Biden says he plans to debate Trump

Pictures of President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump are seen on a screen during a campaign rally for Trump in Green Bay, Wisc., April 2.

Pictures of President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump are seen on a screen during a campaign rally for Trump in Green Bay, Wisc., April 2. (Brian Snyder, Reuters)


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NEW YORK — President Joe Biden said on Friday that he would participate in a debate with former President Donald Trump, his Republican opponent in November's election.

"I am, somewhere. I don't know when," the Democratic president said in an interview with broadcaster Howard Stern. "I'm happy to debate him."

The remarks were Biden's clearest yet on the prospect of a presidential debate. Biden had not previously committed to debate Trump, saying last month it would depend on the former president's behavior.

The University of Utah was originally slated to host the third and final general presidential debate on Oct. 9 in Salt Lake City.

Trump, who refused to debate his rivals before winning the Republican primary race last month, has in recent weeks been challenging Biden to engage in a one-on-one matchup with him, offering to debate the incumbent Democrat "anytime, anywhere, anyplace."

Earlier this month, Trump's top two campaign advisers sent a letter to an independent commission that normally sanctions such events calling for an accelerated debate timetable, holding more than the usual three and starting them earlier in the campaign cycle.

A dozen leading U.S. news organizations have also urged the candidates to publicly commit to debating each other.

Their statement suggested that debates for the current race be sponsored, as they have every election cycle since 1988, by the nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates.

Biden's camp has been concerned that, once on stage, Trump will not abide by rules set by the commission, and some Biden advisers say they would prefer not to elevate Trump by putting him on the same stage with the Democratic incumbent.

Biden has a lead among registered voters of 41% to 37% over Trump, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found earlier this month.

Asked during a trip to Las Vegas in early February about Trump calling for Biden to debate him, Biden said, "If I were him, I would want to debate me too. He's got nothing to do."

Biden and Trump faced each other in two televised presidential election debates during the 2020 campaign.

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Jarrett Renshaw

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