Tim Walz and JD Vance will go head to head in a vice-presidential argument on Wednesday AEST that follows the political sledges and relatively unlimited memes of Donald Trump and Kamala Harris’s telecasted match last month. It’s a crucial minute for Walz, the Democratic guv of Minnesota, and Vance, a Republican senator from Ohio, as 2 lower-profile political leaders who will most likely remain on the nationwide scene for several years to come. Abortion, Project 2025, environment crisis, military service which claim about felines and canines are amongst the concerns most likely to come up in the argument, which will not be kept in front of a live audience. Here’s what Australians can anticipate. How can I see the VP argument and what time is it? The vice-presidential argument will start at 11am AEST on Wednesday 2 October and run for 90 minutes. You can see the dispute on the Guardian or follow along on our live blog site, where personnel will be offering updates and scrutinising claims made by both vice-presidential prospects. Broadcaster CBS, which is hosting the argument, will be streaming the argument on its site and YouTube channel. Who have Harris and Trump picked as their VP choices? Vance, Trump’s proposed second-in charge, is the author of Hillbilly Elegy, a previous Silicon Valley financier and a never-Trumper turned Maga super star. Walz, Harris’s choice, is a previous location instructor and Amerian football coach, whose venture into politics in 2006 saw him increase the ranks to chair of the Democratic Governors Association. Some Australians state the “Oz-coded” Walz bears a striking similarity to the existing and numerous previous Australian PMs at the same time, consisting of Anthony Albanese, Kevin Rudd and Scott Morrison. Have Australian leaders revealed a choice for Vance or Walz? Not honestly. In July, Peter Dutton, sent his congratulations to JD Vance when Trump revealed the VP choice. The opposition leader worried the Australian federal government would continue to work carefully with its United States equivalent “regardless of whether it’s a Democrat or a Republican administration”. Anthony Albanese funnelled Harris and Walz’s categorisation of Trump and Vance as “simply strange” when Australia’s PM called Barnaby Joyce “strange” over remarks at an anti-windfarm rally in July.