What struck me the most about the debate just concluded was CNN's  choice
of a moderator. Newt, I think, had it right as far as Candy Crowley's  
substance
was concerned ;  clearly  --certainly on  balance--  she has a Left-wing 
outlook
and judges issues from a Democratic Party perspective. But this is no  
surprise,
CNN reflects more than anything the Clinton wing of the Democratic  Party.
 
But if there are "style points" for the debaters, what about style  points
for moderators ?   I hate to say it but no-one else seems willing  to do so,
Crowley has all the charm of a battleaxe. Is there a battleaxe
viewership that CNN desires to appeal to ? 
 
As far back as I can remember, admittedly not too many times since
I dislike overt Clintonism and Crowley expresses that viewpoint
even more strongly than most other CNN reporters, thus I usually
choose not to put up with it, regardless, it has always been a  hard-boiled
Left outlook she has communicated, and done so in a hard-edged manner
that, as far as I can tell, is endearing to no-one.
 
So it was, yet again, on Tuesday night. What was CNN thinking ?
 
Billy
 
 
====================================
 
 
 
 
Human Events
 
Gingrich: Obama’s falsehoods will further erode his  standing
 
By: _Neil W. McCabe_ (http://www.humanevents.com/author/neil-w-mccabe/)   
10/17/2012
 
 
The former Speaker of the House, who sparred with W. Mitt Romney during  
throughout the GOP’s primary weighed in with Human Events about his 
impressions  of the _Oct.  16 debate between Romney and President Barack Obama_ 
(http://www.humanevents.com/2012/10/17/gingrich-we-will-know-saturday-townhall-lies
-moderator-bias-and-the-presidential-race/) . 
“I think Obama won on style, Romney won on substance and Candy Crowley lost 
 on both,” said former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, whose campaign 
was  buoyed by his own strong performances in similar debates. 
The president had two strong suits in the debate against Romney, he said. 
“Obama was ready for him, plus Obama has this enthusiastic willingness to  
lie,” he said. 
The president scored points when he talked about _gas  prices_ 
(http://www.humanevents.com/2012/10/16/hudson-obama-fashions-himself-as-a-defender-of-coa
l-oil-gas-romney-calls-foul/) , Libya and _Fast  and Furious_ 
(http://www.humanevents.com/2012/10/17/obama-i-am-coming-after-the-guns-will-screen-gun-ow
ners/) , Gingrich said. “But, on every single one of those, he was  
factually false.” 
It was at the two debates during the Florida primary that Romney was able 
to  finally master Gingrich onstage and pull over from the former speaker. 
“This was comparable to his two debates in Florida, which were the two best 
 debates of the primary season for him,” he said. 
But, Romney did make missteps, he said. “He got into a pattern of asking  
Obama questions, which is a very dangerous debate style, because it puts your 
 opponent in control of what he wants to answer.” 
Gingrich said he was surprised Crowley so actively injected herself into 
the  discussions and manipulated the topics address. 
“It was a big mistake,” he said. “I did not expect it. I suspect she 
really  regrets having done—and she was plain wrong—she was not only wrong in 
the way  she intervened, she was factually wrong, and she has not had to admit 
it.” 
Obama and Crowley had a simpatico that gave the appearance of collusion, 
said  the former college history professor, who earned his PhD in Modern 
European  history from new Orleans-based Tulane University. 
“At the one point, when they got to the Benghazi argument, Obama says: ‘
Read  the transcript,’ and she looks like she really is reading the transcript—
and  then, Obama says: ‘Say it louder,’ if you look at that little 
segment, it’s  kinda like Obama is the play—and she is not responding well 
enough 
for his  taste.” 
Another advantage for Obama was the questions Crowley selected to use, he  
said. 
“Several of the questions were clearly on the left,” he said. 
“This was the debate that I always warned against,” the former speaker 
said.  “What you have is basically two-on-one, you have a left-wing moderator 
picking  left-wing questions—because remember: even if she had people asking 
right-wing  questions, why would she pick them?” 
Still there was one questioner that Gingrich said came close to pressing 
the  president. 
“There was the one person who said: I voted for you last time, I am really  
disappointed, why would I do it again?” he said. “That fella got as close 
to it,  that guy was so emotional in the way he said it.” 
“Nothing changed in regards to the map, but Obama had a marginally better  
night than Romney,” he said. 
“It is pretty obvious, if Romney carries Ohio, Virginia and Florida, it is  
clearly over,” he said. 
After the first debate, Romney saw his biggest jump in New Hampshire,  
combined with his positive momentum in Nevada and Iowa, he presents Obama a 
very 
 serious challenge when he looks at the map, he said. “But, the geography 
doesn’t  really change over the years.” 
The biggest problem for Obama is that as people look at the debate today 
and  tomorrow, the Obama’s falsehoods will become more apparent and they will 
erode  the goodwill people might feel for him, he said. 
“The more they look at it, the clearer it will be that Obama was not being  
honest, and from that point it also sets the stage for a much more critical 
look  at the third debate,” he said.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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