With the Fox News, in conjunction with Facebook and the Ohio Republican Party, debate only one week away, candidates likely to make it to the main stage are beginning to hear some details.
According to two people familiar with the network's plans, candidates will get one minute to answer each question addressed to them by moderators Megyn Kelly, Chris Wallace and Bret Baier during the program, which begins at 9 p.m. Eastern time on August 6 at the Cleveland's Quicken Loans Arena.
Candidates who are called upon will be given only 30 seconds for rebuttals. If a candidate's name is invoked during someone's answer to a question, that candidate will get a chance to respond for a length of time at the moderator's discretion.
The campaign of one leading candidate believes after communications with Fox executives that there will not be a rigorous attempt to make sure all ten candidates get equal time to speak.
On the crowded stage of 10 candidates, the candidate with the highest polling numbers, currently Donald Trump, will stand at the center of the stage, with lower-polling candidates fanned out in alternating order to the left and right.
The debate will include the top 10 Republican candidates in national polls, as determined by Fox News.
Those who do not make the top ten prime-time debate are invited to take part in a 5 p.m. debate moderated by America's Newsroom co-anchors Bill Hemmer and Martha MacCallum.
NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker
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