WASHINGTON ā The Latest on the 2020 presidential election (all times local):
10:50 p.m.
Recommended Videos
President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden are painting a very different picture of the reliability of the upcoming election.
Biden urged voters to cast their ballots and not be intimidated by Trumpās suggestions he might not accept a loss. Trump has been groundlessly casting doubt on the reliability of mail ballots and elections in general.
āVote whatever way is the best way for you,ā Biden said. āBecause he will not be able to stop you from determining the outcome of this election.ā
Biden agreed not to declare victory before the ballots are counted and to accept votersā verdicts.
Trump continued to spread falsehoods about mail voting. He said falsely that his campaign's poll watchers were improperly turned away at a Philadelphia early voting site Tuesday -- the poll watchers had not yet been accredited to observe. He suggested widespread Democratic fraud because a handful of ballots were improperly thrown in the trash last week -- but didnāt mention it occurred in a Republican-controlled elections office and was quickly reported to authorities.
Biden urged viewers not to worry about Trumpās scare tactics.
āI will accept it, and he will, too. You know why?ā Biden said. āBecause once the winner is declared once all the ballots are counted, thatāll be the end of it."
___
HEREāS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT WHATāS HAPPENING IN THE PRESIDENTIAL RACE:
The first presidential debate between President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden begins at 9 p.m. Eastern time in Cleveland.
Read more:
ā 5 questions heading into Trump and Bidenās first debate
ā Viewersā Guide: Trump, Biden meet in Ohio for 1st debate
ā Trump, Biden prepare to debate at a time of mounting crises
ā Analysis: In debate, a last chance for Trump to define Biden
___
HEREāS WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:
10:30 p.m.
Democrat Joe Biden has evoked his son Beau Biden to criticize President Donald Trump for reportedly calling members of the American military who lost their lives ālosersā and āsuckers.ā
Raising his voice at Tuesday nightās debate, Biden described his son as a hero. Beau Biden died of cancer in 2015.
Trump responded by pivoting to a familiar attack, on Bidenās other son, Hunter.
The president said, āI donāt know Beau. I know Hunter,ā and accused Hunter Biden of having collected millions of dollars from oversees interests, including China, while working as a consultant during his fatherās tenure as vice president. It echoed attacks the president made earlier in the debate in Cleveland, but have little basis in fact.
Trump also opened a new line of attack when he said Hunter Biden was dishonorably discharged from the military for cocaine use. Biden responded that his son wasnāt dishonorably discharged.
He addressed viewers directly and said that, like a lot of Americans, Hunter had a drug problem but was āworking on itā and had āfixed it.ā
Biden added, āIām proud of my son.ā
___
10:25 p.m.
President Donald Trump says he does see human beings as contributing somewhat to climate change but doesnāt support strict regulations in part because of negative ramifications for business.
When asked at Tuesday's debate about humans being partially to blame for environmental deterioration, Trump said, āto an extent, yes.ā
But when asked why he took steps like withdrawing the U.S. from the landmark Paris climate pact, Trump reiterated his argument that such agreements were ādriving energy prices through the sky.ā
Nearly 200 nations signed the climate deal in which each country provides its own goals to curb emissions of heat-trapping gases that lead to climate change.
Biden said he would champion job-creating programs that embrace green technologies and would rejoin the Paris accord, which is āall falling apartā without U.S. involvement.
___
10:20 p.m.
President Donald Trump has sidestepped a question from moderator Chris Wallace about whether he was willing to condemn white supremacists and militia groups.
āI would say almost everything I see is from the left wing, not the right wing,ā Trump responded. āIām willing to do anything. I want to see peace.ā
When pressed further, Trump said, āWhat do you want to call them? Give me a name. Give me a name?ā
Finally, he said, āProud Boys ā Stand back, stand by, but Iāll tell you what, somebodyās got to do something about Antifa and the left because this is not right-wing problem..... This is a left wing problem.ā
Antifa followers have appeared at anti-racism protests, but thereās been little evidence behind Republican claims that antifa members are to blame for the violence at such protests.
Trump infamously said there were good people āon both sidesā after a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, that led to the death of a counterprotester.
___
10:15 p.m.
President Donald Trump and Vice President Joe Biden are making their pitches to win over Black voters in the coming election, with Biden mockingly questioning: āThis man, this man is a savior of African Americans? This man has done virtually nothing.ā
Biden says that 1 in 1,000 African Americans has died because of the coronavirus, and if Trump doesnāt do something quickly, it will be 1 in 500.
Trump turned the discussion from COVID-19 to a crime bill passed in 1994 that Biden helped write and get passed that, among other things, increased the penalties for certain drug offenses.
Trump says āIām letting people out of jail now,ā and asserted that Biden had treated the Black community āabout as bad as anybody in this country.ā
___
10:10 p.m.
President Donald Trump and Joe Biden are trading barbs about each otherās relatives.
While Biden was making a point during the first presidential debate in Cleveland about the Trump administrationās trade deals with China not having the desired effect, Trump jumped in. He resurrected past claims about the former vice presidentās son Hunter working overseas.
Trump said Hunter Biden reaped millions in ill-gotten profit from China and other overseas interests, accusations that have been repeatedly debunked. Biden shot back, āNone of that is true.ā He then added of Trump, āHis family, we could talk all night.ā
Trump interrupted to respond that his children gave up lucrative jobs to join government and āhelp people,ā which left moderator Chris Wallace pleading, āMr. President, please stopā trying to restore order on the stage.
Biden then turned to the camera and addressed the audience directly, something he did frequently Tuesday night. āThis is not about my family or his family,ā Biden said. āItās about your family.ā
___
10:05 p.m.
President Donald Trump wonāt say when he will finally make his personal taxes public as he has long promised.
During the first presidential debate Tuesday, Trump was asked specifically about a report in The New York Times that revealed he paid only $750 in personal income taxes each of those years.
All presidents except Trump have publicly released their taxes since the presidency of Richard Nixon.
Trump has said since 2016 that he would eventually release them. But when asked by moderator Chris Wallace when, he said only: āYouāll get to see it.ā
Democratic nominee Joe Biden quickly used that as a point of attack, saying Trump ādoes take advantage of the tax codeā and āpays less tax than a schoolteacher.ā
Trump shrugged off the attack, saying that all business leaders do the same āunless they are stupid.ā
___
10 p.m.
President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden are showcasing vastly different approaches during their first presidential debate in Cleveland.
Trump is being aggressive toward Biden on Tuesday, interrupting the former vice president and repeatedly being admonished by debate moderator Chris Wallace of Fox News to stick to the rules that both campaigns had agreed to.
Biden is taking a more personal approach. At several times during the debate, Biden addressed his comments to āyou folks at homeā watching on television as he looked straight into the camera.
___
9:50 p.m.
President Donald Trump says heās had āno negative effectā from massive campaign rallies with thousands of attendees not adhering to social distancing recommendations amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Trump said during Tuesday nightās debate against Democrat Joe Biden that he thought masks āare OK,ā pulling one out from his pocket and saying, āI wear masks when needed.ā
But Trump also bragged that heās drawn ā35 to 40,000 peopleā at his campaign rallies, saying he brings such large crowds to outdoor events ābecause people want to hear what I have to say.ā Trump portrayed Bidenās socially distanced events as insignificant affairs where the Democrat āhas three people some place.ā
Former Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain, who attended one of Trumpās rallies in June without wearing a mask or social distancing, tested positive for the coronavirus nine days after the rally and died a month later. Neither Trump nor Biden mentioned him.
Biden has held smaller campaign events, requiring attendees to spread out and at times sit in taped-off circles. Calling Trump ātotally irresponsibleā on managing COVID-19, Biden said the president is āa fool on thisā and said Trump only worried about masks in the interest of protecting his own health, not others.
___
9:35 p.m.
The first presidential debate between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden has gotten off to an contentious start, breaking down after just a few moments with Trump interrupting Biden on several occasions and Biden calling the president a clown and a liar.
As the discussion about the Supreme Court quickly turned to COVID-19, Trump claimed without evidence that 2 million people would have died if Biden were president.
Moderator Chris Wallace pleaded with Trump, stating that COVID-19 would be discussed later in the day. He then asked Trump about whether he had a plan to replace the Affordable Care Act, and the president said, āFirst of all, I guess Iām debating you, not him, but thatās OK. Iām not surprised.ā
Biden laughed at Trumpās jabs. But he also appeared to get upset at times, too.
āHereās the deal, the fact is that everything heās saying so far is simply a lie,ā Biden said. āIām not here to call out his lies. Everybody knows heās a liar.ā
Wallace asked Trump to let Biden finish. āFolks do you have any idea what this clown is doing?ā Biden said.
___
9:25 p.m.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden says he is the leader of his party.
Biden made the comment during Tuesday nightās debate after President Donald Trump accused him of supporting abolishing private insurance.
Biden noted that he won the Democratic nomination partly by arguing against single-payer health care that many of his rivals sought. The former vice president has instead proposed expanding the Affordable Care Act to provide a public option that people could buy into.
Trump responded that Democrats still want to abolish private health insurance and suggested the party would force Biden to do its bidding.
āMy party is me,ā Biden replied. āRight now, Iām the Democratic Party.ā
___
9:20 p.m.
The first face-off for President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden is coming over a clash concerning a presidentās prerogative to put push through an election-year Supreme Court nominee.
Trump says during a debate Tuesday night in Cleveland that Republicans āwon the election and therefore we have the right to chooseā Amy Coney Barrett as a replacement for the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Trump added that he felt Democrats āwouldnāt even think about not doing itā if given the chance to nominate a justice with just weeks until the election.
Biden and other Democrats have decried Trumpās nomination of a new justice given Republicansā refusal to consider President Barack Obamaās selection following the 2016 death of Antonin Scalia. Biden didnāt mention that during the debate, however.
Biden says that Barrett seems like āa very fine personā but that her nomination after ātens of thousands of people have already votedā was troubling.
___
9 p.m.
President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden are face-to-face in their first presidential debate, the most pivotal moment so far in an election that turns on a historic pandemic, racial unrest and an economy in shambles.
The two are meeting Tuesday night in Cleveland. Itās a key opportunity for Trump to improve his standing in a race that polls show has remained stubbornly unchanged. For Biden, the debate offers a chance to show the steadiness he says the nation needs in contrast to Trumpās divisiveness.
Biden welcomed Trump to the stage, saying, āHow you doing, man?ā
The topics are the records of the candidates, the Supreme Court, the coronavirus pandemic, the economy, ārace and violence in our cities,ā and election integrity.
At issue is the coronavirus pandemic that has killed 205,000 Americans and cost the country millions of jobs. Early voting is underway in many states, with the election 35 days away.
___
5:50 p.m.
Kamala Harris says her running mate, Joe Biden, will share his vision for tackling the coronavirus and rebuilding the nationās economy during his presidential debate against President Donald Trump.
The Democratic California senator said Tuesday during a digital fundraiser with artists that āJoeās goal in the debate is to communicate directly with the American people.ā
Harris says the country is at a crossroads in more ways than one, from the pandemic and economic recession to a reckoning on racial injustice and climate change. Sheās calling Republican efforts to fill a Supreme Court seat before the election a ācrisis.ā
Harris says, āAnd in the midst of all this, a president whose instinct is to always stoke chaos, division, and mistrust.ā
Harris is set to debate Vice President Mike Pence next week.
___
2:15 p.m.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, have released more of their personal tax returns ahead of the first presidential debate.
The Bidensā returns show the couple paid almost $300,000 in federal taxes in 2019, including almost $288,000 in personal income tax. The Bidens reported taxable income of $944,737.
The release on Tuesday comes just days after The New York Times reported that Trump paid $750 in federal income taxes in 2016, the year he was elected president, and again in 2017, his first year in office. The Times said Trump paid no federal income taxes for 10 of the 15 years before that.
Biden and Trump are set to meet Tuesday night in Cleveland for their first presidential debate, and Trumpās taxes are sure to come up.
Trump has called the reports āfake newsā yet still refuses to release his returns himself. Biden already had released two decadesā worth of his tax returns, in addition to the federal financial disclosures required of him when he was a senator and vice president.
Bidenās running mate, California Sen. Kamala Harris, and her husband, Doug Emhoff, also released their 2019 returns Tuesday. Harris and Emhoff reported paying $1.05 million in personal income taxes and $1.19 million in total federal taxes on $3.02 million in taxable income.
___
2:10 p.m.
President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump emerged from the White House to a crowd of more than 100 cheering supporters as they departed for the first presidential debate in Cleveland.
The crowd, which included staffers and interns, cheered as the Trumps left the White House.
Both the president and first lady paused to recognize the show of support with a few claps of their own and several first pumps from Trump.
Trump boarded Marine One without comment. At Joint Base Andrews, where Air Force One was set to take off, Trump gave a wave and thumbs before boarding.
___
12:30 p.m.
President Donald Trump spent Tuesday morning in informal preparations for the first debate with Joe Biden. A longer, more formal preparation session was set for the afternoon once he arrives in Cleveland.
Trumpās prep team includes former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, campaign communications strategist Jason Miller, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, Jared Kushner, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and communications director Alyssa Farah. Some other advisers like Dan Scavino and Hope Hicks have also been involved.
While Trump is itching to go on the offense against Biden, some aides have encouraged him to adopt a more measured tone -- believing that in many ways the debates are more about Trump vs himself than Biden. Trump, they argue, should focus more on selling his accomplishments than trying to viciously attack Biden. Some involved with the preparations, though, have encouraged Trumpās more aggressive ācounterpunchingā side.