On Fri, Jul 27, 2012 at 3:55 PM, David Bruggeman <[email protected]> wrote:

> The dates have been known since October, so I had to stifle a yawn at this.
>
> Since these events are really more about the political race rather than
> any meaningful exploration of policy differences, I'll continue to take a
> pass.  I'd go so far as to steal Carville's line (which he used about the
> Perot campaign) about exercises in political masturbation, though I think
> that's better said of the fulmination before and after.
>
> In short, if you thought the ads have been bad...
>

I hear people say stuff like this all the time, and it always amazes me. I
think I have seen just about every Presidential Debate since 1976, and the
majority reveal substantial differences between the two candidates.
Certainly the Obama-McCain debates turned on very important and significant
differences on health care, tax policy, financial regulation, and Iraq, all
of which issues have indeed been important during the last 3.5 years. Both
candidates gave articulate and detailed (given the constraints of the
format) presentations of their policies. If Americans had voted for McCain
very different steps would have been taken on each of those fronts. Obama
has generally followed pretty closely what he said he would do, just as
both Presidents Bush and Clinton did in the debates preceding their first
terms (the main exception to that I can think of is that Clinton ran in
1992 on a platform of aggressive economic stimulus, which he never really
did, both because the recession was well on the way to ending by the time
he took the oath, and because the deficit was a hell of a lot worse than he
had been told).

Now, what is true is that both the media and the campaigns tend to focus on
the triviata of the debates, rather than the substance, both before and
after. But that seems to me to be all the more reason for voters to watch
them for themselves, since if you skip them you are likely to only hear
about the trivia. It may also be true that the substance of the debates
rarely have much effect on determining the outcome of the election, but
that is because voters who care about the substance probably have already
educated themselves about the candidates positions before October, while
those that don't care about substance are unlikely to suddenly focus on
candidate differences about how to pay for entitlements in the out years.
But that again has nothing to do with whether the debates contain
significant substantive information, just the extent to which voters need
or care to focus on it.

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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