Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
So the mere fact that he was competant means that that is why he 'won' the debate?
Gore doesn't sigh and it doesn't matter. The headlines the next day say that Bush was a disaster.
you're just ignoring the fact that Bush had as much to prove in those debates as Gore did
So the mere fact that he was competant means that that is why he 'won' the debate?
Gore doesn't sigh and it doesn't matter. The headlines the next day say that Bush was a disaster.
The 'Two Americas' thing was pilloried. Kerry killed Edwards (ironically enough) on Edwards' opposition to NAFTA.
For a Democrat Senator to not know what the DoMA is akin to an ordinary person not knowing Roe v. Wade.
Of course he did. He was in control of the policy while Quayle was reduced to cracks like "You pulled a Clinton on me". He was totally outclassed.
Why not actually read what people were saying?
"MR. SHIELDS: Well, I think that one has to put the vice presidential debates in perspective. They are the preliminary bout before the semi-main event tomorrow night in Richmond. And there's no question, David is right. Dan Quayle raised the Republicans to their peak adrenalin moment of this campaign. He energized and he - - instead of being the enthusiastic advocate and champion of George Bush, because George Bush had failed to make the case against Bill Clinton on Sunday night, it fell to Dan Quayle to do it, and he - - he made the case, or he sought to make the case on the basis of Bill Clinton's character, and he certainly, his words were welcome to a dispirited Republican Party."
and
"I think he helped himself within the Republican Party. I think the expectations -- I mean, the office of vice president is an office that has been in the purview of every citizen to ridicule always and Dan Quayle kind of raised that to a different level by his performance in 1988, and I thought that he did a long way toward redeeming himself last night. "
"MR. GERGEN: And I really feel he's now put himself -- he made it clear last night he will be a force to reckon with. Conservatives will rally behind now. They will look at that and say that's the kind of fellow we need, somebody who's willing to fight. "
"Dan Quayle stepped in last night and didn't run, didn't cut. He stepped up and took the heat and he's loyal. "
Hardly a sign of some sort of catastrophic defeat.
All of this doesn't really matter much, anyway. The VP debates have nada effect on the race. Think about it, the only memorable moment from a VP debate in the past 20 years was Bentson's Jack Kennedy cut on Quayle in 1988. And that was pretty much a cheap shot, not a real debate point. And it sure didn't help Dukakis any. So whining that Edwards might not match up to Cheney in a debate is of minimal concern--that's not the crucial test for a VP candidate.
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