Why do we only formally debate during elections?

<p>I was fascinated this week by the debate between Tim Ryan and J.D. Vance for the Senate seat in Ohio. Ryan is an interesting guy, and I suppose I personally enjoy watching a working-class hero do a master balancing act between his blue collar and his blue suit. What language will he use? How emotional will he be? Will he&nbsp;<em>present</em>&nbsp;as a polished politico or as a man of the people, the guy who wrote that book about farming? He seems to do both well, even though he&rsquo;s been in Congress for 20 years and, well&hellip;never seems to have had a job that wasn&rsquo;t on Capitol Hill. At the other end of the stage was Vance, who went from venture capitalist to celebrated memoirist to renowned Trump kiss-ass, who spent most of the time dodging very legitimate claims that he funded January 6 insurrectionists and is a right-wing election-denying extremist. It was an eventful clash.</p> <p><a href="https://juliovincent.medium.com/why-do-we-only-formally-debate-during-elections-d43adf206841"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>