Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD), U.S. organization established in 1987 that has sponsored U.S. general election presidential debates since 1988. The stated mission of the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) is
to ensure that debates, as a permanent part of every general election, provide the best possible information to viewers and listeners. Its primary purpose is to sponsor and produce debates for the United States presidential and vice presidential candidates and to undertake research and educational activities relating to the debates.
In 1987 the chairmen of the Republican and Democratic national committees, Frank Fahrenkopf and Paul Kirk, respectively, created the commission on the basis of recommendations from two studies—the 1985 National Election Study and the 1986 Twentieth Century Fund (from 1999, the Century Foundation) study of presidential debates that was chaired by former Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chair Newton Minow. Both studies concluded that presidential debates needed to be institutionalized and that a new entity, with the sole purpose of sponsoring general election presidential debates, should be formed. The recommendations included having the two parties start the commission as a way of ensuring participation by candidates. Although the party chairs were involved in the CPD’s formation, the political parties had no relationship to the CPD, a nonprofit, nonpartisan 501(c)(3) education organization.
The CPD is guided by a board of directors. An executive director oversees the day-to-day functioning of the CPD and the production of the debates. As a 501(c)(3) entity, the CPD cannot accept funds from political organizations, does not participate in any partisan activities, and does not lobby. Funding to run the CPD and to produce the debates comes from private sources. Over the commission’s history, sponsors have included the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), American Airlines, the Discovery Channel, the Ford Foundation, the Century Fund, and the Knight Foundation. Communities bid for the opportunity to host a debate and are required to raise local funds to offset costs of the production.
In addition to staging general election presidential and vice presidential debates, the CPD engages in a variety of voter-education projects. Its most prominent is DebateWatch, which encourages voters to host debate-watching gatherings and suggests procedures for the events and questions for discussion. Through a set of more than 100 voter-education partners, the CPD enables researchers to gather reactions to the debates in both survey and focus-group formats. The CPD also sponsors a variety of post-debate forums at which panelists, campaign staffers, and academic researchers discuss the impact of the debates and ways to improve them in subsequent election cycles. The commission’s staff produces video and print material to assist sponsors of local and state debates and advises the media in new democracies on how to develop their own debate traditions. The CPD also maintains records and transcripts of all televised general election debates.
Although the CPD has achieved the goal of institutionalizing debates, the process is not without its problems or detractors. Because candidates have staged campaigns independent of even party control, the CPD has had difficulty guaranteeing that candidates will debate, or agree on the dates selected and with the formats proposed. Although the CPD has no direct ties to political parties, the media has referred to it as bipartisan rather than nonpartisan because of its origins and its founding cochairs’ identification with the major parties. Even though the CPD included independent candidate Ross Perot in the 1992 debates, it is often criticized for not providing minor-party and independent candidates with an equal opportunity for participation. Despite the criticisms, the CPD has successfully produced debates over many election cycles that introduced new formats, emphasized voter education and research, and included citizen participants.
Following criticism for its handling of the 2020 debates and a 2022 Republican National Committee announcement that it would boycott the CPD, in May 2024 Pres. Joe Biden’s reelection campaign informed the CPD that the campaign would negotiate directly with former Pres. Donald Trump’s campaign to schedule presidential debates for the 2024 presidential election cycle. The campaigns agreed on two debates (June 27 and September 10) that would be conducted outside the commission’s process and broadcast on CNN and ABC News, respectively. For viewers without a cable subscription, CNN agreed to stream the debate on its website as well as provide the feed with their branding and commercials to other media outlets.