Posted on 10/03/2012 11:39:15 PM PDT by Second Amendment First
Colorado presidential debate: Media piles on moderator Jim Lehrer By: Mackenzie Weinger October 4, 2012 01:18 AM EDT
The loser of Wednesday nights debate, according to many pundits and political commentators?
Moderator Jim Lehrer.
Lehrer, the executive editor of PBS Newshour, sat behind the desk for the 12th time in the history of televised presidential debates on Wednesday night and drew some of the most blistering reviews of his career. The consensus: Lehrer did not control the debate, failed to enforce the time limits, did not press the candidates enough and generally was steamrolled by the presidential candidates, Mitt Romney in particular.
(Also on POLITICO: Lehrer: The master of moderation)
Fox News Sundays Chris Wallace criticized Lehrer for seeming to lose some control of the candidates, and questioned whether his questions sometimes helped President Barack Obama.
Jim Lehrer, a man for whom I have tremendous esteem, seemed to lose control of the debate, occasionally, Wallace said. He seemed to just simply throw something out there to keep the conversation going, sometimes it seemed to be helping Obama, like saying, Well, gee, so you are for a balanced approach of tax cuts and spending tax increases and spending cuts, and that really seemed to lose some control.
On MSNBC, Chris Matthews knocked Lehrer for not being aggressive, saying, I thought the moderator did not moderate.
He didnt follow up, Matthews said. Today, moderators are expected to be aggressive, theyre going to ask a question, they throw it out there, they dont just say a topic. They ask a question.
Also on MSNBC, The Huffington Posts Howard Fineman blasted Lehrer as practically useless.
Jim Lehrer was practically useless as the moderator, Fineman said. It was criminal negligence not to follow up on the question Mr. Romney, specifically what tax loopholes or deductions do you want to get rid of? He didnt ask it.
CNN contributor James Carville said Lehrer let those guys freelance and go back and forth, and MSNBCs Rachel Maddow noted that Lehrer to the extent that he tried to assert himself got rolled over by Romney again and again and again.
Before the debate, NBCs Ted Koppel defended Lehrers role as debate moderator, telling POLITICO that the pressing in a debate needs to come from the adversary: Its up to the candidates to say to one another, I heard Jims question and youre not answering it. This is not about whether we want Jim Lehrer to be president.
And The Washington Posts Erik Wemple backed Lehrer afterward, writing that the moderator deserves a nod for the excellent debate.
He moderated the thing, after all, Wemple wrote. Much of the vitriol headed his way grinds at his inability to enforce time limits, which are arbitrary and dumb anyhow.
Lerhers real problem was that, for one night, he hads [sic] to play stand-in for the entire American media. And if theres one thing the American public enjoys, its bashing the American media, no matter how it performs, he added.
But many of Lehrers fellow TV hosts tweeted throughout the evening, saying they wished Lehrer would make his presence known. This isnt a debate, its just a polite exchange of views, CNNs Piers Morgan wrote. Come on Jim, get in there and rev things up a bit. David Gregory of NBCs Meet the Press, meanwhile, noted it would be great to have more follow up to pin down their views.
Some were more stark with their assessment of Lehrer: NBCs Today show weatherman Al Roker tweeted, I hope Jim Lehrer gets the license plate of the truck that drove over him in this debate.
Many on Twitter commented on Lehrers inability to control Romney, with Aaron Blake from The Washington Posts The Fix blog writing, Romney is totally overpowering Lehrer. Comedian Bill Maher called for Lehrer to push back against Romney, tweeting, Hey Lehrer, youre the f-ing ref, stop letting the Mittbot bully you - he cant fire YOU. That wasnt the only foul-mouthed tweet of the evening, with The New Republic editor Franklin Foer writing, Biggest p of the night: Obama or Lehrer? Im one of the few undecideds.
Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas dubbed the moderator tonights Clint Eastwood, and Commentary magazine editor John Podhoretz tweeted that Lehrer may be the worst moderator in the history of moderation. But Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein offered a more sympathetic take, tweeting, I feel badly for Jim Lehrer tonight.
The Huffington Posts Sabrina Siddiqui summed up the medias take on Twitter: Tonights loser: Jim Lehrer.
© 2012 POLITICO LLC
I am going to start using that- very good!
Yet Obama got FOUR minutes more than Romney. How was Obama disadvantage?
What really drives me crazy is every time Romney says some raising of taxes on small business people will prevent them from hiring more workers. And then Obama doesn’t call him on it. Neither of them must ever have done their own small business taxes. If they had, they would know that the cost of workers is deducted from the GROSS income, and the taxes are charged on the Adjusted Gross Income less other allowed deductions. Paying workers is a business cost, fully deductible, like machinery, office supplies, etc.
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