Debate Day is Finally Here

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Debate day dawns with big expectations
By Niall Stanage
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. — Buckle up: Debate day is finally here.

The anticipation for Monday night’s face-off between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton has reached a fever pitch, with many expecting a defining moment in one of the wildest elections of modern times.

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Five things to watch for at Trump-Clinton debate
By Jonathan Easley
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will square off on Monday night in the most anticipated and consequential presidential debate in modern times. Here are five things to watch for in the heavyweight clash that will set the course for the final 42 days of the election.
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Verdict on big debate will be instantaneous
By Juan Williams
OPINION: Social media has transformed the way presidential debates are judged.
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Debate prep and being Al Gore
By Judd Gregg
OPINION: What I learnt about debates from impersonating a vice president.
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Everything you need to know about the first presidential debate
By Lisa Hagen
Here’s everything you need to know about the highly anticipated match-up Monday night.
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Trump vs. Clinton: Debate of the century gets wilder  
By Rebecca Savransky
As Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump get ready to face off in the first debate, their campaigns are mired in a new controversy over guests.
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Trump enters new debate frontier
By Ben Kamisar
Donald Trump is entering a new realm as a debater.
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NYT editorial board lays out argument against Trump for president
By Cyra Master
One day after The New York Times endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, it published a scathing editorial titled, ‘Why Donald Trump Should Not Be President” and warning voters they could hand “the White House to a man far more consumed with himself than with the nation’s well-being.”
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Civil rights museum denies Trump visit request
By Jessie Hellmann
A civil rights museum in Greensboro, N.C., rejected a request to visit from Donald Trump’s campaign.
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This week: Shutdown deadline looms over Congress
By Cristina Marcos and Jordain Carney
So much for that early getaway. Instead, Congress now has just four days to avert a government shutdown on Saturday.
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The Washington Post: First debate a pivotal moment for Clinton and Trump
By John Wagner, Jose A. DelReal and Abby Phillip
Much of the nation is expected to tune in amid great uncertainty about what they’ll see — including which version of Donald Trump will be on stage. With polls showing the candidates in a virtual tie six weeks out from Election Day, the stakes in Monday’s debate could hardly be higher.
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The New York Times: First Clinton-Trump debate is framed by rifts over race and gender
By Patrick Healy and Alexander Burns
In a campaign that is now a battle over national identity and values, the candidates are more opposed over race and gender than any in decades.
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Bloomberg: Trump looks to apply new campaign discipline at first debate
By Jennifer Jacobs and Kevin Cirilli
His advisers express confidence, but Monday’s debate will present new challenges.
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The Wall Street Journal: Fiscal constraints await the next president
By Nick Timiraos
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are likely to recite their varied promises for fresh government spending at Monday’s first presidential debate. One reality they’re unlikely to note: Whoever wins in November will enjoy far less latitude to spend money or cut taxes than any president since World War II.
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Reuters: Ahead of debate, Trump endorsed by US immigration officers
By Steve Holland
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump picked up the endorsement on Monday of the union representing 5,000 federal immigration officers, a boost of support for his immigration policy ahead of his first debate with Democrat Hillary Clinton.
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