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  1. October 28, 2023 10:31:50 AM EDT. This file contains a Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) Television transcript of the first presidential debate between candidates Senator John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon. The candidates answered questions on numerous issues, including agriculture, the economy, education, foreign policy, and ...

  2. By one reliable mark, Kennedy outscored Nixon by close to 20 points in every debate but the third one, which Nixon won 42 to 39. Elmo Roper revealed a more telling statistic: 57 percent of voters believed the TV debates influenced their decisions and 4 million ascribed their final voting decision to the debates alone. Of those 4 million, 72 percent voted for Kennedy and only 26 for Nixon ...

  3. On Sept. 26, 1960, 70-million people tuned in as Vice President Richard Nixon and Sen. John F. Kennedy faced off in the first televised presidential debate. ...

  4. 13 October 1960. Folder Description. This folder contains an unofficial transcript of the third presidential debate between candidates Senator John F. Kennedy and Vice President Richard M. Nixon. The candidates answered questions on numerous issues, including the economy, the Federal budget, foreign policy, labor, nuclear disarmament, taxes ...

  5. 26. Sept. 2022 · 1960 stellten sich John F. Kennedy und Richard Nixon als erste amerikanische Präsidentschaftskandidaten einer Live-Debatte im Fernsehen. Verfolgen Sie hier noch einmal den kompletten Auftritt der ...

    • 59 Min.
    • Antonia Kleikamp
  6. Fernsehduell. Fernsehduelle (auch TV-Duelle) sind spezielle Wahldebatten im Fernsehen, bei denen zwei Spitzenkandidaten für hohe politische Ämter antreten. Sogenannte TV-Duelle sind Übernahmen der US-amerikanischen Wahlkampfdebatten, die eine lange, ursprünglich akademische Tradition haben und nicht primär in Fernsehstudios stattfinden.

  7. Nixon said that this would lead to government interference in education, and of course he was right. This old thing is likely the result of correlation and not causation. It's very possible that TV watchers simply favored JFK and radio listeners favored Nixon. People always say the same thing, that those who watched it on TV thought Kennedy won.