INFORMING THE PUBLIC
Televised Presidential Debates
You may have heard that the League originated nationally televised Presidential candidate debates. That's not totally correct. The famous Kennedy-Nixon debates of 1960 were created and moderated by television news agencies. After that, no national Presidential debates were held in 1964, 1968, or 1972.
The League of Women Voters sponsored and moderated national Presidential candidate debates in 1976, 1980, and 1984. Many people joined the League during this time, as these debates introduced them to the League and they chose to support our work.
So why did the League stop sponsoring Televised National Presidential Debates? The short answer to the question is that in the 1988 election, the Democratic and Republican parties, jointly, decided to run the debates themselves. The ground rules they setup for these debates were something the League could not support. The following links, to press releases and press conferences from 1988, explain this decision:
State and local Leagues across the country continue to host debates for candidates running at all other levels of government, from U.S. House of Representatives and Senate to statewide offices, to city government and everything in between. The grassroots nature of the League enables us to engage communities in the process by hosting debates and other election activities. In California, the League maintains the VotersEdge.org website to help in providing that information.