What do you think?  Did Obama win?  Did Romney lose ground, or just fail to 
make more headway?

http://www.mrmediatraining.com/index.php/2012/10/16/obama-vs-romney-debate-scorecard-october-16-2012/

OBAMA VS. ROMNEY DEBATE SCORECARD: OCTOBER 16, 2012

The first presidential debate wasn’t even close. As you may remember, Governor 
Romney crushed President Obama, leading to liberal despair and sinking poll 
numbers for the President.

The tables turned tonight. Mr. Obama scored a decisive victory over a 
diminished Mitt Romney.

Now, I know that some people will say I’m falling victim to a predictable media 
narrative (the champ falls down, only to rise again), but those critics are 
wrong. I’m not grading on a curve. President Obama won this debate convincingly.

Other people may complain about Candy Crowley’s moderating, the questions 
chosen to be asked by the crowd, and the disproportionate amount of time given 
to Mr. Obama. While those complaints have some merit, they didn’t affect the 
outcome of tonight’s debate. Good debaters can overcome those obstacles.


Photo Credit: AP

The key moment of tonight’s debate—one that will likely be replayed 20 years 
from now—came during a discussion about the Administration’s handling of the 
Libyan embassy attack. This was an issue that Mitt Romney should have 
dominated, as the Obama Administration has been back on its heels when trying 
to defend its response.

Instead, a resolute Barack Obama stared at Mitt Romney, pointed his finger, and 
said:

“The suggestion that anybody on my team—the Secretary of State, our UN 
Ambassador, anybody on my team would play politics or mislead when we’ve lost 
four of our own—is offensive. That’s not what we do. That’s not what I do as 
President. That’s not what I do as Commander in Chief.”

 

When Mitt Romney tried to respond, he appeared to get one of his facts wrong. 
Moderator Candy Crowley corrected Mr. Romney, leading to the night’s only 
spontaneous applause from the audience. That appeared to fluster Mr. Romney so 
much that he actually turned to Mr. Obama for help in clarifying the record 
(the President, as one would expect, didn’t help him).


Who Do You Think Won Tonight's Debate?

President Obama (66%, 100 Votes)
Governor Romney (26%, 39 Votes)
Winner? Can't this race just be over yet? (8%, 12 Votes)
Total Voters: 151

That exchange was emblematic of much of the debate, during which Mr. Obama 
appeared confident and aggressive while Mr. Romney appeared somewhat defensive 
and occasionally annoyed. By my count, Mr. Obama said some version of “that 
isn’t true” seven times, challenging Mr. Romney in a tone that was nowhere to 
be found in the first debate.

Mr. Romney had at least two other bad moments.

First, during a question about pay inequality, Mr. Obama began his answer by 
discussing his own grandmother. Mr. Romney began his answer by discussing his 
time as an executive, when, as a result of his instruction, subordinates 
brought him “binders full of women” to consider for a job. Romney’s 
bureaucratic answer looked small next to Obama’s personal one.

Second, during his final answer, he opened the door to a “47 percent” attack by 
emphasizing his concern for 100 percent of the American people. That may have 
been a strategic choice to attempt to preemptively neutralize that attack; it 
may also have been necessary. But it didn’t work and only served to remind 
people of his original hidden video.

Still, Mr. Romney had several good moments. He offered a good response about 
gas prices and trade with China; he also delivered a convincing indictment of 
the President’s failures over the past four years.

The President wasn’t perfect tonight. While answering a question about women’s 
pay inequality—which should have been a slam dunk—Mr. Obama lost some of his 
more important points with a meandering answer. And he was on the verge of 
overplaying his hand by interrupting Mr. Romney and the moderator, and bordered 
on smug a couple of times, apparently aware that he was winning this round.

But all in all, this was the President’s night. In my pre-debate post, I 
mentioned three things Mr. Obama would have to do in this debate: bring his 
passion, draw a strong contrast, and avoid burying his most important messages. 
He did all three.

The score is now 1-1. Next Monday’s debate will break the tie.

Grades: President Obama: A-  Mitt Romney: C+

What do you think? Please leave your thoughts in the comments section below.


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