Sunday, July 31, 2016

Answer The Question: A New Political Debate Format

The 2016 Election looks to be even less a ‘contest of ideas’ than a ‘marketplace of fear’. While there are three debates scheduled (but not guaranteed) between the Presidential candidates we may see an embarrassing illustration of current American politics, even if they simply continue the disappointing experiences of the last several presidential elections. Under the prevailing methods and conditions these debates will likely be ineffective in providing any meaningful examination of national issues or policy; but under these conditions we can expect that they will likely manage to achieve a new low in modern American politics.

One of the causal factors that produces this sorry state and outlook is that current political debates are controlled and managed by the political parties to prevent the public from any substantive view of their respective candidates. This has allowed the parties to twist and contort the objectives of the debates to be opportunities for ‘yet another’ series of campaign sound-bite. This may be a disservice to the voters but that is not a concern of the parties.

To restore the intended purpose and value of American political debates or to actually improve the value of political debates there is a way for a candidate, party, news-media entity, or even other public/private organizations to uses a modern, innovative debate format that political parties can’t control except for the information that they provide which often is the very thing that they were trying to avoid. Today’s technology allows not just the politicians and parties to direct and control their messages but allows others to impose a political and public accountability to those seeking the voters’ decision to elect them.

The new debate format is designed to be unconstrained in time (when it occurs), space (how much support information can be provided beyond the basic answer’s statement), number (no fixed agreement by the parties is required), topics (subjects are not approved by candidates), or required coordination of schedules. In essence the new format allows for a topic to be examined and compared between candidates so that the public can get an answer to the questions asked and not an answer to a topic that the candidate wanted the question to be about. Additionally, this format provides for a simple and direct method for knowledgeable ‘experts’ to provide assessments on the content of an answer, including any political orientation that the subject-matter experts might have.

Since a scheduled debate isn’t required a candidate or party can’t say that their schedule and commitments don’t allow them to engage on the topics, because their ability to respond is under their own control; and if they can’t manage to provide a response, what does that indicate about their campaign’s/candidate’s understanding of an issue and competency in addressing it?

The debate format is a web-based methodology that presents issues, questions, answers, comparisons, assessments, and follow-ups and rebuttals. Each of these elements of the new methodology is asynchronous. An issue is identified and posted on the sponsoring web-site. Initial questions on the issue are sent to the campaigns and posted on the web-site with a “Responses Due By:” date. On the “Due By” date the answers are posted.

The responses can be evaluated by selected groups of individuals who have a designated “subject matter expertise” (SME) relevant to the topic under debate. This group would prepare any follow-up questions that were deemed appropriate to get a better understanding of the meaning, position and policy indicated in the response. The follow-up questions would be posted and sent to the campaigns to be answered by another Due By date. The campaigns would be informed that they can provide any rebuttal statements to their opponent’s answers that they would like to have incorporated into their answers on the issue.

The SMEs would incorporate the follow-up responses in their evaluations, including any rebuttal information, and provide their analysis and summary of the response on the issue. The assessments and summaries would be posted on the web-site’s pages for this issue.

This process can be repeated for each issue that is to be raised. This allows the debate to occur over weeks rather than constrained to just a few hours that can’t cover more than just a few issues.


Moving political debates on relevant national issues to the internet puts the information that a candidate or party is offering as their rationale for voters to choose their visions enables the voters to acquire answers to questions that are important to them. It also provides a channel where voters may see information about issues that they hadn’t paid much attention to heretofore. “An informed public” may not be just a necessary condition for a democracy but could actually become an attainable goal.