• Usa 2020, the last duel between Biden and Trump in Nashville

  • # RaiUsa2020.

    The last face to face

  • Obama: "Trump got it all wrong, he only thinks of himself"

  • Donald Trump's political agenda

  • Joe Biden's political program

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October 22, 2020The last duel between Biden and Trump takes place tonight in Nashville, Tennessee at 8pm.

Seven hundred security officers guard the place at Belmont University.

The moderator of the meeting will be the journalist Kristen Welker of the NBC network that Trump has already attacked by calling her biased.



The confrontation will take place with muted microphones in alternating turns to avoid the chaos and continuous interruptions of the first debate, and will last 90 minutes.

When Biden speaks, Trump's microphone is turned off for two minutes and vice versa, and only after the two minutes can an open discussion begin.



The topics of debate are six: the fight against Covid, the condition of American families, the racial question, climate change, national security and the leadership skills that a president must have. 



The current situation sees Biden ahead in the polls on Trump, albeit with a share that has been reducing, at the national level, from the double-digit advantage of recent days to the current 9%.



Barack Obama took the field in person to sprint his former deputy Joe Biden into the White House and spur the Democratic electorate to vote en masse.

The former president spoke at a drive-in-style rally in the parking lot of baseball stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a state in the balance and crucial to the presidential elections on November 3.



Less than two weeks before the vote and on the eve of the second and final Trump-Biden debate in Nashville, Obama has attacked his successor across the board: "Incompetent, he thinks it's all reality show," he said.



The polls speak of a Biden ahead of several points but it is precisely these numbers that worry Obama who reminded the crowd that listened to him, locked in cars to respect the anti-Covid rules, the previous one in 2016, when it seemed that the road to Hillary Clinton's White House was downhill and Trump's surprise victory came.