Speaking to Fox News, Trump said, “I think my only regret is that I wanted to be elegant, and I didn’t want to go after the anchors. I wish I did, in a way.”
“I was very unfairly treated by the anchor. I’m not a fan of those guys anymore – and his hair was better five years ago,” Trump quipped, adding, “That happens with the clock.”
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump faced each other for the first time on September 11. Both candidates claimed victory following the debate. However, Team Trump lashed out at the anchors, accusing them of being partial towards Harris. Trump later refused to participate in another debate with Vice President Harris.
Meanwhile, a new poll released Wednesday shows Kamala Harris with significant leads over Donald Trump in the swing states of Pennsylvania and Michigan, two “blue wall” battlegrounds seen as key to winning the White House in November.
The surveys, conducted after the September 10 televised debate between the two candidates, suggest a post-showdown boost for Vice President Harris, who is widely perceived as having outperformed her Republican opponent on stage.In the latest Quinnipiac University poll of likely voters, Harris leads Trump 51 percent to 45 percent in Pennsylvania, and 50 percent to 45 percent in Michigan, two states in the post-industrial Rust Belt in the American Midwest and Northeast.A third Rust Belt state, Wisconsin, is essentially tied, with Harris leading by one percentage point, according to Quinnipiac.
Overall polling shows an extremely close race in the seven battleground states that will likely determine the winner in the U.S. Electoral College system.
Trump holds a narrow lead in the Sun Belt states of Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina, according to an amalgamation of polls on RealClearPolitics.com. Harris is barely ahead in the fourth Sun Belt state of Nevada.