Candy Crowley Receives the Right to Ask Questions

Candy Crowley Receives the Right to Ask Questions

Despite griping from both parties for tonight's debate moderator Candy Crowley to keep her mouth shut, she's been given free reign to ask as many follow up questions as she sees fit. 

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The signed memorandum of understanding leaked by Time's Mark Halperin stated the moderator "will not ask any follow-up questions." So when Crowley went around before the debate saying things like, "Once the table is kind of set by the town-hall questioner, there is then time for me to say, 'Hey, wait a second, what about X, Y, Z?'" the campaigns got spooked. Halperin reported both campaigns "expressed concern" to the Commission on Presidential Debates over comments Crowley made threatening to ask follow up questions. 

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The Washington Post's Paul Farhi reports Frank Fahrenkopf, the debate co-chairman, isn't listening to the campaigns' complaints, and isn't worried about the memorandum. Crowley will be free to ask follow-up questions during tonight's town hall style debate. "Our position hasn’t changed," Fahrenkopf told the Post. "It’s exactly as we understood it when we announced the format and the moderator in July." The follow-up format was always supposed to be apart of tonight's debate. It wasn't a question until both campaigns complained. 

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The indication Crowley would be granted her right to ask follow-ups emerged early in the afternoon. Fox News reported "an 11th-hour change to the debate format,"where both campaigns agreed to a follow-up period. Janet Brown, the executive director of the Commission on Presidential Debates, told Politico's Dylan Byers she didn't know of any change to the debate format. Whether she was talking about the memorandum of understanding signed by the candidates or the original, intended format of the debate was unclear. 

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It's "full speed ahead," for Crowley now, Fahrenkopf says. She can choose between small and big shoes to try and fill. Our bet is on the latter.