:04
Right. We actually saw J.D. Vance, his running mate, respond to that on Twitter and kind of mock Harris for introducing herself to him, even though, of course, we reported that this is the first time they actually formally met. They've never really been in the same room together unless you count his congressional addresses or State of the Union addresses. Look, I think the optics, of course, plays a huge role in this, as particularly for someone like Donald Trump, who is always very aware of where a camera is at all times, a TV presence. That's why he likes to make things all about him.
David Rind
00:05:39
And this is an audio medium, but like Harris was really making use of being on TV and having that split screen. It seemed to me.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:05:48
Well, she was making facial expressions while the former president was speaking. You know, I actually texted texted somebody about that because I was. Curious what they are making of it, for example. Was she making those facial expressions because the microphones removed it? So that was a way for her to emote to what the former president was saying. But someone I, as I spoke with, said, look, that's also just kind of who she is. This was a medium that we just haven't seen her in in a long time and it allowed for that. I will say for listeners, this is sort of a fun fact that we saw tonight. You there is a big difference in height between the former president and the vice president. Their podiums were different sizes as well. So in the moments where it wasn't just a split screen of their faces, you could also sort of see their their height difference when the cameras zoomed out, which was something, again, these little things that we just didn't know because they haven't been next to each other.
Alayna Treene
00:06:45
I also think the facial expressions are always so interesting because we know that Donald Trump is very expressive. He's been very expressive in the past on debate stages. There's all those memes about him from past debates and making faces tonight. You know, it was interesting. I think in the first maybe 20 minutes, he was pretty restrained when speaking about his facial expressions. And then he got a little bit more emotive as the night went on.
David Rind
00:07:12
And his voice got a lot louder too.
Alayna Treene
00:07:13
Exactly. Particularly. And one thing I heard a lot from the people I spoke with and some of Trump's advisers was when he was getting fact checked.
Former President Donald Trump
00:07:21
You can look at the governor of West Virginia, the previous governor of West Virginia, not the current governor, who's doing an excellent job, but the governor before he said the baby will be born and we will decide what to do with the baby. In other words, will execute the baby.
Alayna Treene
00:07:35
And that's one they've been arguing that that level of fact checks that each of them received is not fair or equal, that it threw him off his game.
Vice President Kamala Harris
00:07:44
'There is no state in this country where it is legal to kill a baby after it's born that a vice president. Want to get your response to President Trump. Well, as I said, you're going to hear a bunch of lies, and that's not actually a surprising fact. Let's understand how we got here. Donald Trump hand-selected three members of the United States Supreme Court with the intention that they would undo the protections of Roe v Wade.
Alayna Treene
00:08:07
Of course, we've seen the Trump campaign in the past, and they're doing it again tonight, attack the moderators. Although you know that people say when you attack the moderators, that's not, that means you're on the losing end of the argument or you're just.
David Rind
00:08:19
Saying more things that are untrue and does need to be fact checked.
Alayna Treene
00:08:23
Right. So that's been a key thing. And even tonight in the spin room, as I talked to many of Trump's advisers and his surrogates, that one of the first things they said was that this was a three on one debate, obviously referring to both the two moderators as well as Harris against Trump. This is a we've seen this happen in the past. You've also seen the campaign kind of try to pre but this by already labeling ABC News as biased. But again that tends to be an argument that I think voters often see through as well.
Former President Donald Trump
00:08:54
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in. They're eating the cats. They're eating. They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
David Rind
00:09:06
And I have to ask, because this has been kind of percolating and we saw it on the stage again tonight, town in Ohio and migrants eating cats. Can you just, like explain what the heck they were talking about up there?
Alayna Treene
00:09:21
Yeah, This is something that has really been more prominently shared and promoted by Republicans, including those on Donald Trump's campaign, his own son, his running mate, J.D. Vance, on Twitter. This false claim, and I have to be clear about that this is a false claim that Haitian migrants in the city of Springfield, Ohio, have been killing their pets and eating their pets. Now, again, there is no evidence of this that the city of Springfield, as well as local police, have pushed back very heavily, saying that there is no evidence to support these claims. But it is something that has kind of taken off on social media. I'm sure some of our listeners have seen some of the artificial intelligence photos of Donald Trump posing with cats and dogs and pets. Donald Trump brought this up himself today.
David Rind
00:10:12
I was going to say, it's not like the moderators asked him specifically about this. He just went off on this and the moderators had to jump in and say, hey, there's no evidence for this.
Alayna Treene
00:10:21
Right. And when they did that, Donald Trump's response was that he saw it on TV, which I don't think lended a lot of credence to that. We heard, David Muir repeatedly say that ABC had gone in contact with the, you know, the head of the city in Springfield, and they have refuted those claims.
Former President Donald Trump
00:10:40
Maybe he said that and maybe that's a good thing to say for a city manager. I'm not taking this from the people who are taking it. As you say, Mad Dog was eaten by the people that went there.
David Muir
00:10:50
Again, the Springfield city manager says there's no evidence of that vice president.
Former President Donald Trump
00:10:53
Yes.
David Muir
00:10:53
I'll let you respond to the rest of what you've heard.
Vice President Kamala Harris
00:10:56
You talk about extreme.
Alayna Treene
00:10:59
It's a weird thing. I think a lot of this one thing when you cover the Trump campaign, sometimes they latch on to these random small moments and make them go viral. And I think that's what this was, even after it had been refuted. They continued to share this even when it was brought to their attention that this was a false claim. Look, we have our fact checked up on CNN, and I encourage everyone to listen because I'm sure I'm not doing it justice as well as some of our writers. But it was a very bizarre moment. I definitely would think in the spin room, you could hear everyone kind of take an intake of breath during that. It was bizarre.
David Rind
00:11:52
Priscilla, something that undecided voters are telling pollsters is that they still want to learn more about Kamala Harris. Do you think that she accomplished that tonight?
Priscilla Alvarez
00:12:02
Well, and the vice president has also share that with her inner circle. And she is aware that this was a moment where she could bring in a large audience in the debate, would bring in the large audience, and that she would do exactly that, introduce or reintroduce herself to voters.
Vice President Kamala Harris
00:12:17
And I'll tell you, as a prosecutor, I never asked a victim or witness, are you a Republican or a Democrat? The only thing I ever asked them, are you okay? And that's the kind of president we need right now. Someone who cares about you and is not putting themselves first. I intend to be a president for all Americans.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:12:40
You know, the folks that I've spoken with think that tonight allowed voters to see a side of her they haven't seen yet to go toe to toe with the former president, to be able to lay out her vision in her policies, because not everyone is following her stump speeches the way Elaine and I are following these candidates on the trail. And so I think what we have heard consistently from the vice president and her team is that the work is not done. I don't think that they are walking away from this sort of thinking, okay, everyone knows for now. And it's it's a win in November. They still recognize that they need to be on the trail often so that they still get the face time with voters, that they still feel like they know her. Not only her, but what her policies are and why there have been changes on issues or not.
David Rind
00:13:29
Alayna, do we have a sense of how bad this was for Trump?
Alayna Treene
00:13:33
I, I even think saying how bad it was. I mean, look, I think there's definitely things that Trump's own team recognizes he could have done better, including I talked to one adviser who said, yeah, you know, they tried to go after Harris on avoiding questions or trying to attack her answers on the economy and inflation, as well as her response to questions about her changing her position. Some of the flip flops on fracking, for example.
Former President Donald Trump
00:14:00
Fracking. She's been against it for 12 years. Defund the police. She's been against that forever. She gave all that stuff up very wrongly, very horribly. And everybody's laughing at it.
Alayna Treene
00:14:14
And I argued to them. I said, well, shouldn't Donald Trump have tried to veer her back to that conversation? And they acknowledge that he could have done a better job steering her back toward that issue, especially given that is the number one issue that Trump thinks and voters say is their top issue in November. But it's also an issue where Trump polls higher. You also heard Donald Trump in the spin room tonight saying he won, she lost.
David Rind
00:14:35
That's another thing. We should mention that Trump came here to the spin room and I have never seen a scrum like we saw surround him.
Alayna Treene
00:14:43
Yeah, I got mauled in there. I think I got an elbow to the face at one point. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, look, you're always going to have Donald Trump and his team say that they won the debate. That's why we are in the spin room. That's. This is where the spinning happens. As much as you're going to hear the Harris campaign argue that as well. Clearly, this debate went very differently for Donald Trump than that first debate. And a big part of it, I do believe, is one of their fears, you know, kind of coming true in a sense that he was unsuccessful and that, you know, keeping that level of restraint that his advisers had really pushed him to do, of buying into some of of the goading that Harris led him down. And so I think we'll have to see. I always am I'm tempted to to take a moment to see what other people think after a debate night, to see if it lines up with our thought.
David Rind
00:15:33
And it's worth remembering that Donald Trump, quote unquote, lost those debates to Hillary Clinton back in 2016 and.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:15:39
Which is something, by the way, that advisers, Harris advisers were mentioning to me going into this debate, recognizing that even a really good debate night does not guarantee a win in November. And they were keenly aware of that going in. And it's also a message that we're hearing coming out.
David Rind
00:15:57
Well, I want to talk about the big news that we got right after this debate, which appeared on Instagram, a big celebrity endorsement from Taylor Swift, no less, of Kamala Harris. What? What did her team make of that, Priscilla?
Priscilla Alvarez
00:16:09
So I want to start by saying that I have been covering the Harris campaign, but I also covered the then Biden campaign. And I only say that because the context here at the time when I was covering that campaign was that it was really hard to get celebrity endorsements. This was something that I had been hearing for some time. And then when the president dropped out of the race and the vice presidency and the top of the ticket, we saw multiple celebrities come out. But the big question, even during that time, the Democratic National Convention, if people remember that, was had a bunch of star studded performances was whether or not Taylor Swift was going to weigh in. And that was answered tonight. In the moments after the debate when she said she would, I have been texting with Harris campaign officials. They were all caught by surprise. The campaign did not know. They did not receive a heads up that it was coming. They were all thrilled by the news because it is no small thing for Taylor Swift to make an endorsement. But so they are welcoming her on the trail. If she were and she's open to to going on the trail. But certainly very happy news for the Harris campaign. It's another endorsement that they can add. To the list.
David Rind
00:17:29
Yeah, It remains to be seen how much celebrity endorsements actually matter in the grand scheme of things. But no doubt it's like a big momentum boost for them, I guess, going forward. Guys like. Where does this go from here? Obviously, the last debate was seismic and that President Biden dropped out. What kind of change do we think this one could have?
Alayna Treene
00:17:53
I think it's there's no question that for people who say debates don't matter, it really does depend, as we saw with the June 27th CNN debate that led to, you know, set off the series of events that led to Biden ending his campaign. Look, I think it's unclear. You know, I think in certain debates, if it's a really defining moment, it could have the capacity to really alter the race. I think this is one of the final defining moments that they're going to have before the end of this race. Did it alter the state of the race? I think that is unclear. What's interesting is we did see the Harris campaign put out a statement after this saying that they would agree to a second debate. Donald Trump, remember, had also said previously that he agreed to three debates, including this one. He had previously agreed to a Fox News debate that was supposed to be on September 4th, but the Harris campaign did not agree. He also agreed to a September 25th NBC News debate. I asked Trump's advisers, including his senior adviser, Brian Hughes, you know, does that still stand? He said he thinks it still stands, but we'll see. I haven't gotten a clear answer on what's going to happen there. But I think, you know, if it leads to another debate, it could be another defining moment that we could have before November.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:19:09
I think the other two points to take into consideration here is that, number one, one of the goals for the Harris campaign going into tonight was reaching the undecided voters, the persuadable voters, especially those who don't know her very well. And if they can make inroads with a debate like this one with that block, then that would be a boost to them. Of course, we won't know what that actually means until Election Day. But also and I think the three of us can attest to this, we still have weeks before Election Day and a lot can happen in that span of time. This was one of those unscripted moments of the vice president has had there has been a push for her to do more of that. So how all of this contributes to that decision making will be interesting to watch. But certainly there's still quite a bit of time left in this election, even if we are in the final stretch.
David Rind
00:20:05
Yeah, there's still still road to go here. Priscilla, Alayna, thank you so much.
Priscilla Alvarez
00:20:10
Thank you.
Alayna Treene
00:20:11
Thank you, David.
David Rind
00:20:24
One thing is a production of CNN Audio. This episode was produced by Paola Ortiz and me, David Rind. Our senior producers are Felicia Patinkin and Faiz Jamil. Matt Dempsey is our production manager. Dan Dzula is our technical director, and Steve Lickteig is the executive producer of CNN Audio. We get support from Haley Thomas, Alex Manasseri, Robert Mathers, John Dianora, Leni Steinhardt, Jamus Andrest, and Nichole Pesaru and Lisa Amaral. Special thanks to Brian Rochas, D.J. Judd, Wendy Brundage and Katie Hinman. We'll be back on Sunday. In the meantime, catch up with the latest on the campaign over at CNN.com Or on the CNN 5 Things podcast. I'll talk to you later.