CHAPIN, S.C. — President Joe Biden 's campaign provided lists of approved questions to two radio hosts who did the first interviews with him after his faltering debate performance, both hosts said on Saturday.
Biden's Thursday appearances on Black radio shows in the critical states of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania were his first chances to show he could answer questions and discuss his record after a debate in which the 81-year-old repeatedly struggled to complete sentences and press his case against Republican Donald Trump.
Radio host Earl Ingram said Saturday that Biden aides reached out to him directly for his interview that aired Thursday and sent him a list of four questions in advance, about which there was no negotiation.
''They gave me the exact questions to ask,'' Ingram, whose ''The Earl Ingram Show'' is broadcast statewide across 20 Wisconsin outlets, told The Associated Press. ''There was no back and forth.''
But moving forward from the pair of radio interviews, the Biden campaign plans to refrain from offering suggested questions to hosts, according to a person familiar with the candidate's interview booking process but not permitted to speak publicly about its operations.
But while the interviews were meant as part of an effort to restore faith in Biden's ability not just to govern over the next four years but to successfully campaign, the revelation instead created questions about whether Biden was capable of performing in ad-hoc, unscripted moments following his disastrous debate performance.
Appearing with Ingram earlier on CNN, Andrea Lawful-Sanders — host of ''The Source'' on WURD in Philadelphia — said that she had received a list of eight questions, from which she approved four.
WURD said Sunday that the interview had been arranged and negotiated by Lawful-Sanders independently ''without knowledge, consultation or collaboration with WURD management."