In theory, democracy is served when voters get an opportunity to assess candidates. However, these sorts of “debates” incentivize candidates to showcase their differences in all the worst ways, that don’t actually help us select a leader. The leadership qualities we should seek, and those that shine on the debate stage, are very different. In some ways even antithetical.
The same dynamic has operated in the Democratic debates thus far. They are structured to reward “gotcha” bullying tactics. Exemplified by Julian Castro’s hit on Biden. Castro was gotchaed on his own petard when the facts vindicated Biden.
(Reminds me of Messala in the chariot race with Ben Hur.) Good for that, but it doesn’t negate what pushed Castro into it.
If the aim were really to inform voters about candidates, we should ditch this debate stage thing in favor of a series of in-depth one-on-one conversations with well-versed journalists. Of course that would be boring TV. The true aim is not to inform viewers but titillate them into staying tuned through the commercials. With the equivalent of chariot races.
I’m talking here about a multi-candidate field. Debates between two finalists for the November elections stand differently, and it does make some sense to size them up side-by-side. I would not want to lose that. But that assumes voters are capable of properly evaluating what they see, with a sense of civic responsibility. Again, 2016 makes that doubtful.
One focus for Democrats has been assessing which candidate(s) could go toe-to-toe with Trump in debates. As though Trump won in 2016 thanks to formidable debating skill. And why assume such debates will occur in 2020? No law requires them. They used to be customary, but so were candidates releasing tax returns. Trump would actually have far more to lose than to gain from debates, not needing them to convey his message. He will come up with some bullshit pretext to avoid debating.