ABC News November 8, 2023

Trump keeps skipping the Republican debates and keeps dominating in primary polls

WATCH: What to watch for in 3rd GOP debate

As five 2024 Republican hopefuls take the debate stage in Miami to make their case to voters on Wednesday night, for the third time this year, the primary front-runner -- former President Donald Trump -- will once again be absent.

Trump has said he sees no value in attending the debates, despite some outcry and criticism, because his polling lead with GOP voters gives him no incentive to face attacks from the other candidates.

"I like to debate. I probably am here because of debates. I don't mind it at all," he told Fox News' Bret Baier in an interview this summer. "But when you're 40 points up .... Why would I let these people take shots at me?"

MORE: What to know about the 3rd Republican presidential primary debate

Having skipped the first two faceoffs, Trump continues to poll at No. 1 both nationally and in the key early primary states, according to 538.

Instead of debating, Trump has been holding various events as counter-programming. He plans to do that again on Wednesday, with a campaign rally in Hialeah, Florida, just 10 miles northwest of where his primary rivals will be debating.

Speaking in an area where Hispanics and Latinos make up 95% of the population, Trump's rally is intended to help him grow his support among a group who has trended Republican in recent years.

Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
Former President Donald Trump visits the Versailles restaurant in the Little Havana neighborhood after being arraigned at the Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. United States Federal Courthouse on June 13, 2023 in Miami, Florida.

The Hialeah rally will feature celebrity supporters and several of Trump's close allies, including former White House press secretary and now-Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders, who just endorsed her old boss. After the remarks, the Trump campaign is hosting a debate-style "spin room" with its own surrogates at the rally site, an attempt to take the spotlight away from his competitors.

The next day, on Thursday, Trump is throwing a party at his Mar-a-Lago Club for Florida Republican Party leaders -- a jab at DeSantis in the governor's home state.

MORE: Who will win the third Republican debate?

In the wake of the second debate, Trump's team called for the Republican Party to cancel the future ones in order to focus on the potential rematch between him and President Joe Biden.

Trump echoed that while speaking at the Florida Freedom Summit over the weekend, saying it was time for the "Republican establishment to stop wasting time and money trying to push weak [Republicans in name only] and 'Never Trumpers' that nobody wants on the ballot."

The Washington Post via Getty Im
Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis Vivek Ramaswamy, Sen. Tim Scott and Former vice president Mike Pence arrive on stage for the second Republican presidential primary debate hosted by Fox News at Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif., September 27, 2023.

During the first GOP debate, in August, Trump released an hourlong pre-taped interview with Tucker Carlson. And during the second GOP debate, in September, he held a campaign rally in front of an auto manufacturing plant in Clinton Township, Michigan, to court workers amid the United Auto Workers strike (though the plant itself was non-union).

His primary challengers have been increasingly vocal about their criticism of him not facing them in debates, with DeSantis even mockingly inviting him to bring a teleprompter to the stage if he wants.

Saul Martinez/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Former president Donald Trump, speaks at a Club 47 USA event in West Palm Beach, Florida on October 11, 2023.
MORE: Trump, DeSantis and others balk at future Republican debates, with competing calls to change or cancel them

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Trump adviser-turned-vocal critic, taunted Trump during the second GOP debate in September for "ducking" the other candidates and not having to defend his record, calling him "Donald Duck."

On Monday, Christie insisted that he believes Trump will, eventually, show up to a debate "because he knows that his most effective moments are when he's on television."