Obama-Romney Round Two: stylistics to the President; substance to the Challenger; Moderator Candy Crowley One Major No-No
Obama-Romney Round Two: Stylistics to
the President; Substance to the Challenger; Moderator Candy Crowley One Bizarre Major
No-No
--Richard E. Vatz
In
the Second Presidential Debate of 2012 last night, President Obama made a
stylistic comeback the likes of which we haven’t seen since President Reagan
came back from his bizarre first debate with Walter Mondale in 1984.
The
difference is the while President Reagan was defending a substantively
impressive first term, President Obama was avoiding defending a questionable
record in his first term.
The
President was clear, articulate, aggressive, and undaunted. The contrast was so striking with his first
debate that all Obama supporters could cheer their candidate’s recovery.
On
substance, however, Gov. Romney won hands down.
About an hour into the debate he rattled off a list -- an extensive list -- of presidential
stewardship failures, a list that President Obama never addressed: unemployment
rarely below 8% and in reality 10.7% when you include those who have given up looking for work, despite promises that it would be around 5%; gigantic
increases of citizens receiving food stamps; no addressing the fact of exponentially rising entitlements; promises to cut the deficit, followed by a doubling of said
deficit accompanied by ever-rising frightening debt approaching soon 16 trillion dollars. The president never responded to the issues,
nor did he respond to the list of foreign policy incipient disasters then gone over by Gov. Romney: Iran,
Israel, Syria, etc.
The
president still has not answered questions regarding why his confiscatory taxes
on small businesses do not destroy job creation in America. Gov. Romney and Rep. Paul Ryan raise this issue in every debate, but the moderators, who find discussions of small business irritating and confusing, quickly change the subject.
Moderator
Candy Crowley with an incongruous paroxysm of partisanship defended the
president's claim that he called the attack in Benghazi “terrorism,” flummoxing
the challenger. The issue was not whether the President called the Benghazi murders terrorism initially, it was whether in the subsequent days he mischaracterized the attack as due to angry protests against an anti-Muslim video, which he did several times, including an address to the U.N.
Electoral
consequences of the night? Unsure here,
but on style it was a blistering comeback for President Obama and on substance
another victory for Gov. Romney.
Gov.
Romney, reminiscent of President John F. Kennedy’s famous “We can do better,”
said less elegantly American should not have to “settle for this.”
That
may be the straw that breaks the Administration’s re-election back in the final weeks of the campaign.
Professor
Vatz teaches political rhetoric at Towson University and is author of The Only Authentic Book of Persuasion (Kendall
Hunt, 2012, 2013)

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