The face-off between vice presidential candidates Mike Pence and Tim Kaine focused heavily on the credentials and positions of their running mates, Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Though lacking some of the bombast of last week's presidential debate, throughout the spirited and, at times, interruption-filled discussion, each vice presidential nominee detailed his campaign's platform and attacked the record of the opposing ticket.
ABC News took stock of some of the debate's most memorable lines:
Sen. Tim Kaine shared a similar sentiment during his speech at the Democratic National Convention in July, saying then, "On a personal level, as [my son] is serving our nation abroad, I trust Hillary Clinton with our son's life. Now you know who I don't trust? Hmm, I wonder. Donald Trump."
Kaine was quick to attack Trump, honing in on the question of why Pence would align himself with the Republican nominee.
After Kaine's attack, Pence flipped the script, accusing the Democrats of being the aggressors.
Kaine delivered two references to Trump's former reality TV show, "The Apprentice," within the debate's first 20 minutes.
Pence brushed off Kaine's attack lines, accusing the Democrat -- and Hillary Clinton -- of coming to the debates with rehearsed remarks.
Pence attempted to defend the Republican presidential candidate against a New York Times report that Trump claimed a loss so large in 1995 that he could have avoided paying federal income taxes for up to 18 years by saying Trump took advantage of every deduction afforded to him. Kaine said Trump's lack of transparency makes it hard to know for sure.
Moderator Elaine Quijano of CBS News stepped in after the first part of the debate was marked by the candidates frequently interrupting and talking over each other.
Pence was responding to Kaine's claim that Trump had a led an "insult-driven" campaign when he turned the attack around to focus on a line delivered by Clinton at a private fundraiser in New York on Sept. 9.
After Pence invoked the "basket of deplorables" remark, Kaine said that Clinton's comment was a mistake and that she apologized the next day. He then listed a number of statements made by Trump, including insults of Sen. John McCain, President Obama and African-Americans, saying that Trump had never said he was sorry.
Kaine made the case that Pence was altering the Republican campaign platform during the debate rather than standing behind prior claims made by Trump.
Pence said Kaine crossed a line after the Democratic vice presidential nominee sought to raise doubts about Trump's temperament by paraphrasing a Ronald Reagan quote that "some fool or maniac could trigger a catastrophic event" with the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
Pence sought to paint his running mate's off-the-cuff style as a positive trait and said the Republican nominee may not have meant what he said when he told MSNBC's Chris Matthews at a town hall in March, that -- if abortions were banned -- when a woman has one "there has to be some form of punishment."
Pence responded with apparent frustration after Kaine continued to criticize Trump for the abortion-punishment line and also again brought up the Republican presidential nominee's announcement of his candidacy in June 2015 when he said some Mexicans are "rapists."
The conversation turned back to abortion, with Kaine questioning why Pence thinks government should dictate if women can decide whether to have an abortion.