Vice presidential debate

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence participates in the vice presidential debate at the University of Utah on October 7, 2020 in Salt Lake City, Utah. The vice presidential candidates only meet once to debate before the general election on November 3. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The VP debate: Just another American letdown

Andray Domise: It wasn’t last week’s Trump/Biden debacle, but the surreal VP debate reflected almost nothing of the world outside the debate hall

Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) (L) and U.S. Vice President Mike Pence (R) take the stage for the vice presidential debate at the University of Utah on October 7, 2020 in Salt Lake City, Utah. The vice presidential candidates only meet once to debate before the general election on November 3. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The VP debate: ‘What on earth did Trump just do?’

Paul Wells: There aren’t a lot of ways to politely defend the president. Enter the interrupting, truth-inverting funhouse mirror Mike Pence.

What to watch for in VP debate

Will the “Moderate Mitt” image survive an evening of Paul Ryan?

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Sarah Palin’s (& Gwen Ifill’s) big night

One of two things will happen tonight when Gov. Sarah Palin debates Sen. Joe Biden in the first and only VP debate of the campaign: either she will exceed expectations (which have been beaten down so low by those Charlie Gibson and Katie Couric interviews — helpfully distilled by the leftosphere into a convenient video  summary — that at this point that she will be exceeded if her sentences contain a noun that goes with a verb) or she will mess it up and the trickle of calls for her to step down will turn into a wave.