During the debate, Trump interrupted almost every question Davis posed to him. Sometimes she only got out âPresident Trumpââ before he proceeded to speak over her. While her co-anchor David Muir often asked sprawling questionsâwith Trump often responding directly to him, using his first name regularly in his repliesâand racked up nearly 2,000 words spoken, Davis (who Trump never addressed by name) managed just 818. I know because I counted them. And most of Davisâ words came from her direct questions to Vice President Harris.
It might seem petty to get this granular, but, as women, paying attention to who gives voice to us matters.
In this debate, Trump had no choice but to let Harris speak. He chose not to let Davis.
Itâs hard to pinpoint exactly what made him so averse. But certainly Davisâs questions on his abortion stanceâright at the top of the debateâput him on the defensive, and marked the beginning and end of her ability to interact with him. And perhaps Davis hit the nail on the head in a broader sense when she asked him âWhy should [women] trust you?â over his constant course changing on reproductive rights, as well as his opposition to abortion. Itâs notable that he never actually answered the question, instead praising the âgenius and heart and strengthâ of the six Supreme Court judges who overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.
From that point on Davis only managed one further question to the former president without being cut off by him. The only ones she was able to ask in full were those posed to Harris. Muir was mostly never interrupted by Trump.
Again, here, itâs worth noting statistically how much men in general dominated the debate. In part due to the number of times Davis was interrupted by Trump, she spoke just 35 times compared to Muirâs 74. But it wasnât just the moderators. Despite Harris being given her full two minutes to land her point each time, as well as rebuttals, she only spoke 34 times to Trumpâs 74. It might have seemed hard to follow during a back and forth debate, but Iâd put money on me not being the only woman to pick up just how many times Trump refused to let Harris have the last word. Even when it was clearly her turn to wrap up a topic. And how hard it was, ultimately, for both moderators to rein the former president in.
In the end, even after a debate in which Trump dominated by the sheer volume of words, political experts largely handed the debate victory to Harris. She spoke confidently, clearly, and made a case for the future. âLetâs turn the pageâ she argued more than once about Trump and his divisive politics, and outlined her vision for an âopportunity economy.â Trump, when pressed on the details rather than insults, especially in relation to healthcare, answered with the astonishingly vague âI have concepts of a plan,â and shrugged it off with âIâm not president right now.â