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(STACKER) – The first presidential debate between former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald J. Trump is set for Sept. 29, with two more to follow Oct. 15 and 22. The coronavirus pandemic has dictated several rules surrounding the upcoming events, from audience size to press presence. An already tumultuous year is being punctuated by two candidates who have played into stark polarities.

In light of the events in the coming weeks, Stacker is taking a look back at the history of presidential debates. From their inception, forged in a senatorial debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, to today when safety precautions amid the coronavirus will undoubtedly set the tone, presidential debates have punctuated the times they’re in and dictated how the country moves forward through catastrophes and challenges not entirely dissimilar from the times now confronted.

Keep reading to learn more about the history of presidential debates and how they’ve shaped the trajectory of the free world.

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1858: Senatorial debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas

Presidential debates in the United States were inspired by a famous Illinois senatorial debate in 1858 between Abraham Lincoln and incumbent Stephen Douglas that was held without a moderator or panel. As Douglas campaigned around Illinois, Lincoln attended his opponent’s campaign speeches and heckled Douglas from the crowd. Lincoln’s antics drummed up sufficient attention, and finally he and Douglass met for a three-hour debate during which the men discussed slavery and various conspiracy theories.

Douglas won the Senate seat, and Lincoln didn’t participate in any debates in 1860 during his run for president. Nevertheless, the men’s debate set a stage for the use of debates in future election cycles. The 2016 debates between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton were likened by many historians to the Lincoln-Douglas debate of 1858.

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Debate-free presidential campaigns preside

More than a dozen election cycles passed without significant debates between candidates. Instead, presidential hopefuls responded to each other’s comments during speeches along the campaign trail.

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1948: Radio broadcast of Republican primary debate

Republicans Thomas Dewey and Harold Stassen participated in a presidential primary debate broadcast by radio. During the debate, the men traded barbs over the legal status of the Communist Party of the United States.

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1952: First televised debate with all candidates

The League of Women voters in 1952 hosted the first televised presidential debate in U.S. history for a nationwide audience. Every major candidate from both parties attended, standing in stark contrast to today’s debates that include just the nominated candidate from each party.

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1956: First televised presidential debate for the two nominees

Democrat Adlai Stevenson challenged incumbent Republican President Dwight Eisenhower in 1956, but the debate for that election didn’t include either of them. Surrogates former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and senior Maine Sen. Margaret Chase Smith debated on behalf of the Democrat and Republican, respectively.

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1960: The famous Kennedy-Nixon televised debates

Despite two other presidential debates being aired on TV in 1952 and 1956, the debates between Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon in 1960 are widely remembered as the first televised presidential debates. Because of this series, debating was eventually seen as the norm in campaigns and became an integral element to running for president.

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1964: Lyndon Johnson refuses to debate

Despite the popularity of the Kennedy-Nixon debates, President Lyndon B. Johnson turned down requests to debate the Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater in 1964. In so doing, Johnson touched off a 16-year period of no presidential debate series being held.

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1968: Nixon won’t debate

Following President Johnson’s lead, Richard Nixon turned down the debate stage in 1968. He defeated Hubert Humphrey, the incumbent Democratic vice president, in the election. He’d repeat the move of refusing the debate in 1972 as well.

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1970: Nixon overrides repeal of the equal-time rule in elections

President Nixon in 1970 overrode a bill that had repealed the equal-time rule of the Communications Act of 1934. The law mandated that national level candidates be granted equal exposure in the media. In his actions, Nixon ensured that candidates could hobble their opponents by turning down the opportunity to debate.

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1972: Nixon refuses another debate

President Richard Nixon refused to debate his political opponent again in 1972. The incumbent coasted into reelection, defeating Democratic U.S. Sen. George McGovern.

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1975: League of Women Voters sets itself as ’76 debate host

The League of Women Voters (LWV) in 1975 scored the envied position of host for the 1976 presidential debates. The LWV hosted the event until 1984.

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1976: Gerald Ford reinforces negative perceptions

Gerald Ford ascended to the presidency after Richard Nixon’s vice president Spiro Agnew resigned amid the Watergate scandal, and then Nixon resigned after his impeachment. Ford pardoned Nixon, earning him mixed reviews among American voters. His time as president was filled with fumbles—literally—that included tripping down the steps of Air Force One in Austria and up those same steps in Michigan. He fed into his reputation at the 1976 debates.

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1980: Jimmy Carter refuses to share a three-man stage

Democratic incumbent President Jimmy Carter in 1980 turned down the opportunity to debate with Republican nominee Ronald Reagan and Independent candidate John Anderson. The LWV went ahead with that debate without Carter.

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1980: Carter fails to land at his one debate

In the one debate Carter participated in on Oct. 28, 1980, against Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan, Carter was outperformed. Regan, a former actor, cozied up to the camera by flashing smiles and exuding relaxation anytime Carter threw jabs. Reagan famously addressed the crowd directly with his question “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” and enjoyed a landslide victory just seven days later.

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1984: Joint veto of nearly 100 debate panelists

Republican and Democratic parties reached an agreement ahead of the first 1984 presidential debate that led directly to a joint veto of almost 100 proposed panelists, namely journalists. The move was compared to a frat rush.

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1984: Emphasis on Reagan’s age

President Reagan’s age became a point of contention at the 1984 debates. When he was asked about concerns over his advanced age, Reagan coolly flipped the conversation on its head, saying: “I want you to know that also I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent’s youth and inexperience.” His opponent in that debate was former Vice President Walter Mondale.

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1988: Bush and Dukakis draft secret document

Campaigners for incumbent Vice President George H.W. Bush and Gov. Michael Dukakis met without the knowledge of the League of Women Voters (LWV) to draft a secret “memorandum of understanding” that detailed permissible audience members and panelists while doing away with follow-up questions. The decisions effectively limited the reach of the LWV during the debates, removing the group’s ability to have a say in how the debates were structured or held.

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1988: Commission of Presidential Debates is new host

The bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) in 1988 took over as presidential campaign host. From podium-height and room-temperature requirements to moderator selection, the CPD institutionalized and all but removed anything left to chance at these debates.

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1988: The Quayle/Kennedy comparison flop

Sen. Dan Quayle, running as vice president under presidential candidate George H.W. Bush, in 1988 took the bold step of comparing himself to President John F. Kennedy during a vice presidential debate. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen took the opportunity to attack, saying, “I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you’re no Jack Kennedy.”

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1992: Debates buoy Ross Perot

Reform Party candidate Ross Perot increased his percentage of favorable votes from 7% to 19% throughout the presidential debates in 1992. His gains represent the biggest jump in history for an American presidential candidate.

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1992: President George H.W. Bush checks his watch

President George H.W. Bush was caught making a major debate faux pas in 1992 when he checked his watch repeatedly during a town hall debate as an audience member asked the president how he’d been personally affected by a deep recession. “Of course, you feel it when you’re president of the United States; that’s why I’m trying to do something about it,” the president said in response, after straightening his jacket and looking at his watch, “by stimulating the export, vesting more, better education system.”

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2000: Candidates need 15% support in polls to debate

The CPD in 2000 made a new debate rule requiring at least 15% polling support for candidates in order for them to be included in the national debates. Controversial from its inception, the rule all but guarantees a two-party debate stage.

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2000: Sen. John Kerry trashes debates

Ahead of his 2004 nomination as the Democratic nominee for president, Sen. John Kerry in 2000 said of the debates that year: “You could have picked 10 people off the street who didn’t know Jerusalem from Georgia, and they would have had better questions.” Kerry wasn’t alone in his criticisms; others claimed one debate moderator allowed topics to get off-track and that generally the debate series lacked substance or focus.

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2004: TV networks ditch decorum, offer reaction shots

Reaction shots became a part of the presidential debates in 2004. Most notably, Republican incumbent George W. Bush was captured on screen as visibly irritated when the camera switched over to Democratic candidate Sen. John Kerry.

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2008: Tech takes center stage

The 2008 debates are second only to 1960’s debates between Nixon and Kennedy for the significant role technology played. The presidential candidates were Republican Sen. John McCain and Democratic Sen. Barack Obama. Questions were submitted via YouTube and text messages, and even MySpace and Twitter played a central role.

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2012: Romney dominates

Republican candidate Mitt Romney outshone President Barack Obama in the first of three presidential debates in 2012, citing the sitting president as “not getting the job done in government.” The debate focused on the economy, taxes, and health care.

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2016: Trump and Clinton

The 2016 debate stage featured Republican candidate Donald Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Trump promised, among other things, to send Clinton to prison and demonized her.

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2020: #demssowhite

The Democratic debate stage started as the most diverse field of candidates in history. But by January 2020, the field had narrowed to a stage noticeably lacking candidates of color. The noticeable lack of diversity led to a trending hashtag: #demssowhite.

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The coronavirus transforms debates

The coronavirus pandemic has shaped how the first of 2020’s presidential debates on Sept. 29 between incumbent Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will be held—from Cleveland’s joint campus of Case Western Reserve University and The Cleveland Clinic—with only one moderator and as few people as possible on stage. The approximately 200 audience members will need to be screened for health issues, wear masks, distance as requested, and sanitize their hands.

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This report was contributed by Stacker.