- Tue Aug 19, 2025 4:13 pm
#114051
Hey Aneesa,
This is a weaken question, so we want to first identify the author's argument (conclusion) and then look at how the author reached that conclusion (identify premesis). We'll weaken the argument by attacking a premise.
Here, the conlusion is that winning a televised debate does little to help win an election. The reasoning for that is that most people who watch the debates already have their mind made up and those who are undecided are still unsure who to vote for afterwards.
Reading this intially, I see a population that the stimulus didn't account for at all - people who didn't watch the debate. Perhaps among people who watch the debate, there is no impact, but if there are a lot of undecided voters who don't watch the debate, perhaps they can impact the election. If I was to paraphrase, I would be looking for an answer choice that has to do with this population being influenced.
Answer choice (A) doesn't work because it just tells us people are might be more likely to vote, but not how they will vote. The author's argument, that people won't be swayed to switch votes via a debate, still stands.
Answer choice (B) is correct, because it addresses this other population of people who didn't watch the debate and says they actually will be influenced (albiet indirectly) by the debate results. Therefore, the author's argument that debate results are irrelevant is weakened.
Answer choice (C) doesn't weaken because even if there are differences, the author says decided voters won't change their mind and undecided voters will still be undecided, and that can be true even if there are different opinions about who won.
Answer choice (D) is tempting, but it's not as strong as answer choice (B) because it only says people "may" be influenced. The author themselves says winning a debate does "little" to bolster chances, so it wouldn't necessarily weaken the argument to add this answer choice in.
Answer choice (E) basically restates part of the author's point, so that doesn't weaken - decided voters will stick with their initial choice no matter what happens in the debate, so debate results don't really matter. So this is incorrect.
hope that helps!