1st presidential debate between Trump and Biden spirals into chaotic clash

Highlights from the first presidential debate held in Cleveland.

President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee for president Joe Biden faced off from a social distance in the first presidential debate of 2020 in Cleveland, just five weeks out from Election Day.

The first presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Clinic came on the heels of bombshell reporting from The New York Times on two decades of Trump's tax records, ahead of a contentious Supreme Court confirmation process in the Senate and as the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll shows Biden maintains a 10-point edge among both registered and likely voters.

The coronavirus pandemic's impact on the race was also on display as the two candidates didn't partake in a handshake, customary at the top of such events. The size of the audience was also limited and everyone attending the debate had to undergo COVID-19 testing and follow other public health protocols.

The debate’s moderator, Chris Wallace of "Fox News Sunday," selected six topics for Tuesday with each segment expected to get approximately 15 minutes: Trump's and Biden's records, the Supreme Court, COVID-19, the economy, race and violence in U.S. cities, and the integrity of the election -- the final topic coming as Trump over the weekend wouldn’t commit to a peaceful transfer of power.


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Wallace asks Trump to stop interrupting

Moderator Chris Wallace has repeatedly tried to keep Trump from interrupting Biden.

"It's hard to get any word in with this clown," Biden said, "excuse me, this person."


Amid bombshell reporting in the New York Times on the past two decades of Trump's taxes, Wallace put the first question to the president.

"Is it true that you paid $750 in federal income taxes?" Wallace asked.

"I paid millions of dollars in taxes," Trump responded. "Millions of dollars of income tax."

But the president never fully answered if that was federal income tax.

Trump paid just $750 in income taxes in 2016, the year he ran for president, and in 2017, his first year in the White House, according to the Times report.

Biden, meanwhile, paid nearly $288,000 in federal income taxes last year, according to returns he released just hours before his Tuesday night debate, an effort to draw a sharp contrast with the revelations about Trump's tax returns.

Democrats said if the president is upwards of $400 million in debt as the New York Times has reported, he poses a national security threat to the country.

Wallace pressed on, asking "Mr. President, I'm asking you a question. Will you tell us how much you paid in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017?

"Millions of dollars," Trump replied.

The president then blamed Biden for the tax codes since Biden has worked for so long in Washington.

"I'm going to eliminate the Trump tax cuts," Biden said.

"You are the worst president America has ever had," Biden continued.

"Let me just say, I've done more in 47 months than you've done in 47 years, Joe," Trump replied.


Trump brings up Biden’s son Hunter without mentioning him by name

In a heated discussion on tax policy, Biden criticized Trump's trade policies with China which led to the first thinly veiled mention of Hunter Biden on stage.

"He talks about the art of the deal. China's perfected the art of the steal. We have a higher deficit with China now than we did before, we have the highest deficit -- trade deficit with Mexico," Biden said, before Trump interrupted.

"China ate your lunch, Joe. And no wonder your son goes in and he takes out what he takes out, billion of dollars," Trump said, before launching personal attacks on Biden's son, Hunter Biden, and his business dealings while his father was vice president. Hunter Biden has denied any wrongdoing.

"We want to talk about families and ethics? I don't want to do that. I mean his family, we can talk about all night," Biden responded, then said the American people don't want to hear about their families.


Biden asks voters: 'How well are you doing?'

Asked about how they would deal with economic recovery, Trump said he would avoid further shutdowns, touted the current economic recovery and credited himself with bringing back college football.

"Our country is coming back incredibly well, setting records as it does it. We don't need somebody to come in and say let's shut it down," Trump said, though Biden said he would not impose a full shutdown as the president suggested.

Biden then took the opportunity to speak directly to American families on Trump's taxes and repeated his mantra that the U.S. "can't fix the economy without fixing COVID."

"The difference is millionaires and billionaires like him in the middle of the COVID crisis have done very well," Biden said. "You folks living in Scranton and Clayton and all the small towns and working-class towns in America: How well are you doing?"


At least 1.1 million voters already cast their ballots in the 2020 election ahead of 1st presidential debate, according to election expert's analysis

Ahead of tonight's presidential debate, a first opportunity to see former Vice President Joe Biden and President Trump spar over a range of critical issues, some voters already decided who they are voting for.

At least 1.1 million ballots have already been cast in the 2020 election, according to data compiled by Michael McDonald, an elections expert and professor of political science at the University of Florida.

Across the 14 state reporting data -- Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, Iowa, Illinois, Virginia, South Carolina, Montana, South Dakota and New Jersey -- voters cast a total of 1,144,059 ballots, as of the most recent reports.

McDonald cautions that the total number is likely higher because he does not "have complete reports for all states."

On Sunday, when the vote total was just under 1 million, McDonald wrote in his analysis that the volume of early voters "this far in advance of an election has never occurred in any American election. Period."

"Around this time in 2016, I noted only 9,525 people had voted," he wrote. "There literally is no comparison since at this comparable point in time in 2016, so few people had cast early votes that states did not bother to release any data."

-ABC News' Kendall Karson