Donald Trump is done with debates.
“We just don’t think that there’s any need for it,” the 45th president exclusively told The Post Thursday after announcing on Truth Social he would not take the stage against Vice President Kamala Harris again.
“We’ve done two. You know, one against Biden[on June 27], one against Comrade Kamala. I did well. I did really well,” the 78-year-old said during a phone interview.
“The debate polls, every single poll, had us winning it.”
Shortly before Trump’s announcement, the campaign blasted out a “confidential memorandum” claiming that its internal polling had showed the Republican nominee gaining two percentage points on Harris among likely voters across seven unidentified “target states.”
The GOP campaign had previously argued that the Harris camp should “stop f—ing around,” in the words of one Trump spokesperson, and take up the former president’s offer of a Sept. 25 debate hosted by NBC News.
Instead, the Harris camp countered by proposing a debate to be held sometime in October.
“There’s no debate on the 25th,” Trump told The Post Thursday afternoon. “Nothing has been arranged.”
Trump remained sore about his treatment Tuesday night by ABC News moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis, who were criticized forletting Harris skate on her falsehoods while giving Trump the third degree.
“I think she had the questions. And I think that the anchors … were a disgrace to American journalism,” Trump told The Post.
“You saw the way that was done, that was ridiculous,” he added.
“They didn’t challenge her on all of those things that they knew were false.”
The former president had initially proposed three debates with Harris — one hosted by Fox News Sept. 4, one hosted by ABC News Sept. 10, and one hosted by NBC News Sept. 25.
After the Democratic campaign passed up the Fox debate, Trump took part in a town hall in Harrisburg, Pa. alongside primetime host Sean Hannity.