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Candidates should have most of the bases covered after thorough debate prep

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Debate prep, though, is a less partisan affair: Candidates’ answers may differ, but the advice from handlers is generally the same.

The first rule of answering a question is not to answer the question. Don’t flatly ignore it, of course. But pivot as deftly and quickly as possible to three or four things you really want to talk about.

“You’re trying to get (the candidate) to understand that fine balance between answering the question and using the question as an opportunity to give an answer,” said Tom Wilson, a former Republican Party chairman in New Jersey who has prepped several senatorial and gubernatorial candidates, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Carl Golden, who prepared former New Jersey Govs. Tom Kean and Christie Todd Whitman for debates, said viewers should count how many times the candidates say something like: “Having said that ... “

That’s the phrase they use to change the subject.

Preparation may begin with a huge stack of briefing materials prepared by aides and read (or not) by the candidate. Those materials are whittled down to coherent arguments, often sound bites, that the candidate can use in the moment.

How can a candidate steer a discussion toward those talking points?

Take a question about clean water, Wilson says. The answer may be about clean water — “or can provide you an opportunity to talk about the need to balance responsible environmental policies with the need for economic development and growth.”

“It’s all the process of training and teaching to provide the answer, as opposed to answering the question,” Wilson said. “And then it’s repetition.”

Andrews said viewers can tell who is winning the debate by noting who offers fewer responses to attacks: “How many answers does the candidate give that’s mostly an answer to what the last guy said?”

In prep sessions, once a candidate gets comfortable spouting his or her own opinions, handlers begin the mock debates. Wilson said he starts off with softballs for comfort, then fastballs to elicit a reaction. Then come the curveballs, such as the question posed to Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis in 1988: If his wife had been raped and murdered, would he “favor an irrevocable death penalty for the killer?”

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