Impact Development in Congressional Debate
Impact Development in Congressional Debate
Impact Development in Congressional Debate
By Ryan Fedasiuk
What is an impact?
Hopefully by now you are familiar with the basic structure of an argument
in Congressional Debate: Claim, Warrant, Data, Impact (CWDI). The impact
is the most important part of any point in a congress speech.
At its core, an impact represents why your argument matters. It is a
statement of significance. You should be able to begin any impact with the
phrase, This matters because In an average debate on a single piece of
legislation, you will hear at least twelve speeches featuring (usually) two
arguments in each speech. The purpose of the impact is to differentiate your
two arguments from the other twenty-two the judge will hear in the span of
an hour.
Moreover, something I have noticed since graduating is that, as a judge, I
do not have the time or energy to carefully study and dissect each individual
argument presented in a congress round. Strong, persuasive, humanized
impacts are what set speakers apart in my mind. A well-developed impact
separates the strong from the weak. In close final rounds, it can literally
mean the difference between first and last place.
Humanizing impacts
Overview
Look back at the terminal impacts in the previous section. What do both of
them have in common? Yes, they are both dramatic and unbelievable. But on
a more fundamental level, both of these impacts talk about how people are
affected by your argument. In my opinion, this is the most important
element of any impact you could conceive. If there is one thing you should
learn from this webinar, it is how to humanize impacts.
I break humanization down into two distinct elements: people and poetry. A
successfully humanized impact usually incorporates both elements as
appropriate.
People
Every impact you ever give in a congress speech should be about people.
Period. There are no exceptions to this rule. Here is a quick checklist to find
out if your impact violates this tenet:
Every impact must be an answer to the question, How does this affect
people? More often than not, all it takes is the addition of one sentence to
the end of your impact in order to solidify the human element.
Examples: People
Impacts in red are insufficient because they do not talk about people.
Impacts in blue are improved, humanized versions of the red ones. In other
words, you would add the blue impact to the end of the red impact for the
best outcome in a speech.
This bill generates $5 billion for the economy, improving economic activity.
Thats money our constituents can use to pay off their student loans or
start businesses.
This bill creates 800,000 American jobs.
Fewer Americans will worry about their ability to provide for their
family or pay for their childs college education.
We protect the environment by significantly reducing carbon emissions.
6 | Impact Development with Ryan Fedasiuk
By creating 800,000 jobs, fewer Americans will wade through
the murky existence of unemployment. They wont have to worry
about paying for their childs college education by taking out payday
loans, because theyll have an IRA instead.
We protect the environment by significantly reducing carbon emissions.
Fewer people will develop breathing complications; theyll spend less money
on hospital stays.
for example, you cannot use the same one at Harvard. The best way to
procure a list of sound bites is to read a lot of articles and listen to debates
and speeches given by real politicians. Some of my favorite one-liner sound
bites include:
The best strategy when incorporating poetry in impacts is to keep your micdrop sound bite as the last line of your point. You can pre-prepare that one
line and write it down; the rest of your impact should flow naturally from
your analysis and speaking. Once you reach the line and deliver it, pause for
a second and move to your next point or conclusion.
Speak from the heart and make your audience care. Dont force poetization,
else your impacts will not be convincing and they will just seem overblown.
Weighing mechanisms
Instead of attacking your opponents warrants and link chains, sometimes it
is more strategic to assume their argument is correct and instead attack the
importance of their impacts. Comparing the impacts of two arguments is
called weighing, and clearly explaining which argument is more important
is part of impact calculus.
There are four primary weighing mechanisms in Congressional Debate:
1. Magnitude
Refers to how large an impact is: three million versus five
million people affected, $2.6 billion versus $3.2 trillion gained,
800,000 versus 1.6 million jobs lost.
2. Scope / Severity
Refers to the severity of an impact: three million people will
break their foot if we negate, but two thousand people will die if
we affirm. Death is more severe.
3. Timeframe
Refers to the timeframe in which we will see an impact.
Generating $100 million in one year might be better than
generating $5 billion over one hundred years.
4. Probability
Refers to how likely it is an impact will happen. Affirming
increases the chance of human extinction by 0.1 percent, but
negating increases the chance of war with China by three
percent. War is more probable so we should negate.
When weighing, you may be explicit in the wording you use. Directly
compare two impacts and explain that one is larger/smaller, more/less
severe, has a shorter/longer timeframe, or is more/less probable. Do not say
the affirmative outweighs on magnitudethis uses too much debate
jargon.
You may also use these weighing mechanisms to stress the importance of
your own argument without directly comparing it to anyone elses impact
directly. By underscoring how short of a timeframe your impact will occur
in, you convey to the judge the urgency of what you are talking about.