DOI: 10.1075/etc.25014.ary ISSN: 1874-8767

Turn-taking and argumentation in the 2020 US presidential debate

Maya Lisa Aryanti, Susi Yuliawati, Dian Ekawati, Nani Darmayanti

Abstract

Intense argumentation characterised the 2020 U.S. presidential debate. This study investigates the turn-taking strategies employed by Donald Trump and Joe Biden to build their arguments during the debate. The analysis draws on

Stenström’s (2014)
framework of turn-taking and
Toulmin’s (2003)
model of argumentation. A qualitative method is used, with data consisting of selected utterances from the first and second rounds of presidential debate videos obtained from C-SPAN. The findings indicate that “taking the turn” and its various subcategories are employed predominantly and assertively. Trump uses them to dominate the floor, while Biden adopts a more measured and structured approach. Trump’s arguments are characterised by assertive claims, specific backing, and repetition; Biden, by contrast, structures his arguments through data and warrants. Both candidates make use of distinct sub-strategies of “holding the turn” as they organise and deliver their logical arguments.

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