Walz v Vance vice-presidential debate: Irish start time, where to watch and what to expect

Democrat Tim Walz and Republican JD Vance will face off in the early hours of Wednesday morning Irish time

Tim Walz, the Democrats' vice-presidential candidate, and Kamala Harris, who is running for president. Photograph: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Democrat Tim Walz and Republican JD Vance will face off on Tuesday night in the only scheduled US vice-presidential debate, a chance for each man to reinforce his running mate’s message to voters just weeks before the November 5th election.

Here are some details about the event.

When and where is the debate?

The 90-minute debate, hosted by CBS News, will take place on Tuesday, October 1st at 9pm (2am Wednesday Irish time) in New York City, a Democratic stronghold that is the former home of Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate running against Democratic vice-president Kamala Harris.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, JD Vance. Photograph: Eric Lee/New York Times

Who are the moderators?

The debate will take place at the CBS Broadcast Center and will be moderated by CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell and Face the Nation moderator Margaret Brennan.

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How can you watch the debate?

The event will be broadcast on the CBS network. It will be broadcast on BBC1 and BBC News and live-streamed on all platforms where CBS News 24/7 and Paramount+ are available.

What are the ground rules?

There will be no audience. Candidates will stand behind lecterns for the duration of the debate. No props or pre-written notes will be allowed on stage. CBS News said it reserved the right to turn off candidates’ microphones.

What to expect from Walz

Walz, the governor of Minnesota, will likely use his “regular guy” reputation to try to appeal to voters, including some independents, who view Harris, a former senator from California, as too liberal.

Walz (60) is a former congressman who won elections in a Republican-leaning district before becoming governor.

As governor, he has pushed a progressive agenda including free school meals, tax cuts for the middle class and expanded paid leave for Minnesota workers. Walz will likely try to needle Vance, as Harris did successfully in her debate with Trump. Walz has questioned Vance’s Midwestern credentials and derided his 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy for its depiction of rural America.

“Like all regular people I grew up in the heartland; JD studied at Yale, had his career funded by Silicon Valley billionaires and then wrote a bestseller trashing that community,” Walz said at his first rally as Harris’s vice-presidential pick. “Come on! That’s not what middle America is.”

Walz, also a former high schoolteacher and football coach, has dismissed Trump and Vance as “creepy and, yes, weird” – a takedown that spread widely among Democrats. The Democratic vice-presidential candidate has linked Vance to a set of conservative policy proposals known as Project 2025, from which Trump has tried to distance himself.

What to expect from Vance

Vance, a US senator from Ohio, will have to work hard not to be on the defensive throughout the debate if Walz employs Harris’s debate strategy.

Vance (40) will likely face questions about his inflammatory rhetoric and could punch back with his typical combative style. He has been criticised for referring to Harris and other Democrats in 2021 as a “bunch of childless cat ladies” and, more recently, for spreading false claims that Haitian migrants in the Ohio city of Springfield were eating pets.

He has also claimed without evidence that the suspect in the latest assassination attempt against Trump was acting on Democrats’ inflammatory language. “The big difference between conservatives and liberals is that ... no one has tried to kill Kamala Harris in the last couple of months and two people now have tried to kill Donald Trump in the last couple of months,” said Vance in comments that drew a rebuke from the White House.

On the campaign trail, Vance has portrayed Walz and Harris as radical liberals. He has also questioned Walz’s depictions of his military record and his family’s fertility struggles.

Vance, who served in the Marine Corps and was a public affairs officer during a six-month stint in Iraq, has accused Walz of leaving the Army National Guard to avoid being deployed to Iraq and of falsely suggesting he served in combat.

Walz, who served in the guard for 24 years, retired to run for Congress. He has defended his record, but the Harris campaign has acknowledged he misspoke in a 2018 video in which he referenced “weapons of war that I carried into war”. Walz never served in a combat zone. – Reuters