Posted on 10/12/2012 5:36:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I think both candidates basically did what they needed to do in the vice presidential debate, which leaves the Republican ticket in a slightly better positionsince Bidens goal was damage control with the base and Ryans was reinforcing a positive impression with persuadable voters.
After the calamity they experienced in last weeks presidential debate, liberals needed to be bucked up by the Obama campaign, and I think they got that tonight. It probably came at a real costI have a feeling that Bidens hyper-aggressive and at times buffoonish performance (and perhaps especially his Joker grin, which seemed to me as much a product of nervousness as of intent) hurt the ticket some with independent voters and especially with womenbut it was a price the Obama campaign is probably quite willing to pay given the situation theyre now in. This debate didnt help them win persuadable voters, and it probably wont move the polls in their direction, but it will calm liberals down and it was absolutely essential for them to do that. The MSNBC types needed someone to be a jerk toward Paul Ryan to his face, and they got it.
Biden gave them what they needed by behaving the way liberals think Mitt Romney behaved in last weeks debatebasically like a strident bully who just says whatever he needs to say to shut down his opponent. The Left wished Obama had done that, and now they got to see Biden doing it. The trouble for them is that Romney didnt actually do that. He won by appealing to moderate voters through substantive arguments. Biden (and therefore Obama) wont gain that appeal from this debate.
For Paul Ryan, this was an important night. He didnt shine the way Romney did last week, but thats never really an option for the running mate. His job was to reinforce Romneys case and to pass the bar of presidential credibility himself, and he certainly did that. In his biggest moment on the national stage to date, he was calm, clear, thoughtful, and serious. Thats the image the Romney campaign needs to project in these final weeks, and its the image Ryan wants to project. He did it in part by not pressing every potential opportunity he had (whether intentionally or by truly missing those opportunities), so that for those of us who spend our days mired in the minutia of these policy debates it was sometimes frustrating to think that here was Ryan, who could basically make Joe Biden look like a fool on this or that issue, instead making a more general point and returning to the basic economic case. He had to decide on the fly how to handle Bidens strange behavior, and he probably made the right choice. Ryan was easily the more presidential figure on the stage (I might have said more vice presidential, but that would seem like an insult), and his command of the foreign policy issues that came up should go a long way toward putting to rest any concern about his expertise on that front.
Substantively, Biden was predictably demagogic on the key domestic issues. His argument on entitlements was basically dont listen to either side, just use your common sense, dont you trust Democrats more than Republicans on this? Thats a very good sign for Republicans, especially on Medicare, and especially because polls (including the debate focus group dials) suggest the answer isnt necessarily what Biden thinks it isor what it used to be just a few years ago. Republicans have made extraordinary gains on that front, and this is very largely Ryans own doing.
This was one place where my own policy obsessions left me thinking Ryan could have said more, and particularly that he might have pushed one more time on vouchers. I dont have any particular problem with the term voucher in a lot of policy contexts, but it is simply not an accurate description of a premium-support reform of Medicare, in which seniors would get their choice of coverage, not a voucher, and those whose choice was among the more expensive would make up the difference themselves while those who choose cheaper options would have no further out of pocket costs and might get some money back. At no point is there a voucher. This is exactly how the Medicare prescription-drug benefit, Medicare Advantage, and the federal employee insurance system through which Joe Bidens family has gotten insurance for forty years function. Are those voucher programs?
I also thought Ryan should have gone one step further into details on the tax planperhaps pointing to the idea of a cap on total exclusions at some dollar figure, as Romney has done. He tried to argue instead that the presidents job is to lay out principles (no increase in the deficit, no increase in middle class taxes, no reduction in the portion of the tax burden borne by the wealthy) and then reach decisions on particulars with congress. Thats certainly right, but Biden didnt let him make the argument, and he should have pushed back some by first providing the particulars that Raddatz (who clearly didnt understand his answer) was demanding. But these are the complaints of a wonkof a person who notices missed opportunities rather than simply listening to what was said.
On foreign policy, I think Ryan won handily and that the debate (along with the sheer facts of the Libya debacle of course) has largely robbed the administration of what it thought would be a foreign policy advantage going into the final weeks, and especially into the last presidential debate in two weeks, which is all about foreign policy. It was quite striking, of course, just how much foreign policy there was in this debate. It was clear from her questions that Martha Raddatz really knows a lot about foreign policy (so that she pushed against and argued with some of the liberal platitudes Biden was pushing) but knows only the basic liberal talking points on the domestic issues. Thats too badher aggressive and pressing style would have made for some good exchanges if she knew more about those subjects.
Ryan pushed especially effectively on Libya, and I actually think Bidens answers on that front were extremely problematic for the administration and will greatly complicate their efforts to control a growing, serious, and very ill-timed scandal. The bald-faced lie about requests for more security will just have to be rolled back, which will be a bit embarrassing. But Bidens throwing the intelligence community under the bus is a huge problem too. Any time a politician blames something on the intelligence community, you just know that a torrent of leaks from the intelligence community to the major papers is about to erupt, and I think we can bet on that happening here.
Above all, I think a voter stepping back from all of this would have to ask himself just what the Obama administration is actually proposing to do in the next four years. Anything different from the last four years? Anything in particular at all? This was basically a debate about the Romney agenda, with some thoughts on the Obama record thrown in. For a campaign whose motto is forward there was remarkably little forward-looking substance.
To assess the effect of it all on the race, I think an important question will be how many voters watched this debate, compared to the last one. For those who did, I imagine this will basically be a drawa tie between those who found Bidens bullying effective and those who found it off-putting. But among those who only hear about it in the coming days, I have a feeling that this will turn out to have been a bit of a problem for the Democrats. Ryans performance probably wont be much noted either way (which is about what he was going for, I suspect; he has now established his place in the very upper tier of American political life without even much of a fuss), but the two lasting impressions of this debate that will be talked about will be Bidens bizarre behavior and his false assertion about requests for security by American diplomats in Libya. As they struggle to close Romneys narrow lead, neither will be a welcome subject of discussion for the Democrats.
Roflmao. Thank you.
100% accurate in my assessment. “Malarkey” Joe was just being himself but the public that isn't familiar with his style may be put off somewhat and that may help the Romney/Ryan ticket. In four days the main combatants will be back front and center and this will be forgotten.
Someone needs to ask him what he meant.....the State Dept. Building...Hillary and HUMA....the White House...Barack HUSSEIN Obama.....the Pentagon, the EMBASSY??? What BUILDING, Mr. Nordstrom?? WHO???
"the Taliban is in the Building" needs to be PROBED.
Well, Plugs did show his cranky old man side most of the night. Not sure if that was Joe being Joe or if that was a planned strat? As far as moving the needle of the highly sought after independant voter.... he did his job. He didn’t push them over to Romney. So for Joe that was/is a very very good night.
The downside. After the debate all that was lost was 90 min of my life I wont ever get back!
RE: The moderator did ok to begin with but then started helping Biden..She did not tell Biden to shut up when he interrupted.
They counted the number of times Biden interrupted Ryan just as he was about to make his point.... 82 TIMES !!! UNPRECEDENTED.
It seems as if Biden was afraid for the people to hear Ryan’s logic and reasoning and tried to hide his own inadequacies by using his antics.
From the American Thinker:
***********
His smile was frightening. For most of the night Joe Biden looked like the Joker — Nicholson not Ledger.
After 3 ½ years of Biden’s playing the fool, it is hard to remember he was once considered a serious man, a serious politician. But...Barack wasn’t looking for a serious politician — he wanted a court jester — and that’s what he got.
Now, after playing the fool for so long he has become the fool. Yet, in the debate he wanted to again be a serious man — or at least play one on TV. He clearly showed why Clint Eastwood called him the “intellect” of the Democrat Party.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/10/bfd_bidens_failed_debate.html#ixzz295pVkAkA
Typical Dem-lib thinking he was/is the smartest guy in the room, acting as a bully in his position as Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and last night as "Oh, I am so above this. I am so smart and you are soooo stupid."
Ryan delivered as expected as he was the same person that handed Obama and his staff of morons their collective asses during the health care meeting.
Once again, the Dem-lib arrogance was on display as they also relied on their self-delusional assurance that their superior intellect would be an obstacle too huge for the lesser-cranially-blessed Republicans to rebut.
Can you imagine the old fart Biden as a president,he is so ignorant,he scares me..
Republicans need to redo the ad of the guy in the car telling the laughing Tip O’Neill look alike, “Congressman, we’re running out of gas.” with a laughing Joe Biden look alike and the man saying, “You have us headed in the wrong direction. This is the wrong way.”
LOL!
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