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Black Experts Critique Harris-Trump Presidential Debate

A host of Black experts report to The Root who they believe won the first debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump and why.

On Tuesday (September 10), the long-awaited first presidential debate took place between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. The Root talked to several political experts about each candidateโ€™s performance and what it could mean come November.

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Gevin Reynolds, a political commentator and former speechwriter for Harris , praised the way the Vice President bravely took on Trump. โ€œShe delivered [Tuesday night]. The Vice President prosecuted the case against Donald Trump like only she can,โ€ Reynolds told The Root.

Harris was indeed on a roll during the debate and the difference between the two candidates was astonishing. The Vice President successfully baited Trump by saying he was was โ€œfired by 81 million peopleโ€ in the 2020 election and is now โ€œconfusedโ€ about losing.

She also told Trump that world leaders were laughing at him, and that military leaders labeled him a โ€œdisgrace.โ€ However, Reynolds insisted that itโ€™s vital not to count Trump out just yet.

โ€œIโ€™d much rather be the Vice President than the former President, but it would be a mistake to think Trump is done for. As they say, polls donโ€™t vote, people do,โ€ Reynolds said.

But he cautioned that we wonโ€™t see much of a bump in the polls. โ€œWhile [Harris is] still the underdog in this race, Iโ€™d say after tonight, the momentum is on her side. She did her part, now itโ€™s time for us to do ours.โ€

Political commentator and disinformation expert Reecie Colbert believed that Harrisโ€™ performance was downright impressive. During the debate, Harris explained her policy which contains tax breaks for parents and small businesses, further explaining she wants to issue a first-time home-buyer credit for down payments. However, Trump merely said he had โ€œconcepts of a planโ€ when asked about how he will replace the Affordable Care Act.

โ€œVP Kamala Harris showed up and gave big boss energy while totally diminishing the former bully known as Donald Trump,โ€ Colbert said. โ€œHe had no answers for VP and she had everything laid outโ€”from her policy to her [professional] record as she made the contrast against Trump.โ€

Colbert also believed that the debate cemented Harris as an intrinsic leader. โ€œAnybody who had any kind of doubt or confusion surrounding who is fit to be commander-in-chief for the next four years got the answer they needed Tuesday night.โ€

Things werenโ€™t all bad for Trump, though. Historian and economist Dr. Walter Greason told The Root that there was one particular highlight from the former president. โ€œTrump had his best moment in trying to divide the public about the War in Gaza,โ€ Greason said.

โ€œHarris should have exposed his selfishness more frequently as she offered policy solutions.โ€ However, he ultimately agreed that Harris was unstoppable during the debate.

โ€œ[The Vice President] dominated the debate at multiple points, but the reversal on the immigration question about his boring rallies was the moment she disqualified him,โ€ Greason continued.

The professor also emphasized that despite coming out on top Tuesday night, it will still be an uphill battle for Harris. โ€œPolling of likely and registered voters skews against Harris,โ€ Greason said. โ€œThe key for Democrats is turnout, and Trumpโ€™s depression of conservative voters is always underestimated.โ€

Despite the challenge the election will most likely remain for Harris, the debate galvanized Black folks in a special way, according to Greason.

โ€œFor Black America, this performance by Vice-President Harris is a global vindication of African-American excellence and the need to restore thousands of Black institutions that have been destroyed since 1965.โ€

Nicole Austin-Hillery, President & CEO at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, told The Root thatย the debate amplified our truth.

โ€œThe experience of Black Americans is rooted in a belief in the promise of opportunity, the chance for a better life, and empowerment, despite the historical challenges to making that promise a reality,โ€ she said.

โ€œMany of the issues discussed [at the debate] had a clear connection to ensuring a renewed commitment to that promise and that possibility should leave Black America feeling hopeful in the march towards the November election.โ€

Straight From The Root

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