Romney-Obama

The Denver debate.  I wasnā€™t impressed with the debate structure, moderation or candidate performances.  Some quick takeaways:

  • I was generally bored.  How much did we really learn?  If I was bored, I canā€™t imagine what non-political junkies thought.
  • Mitt Romney was all over the place during the first half of the debate.  (Update: it was mentioned to me that this was by design, I agree).  He was nervous.  He seemed to be trying to cram in all of his taking points, and he seemed over-prepared.  He turned the corner on that with the exchange on entitlement spending and finished the debate strong.  He was definitely more aggressive than Obama.  His ā€œtrickle-downā€ comment was, in my opinion, his most memorable ā€“ ā€œThe president has a view very similar to the view he had when he ran four years ago, that a bigger government, spending more, taxing more, regulating more ā€” if you will, trickle-down government ā€” would work. That’s not the right answer for America.ā€  If this were a boxing match Romney landed more punches.  Also, "Mr. President you’re entitled to your own house, your own airplane, but not your own facts."  Zing!
  • President Barack Obama seemed to be unable to maintain eye contact with Romney and had a smirk when listening to Romney that Iā€™m not sure will be received well by undecideds.  He was subdued, and not sharp.  You can tell it has been four years since his last debate.
  • It took President Obama a full half hour before he reached for the Blame Bush card.  I was shocked by his restraint.
  • Did anybody else have a hard time not laughing when President Obama tried to talk about how he was going to cut the deficit?
  • Romney clearly won on substance ā€“ in particular when discussing taxes, entitlement spending, education and the role of the federal government.  Romney was hedged in with the discussion on health care reform.  RomneyCare = ObamaCare.  Those of us who didnā€™t support Romney knew that would be coming.  That said he did bring up some key distinctions.
  • President Obamaā€™s answer on the role of the federal government was weak and I find it amusing that the ā€œConstitutional law professorā€ didnā€™t actually bring up the Constitution.
  • When Romney was able to focus on jobs and the economy he knocked it out of the park.
  • President Obamaā€™s explanation of the independent commission (aka ā€œDeath Panels) wasnā€™t convincing.
  • While Romney was substantive, at times he seemed overly wonky.  I was fine with it, but Iā€™m not sure how well that goes over with undecideds.

What did you think?   Who do you believe won the debate and why?

Update: We’re now getting a handle of how undecideds viewed the debate.  A Romney win.  CBS post-debate poll shows undecided voters believed Romney won the debate 46% to 22% who believed President Obama won.  32% believed it to be a tie.

2nd Update: Breaking – CNN/ORC poll: 67% of those responding said Mitt Romney won the first presidential debate; 25% said President Obama won.

3rd Update: Chris Matthews lost that thrill up his leg:

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