Posted on 09/08/2011 7:30:09 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The first Republican debate with former frontrunner Mitt Romney as a hungry challenger took place last night, and in many ways it unfolded largely as I predicted. Romney mainly stuck to his above-the-fray strategy except for a couple of notable exchanges in the beginning with the new frontrunner, Rick Perry. Perry avoided looking or sounding scary despite the best attempts of the moderators to make him stumble. Michele Bachmann may in fact have been the only real loser of the debate despite giving a credible performance.
Lets start with Perry, who was the focus of the attention for his first debate. The Texas governor did well, especially on a late question on the death penalty and when he challenged both Karl Rove and Dick Cheney on Social Security. He gave a good explanation of how the current model of Social Security is indeed a Ponzi scheme for the younger contributors who have no hope of seeing any benefits without serious reform, and rejected the idea that telling the truth was so provocative that it shouldnt be done in an election. Romney had one of his weakest moments when he scolded Perry for scaring people while conceding that Perry was right, which made Mitt look as though pandering rather than telling the truth is preferable.
On the other hand, Perry gave a surprisingly weak answer on a gotcha question about climate change (Can you name any scientists?), a topic for which he should have been prepared. Bachmann did better on the follow-up. Perry also revealed a tendency to pause while reaching for the right words, which some speakers usually fill with trite phrases like Let me be perfectly clear. He needs to improve if he expects to joust with Barack Obama in the general election, who looks more natural on the debate stage than Perry. However, he didnt give anyone a reason to not support him as a nominee and should keep his momentum intact. Perry certainly came across as a fighter and a plain speaker, which will boost his chances among the Republican base.
Other than the weak moment on Social Security, Romney excelled in the debate at maintaining a presidential approach. Even the sharp exchanges with Perry in the beginning didnt get at all personal, and at least one time Romney defended Perry, noting that Perry had already admitted that he shouldnt have approached the Gardasil vaccination by executive order. More than most on stage, Romney kept bringing the debate back to Barack Obama rather than the other candidates on the stage. Romney made a strong showing as an alternative to Perry. Bachmann had a technically good debate, but far short of what she needed last night. A slew of polls show her dropping back into the second tier after Perrys entry into the race, and nothing that she did during the debate will have former supporters returning to her side. She had nothing to lose by going on the attack, but Bachmann seemed curiously disengaged, and more passive than any other debate in which she has participated. Dont be surprised to see Bachmann fading even further into the background after tonight.
Jon Huntsman had a great debate for about three-quarters of the event. He came across as magnanimous, focused on Obama, and offered a coherent center-right view. Unfortunately, he followed in Tim Pawlentys footsteps when the moderators asked him to repeat assertions from him and his campaign strategist about the supposed anti-science loons sharing the stage with him. Huntsman, who did nothing to distance himself from John Weavers remarks earlier, refused to repeat his earlier accusations and weakly insisted that he didnt answer for Weaver. Like Pawlenty, the sudden lack of intestinal fortitude on camera eliminated whatever credibility Huntsman built this week with his economic plan and the earlier debate performance.
Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain had good debates, too. Gingrich went after the moderators again, which at least gives him some real value to the other Republicans on stage. Dont expect to see Perry or Romney asking to get Newt out of any debates in the future. Cain is always engaging on stage and scored points on economics, but no more so than in any other debate. Santorum was mainly a non-factor, while Ron Paul was Ron Paul. He jabbed Perry over HillaryCare, and Perry jabbed him right back over his 1987 letter to the RNC repudiating his party membership because of Ronald Reagan, which left Paul sputtering.
Overall, Id say that Romney and Perry did well, Romney perhaps a little more so, while Bachmann lost by not engaging, and the rest of the field didnt make a case for their relevancy to the eventual outcome. If Perry can work on his delivery a bit over the next two debates, this will become a two-man race.
In our Green Room, Kevin McCullough calls Rick Perry the big winner of the evening, and applauds all of the participants for an excellent and spirited debate.
Update: Bryan Preston at the PJ Tatler also calls it for Perry, and makes an interesting point about Obama being the biggest loser:
_______________________________________
By comparison to all but one of the candidates, the president comes off poorly. He delivers a speech before tomorrow nights NFL kickoff that will not be as substantive or as interesting as this debate. Despite the atmosphere of a joint session of Congress he will seem small because his ideas are small and he is a proven failure in his office. I doubt that Americans will have any qualms replacing him next year with a solid, credible Republican, and there were many of those engaged in this debate tonight.
Media hard at work, picking candidates for us more than a year out.
msnbc online poll showed Ron Paul won the debate!
Total of 120,159 votes -
Ron Paul 49.7%(59,708 votes)
Mitt Romney 17.4%(20,898 votes)
Rick Perry 14.6%(17,502 votes)
Jon Huntsman 6.9%(8,307 votes)
Newt Gingrich 4.8%(5,719 votes)
Herman Cain 3.4%(4,030 votes)
Michele Bachmann 2.3%(2,718 votes)
Rick Santorum 1.1%(1,277 votes)
Here is a list of several polls regarding last nights debate, and they show Ron Paul won the debate!
The Paultards are once again duped into making sure our choices are RINOs or Obama.
Paul didn’t win anything except to keep control of his paulbots. Online polls are worth only the paper they are written on.
RINO’s as in Perry, Romney, those rino’s. Wow it is time to elect a real patriot, and Paul can win!
Not uncommon polls ‘use’ Ron Paul as the bookmark....most recognize this goes with the polling game.
Sorry but nobody’s ‘talking’ in the news about Ron Paul...he remains a placemark only, just as in previous election. Some things just never change....
Only a drug sodden morons think Paul can win.
Unfortunately Paul knows that and is actively helping Mitt Perry by stringing morons along like the pied piper.
The odd thing is Ron Paul knows he’s a bookmark but fails to let his supporters know. It works for him in keeping them full of false hope.
RE: msnbc online poll showed Ron Paul won the debate!
Can anyone explain tome what this logic Ron Paul presented means, because I don’t get how it applies:
PARAPHRASING
“If you build a fence to keep illegals out, be careful, because the same fence can also be used to keep Americans IN the country if they want to leave.”
He seems to think that the fence that we build will be used as some sort of Berlin Wall on US Citizens.
Williams/Harris were particularly off-putting, especially Politico Harris who was clearly in over his head. The questions were biased and accusatory, as the two questioners struggled to spark a real debate. Williams/Harris failed to ask the most important questions.
============================================
The Perry contradictions were starkly evident. As a presidential candidate Perry knows he has to appear tough on illegals. But Governor Perry is another story. He acts like no one knows about his activities in Texas.
* Governor Perry established sanctuary cities for illegals. * Governor Perry refigured sub-prime mortgage laws that helped illegals stiff taxpayers. * Gov Perry gave illegals in-state college tuition. * Gov Perry went to Mexico and criticized US amnesty policy (while standing on foreign soil). * Gov Perry criticized Arizona's immigration enforcement law and opposes border fences. * Governor Perry has done nothing about savage Zetas ensconced in Big D-Dallas, operating drug cartels seemingly with his tacit blessing. * Gov Perry has apparently already endorsed legalization under the guise of guest worker programs (same trick tried by George W. Bush).
Perry wants to have it both ways. For an unabashedly proud law-and-order man bragging about relentless Texas executions, Perry is too blasé about the real threats to Americans by law-breaking illegals who overflow our jails.
(Cue in Perrydactyls foaming at the mouth.)
We are so past this...and might add, that Newt seems to be the only candidate to take Obama's ugly truth to those listening.
Our 'frontrunners' would benefit greatly if they shared some 'Newt Wisdom' - and that of Allen West and Marco Rubio, for that matter.
Hey, ElRon wins nearly ALL the uncontrolled polls.
Fortunately for US, those are about the *only* polls he wins — the unscientific ones that are easily manipulated by the paultard hordes.
Good point. These supporters of Paul’s are feeding a huge ego.
Especially online polls on MSNBC since few if any conservatives actually read that site. Paul wins an unscientific online poll when paulbots and Democrats vote for a winner. Yippee.
Paul looked like the insane uncle again with his bizarre theory that building a wall to secure our southern border would somehow be used to keep Americans from.....fleeing to Mexico? The guy is a loon.
>> Am still amazed - in the worst way - that Mitt offers up that “Obama is a nice guy”
Give him a break — he doesn’t mean it, he’s just pandering to his base (hardcore ‘rats).
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