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If you just dropped by the Earth en route Venus from Mars (or the other way around) and watched this debate you would be hard-pressed to know who was the incumbent president and who was the challenger.
Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney waves to audience members following the first presidential debate with President Barack Obama at the University of Denver, Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012. (Eric Gay / AP Photo)
From the very start of the debate, it was clear that Mitt Romney knew what was at stake and had taken this seriously. As for President Obama—I know this: it is very unlikely they will do debate prep in Las Vegas again.
We know that Obama doesn’t think much of Romney. Romney is the rich white guy of privilege against whom Obama fought day in and day out in his role as a community organizer.
He didn’t exactly do the Al Gore eye-roll-and-sigh routine, but Obama didn’t miss by much.
At every turn, Romney seemed to hit the ground running with his answers while Obama stumbled and fumbled around until he hit on what in his head sounded like a good approach and he would go with that for two or three minutes.
He didn’t exactly do the Al Gore eye-roll-and-sigh routine, but Obama didn’t miss by much.
Obama’s best line of the night came in his opening answer when he used the phrase “economic patriotism.” But, he never came back to it, never referred to it, and seemed so off-balance by Romney’s demeanor and approach that he seemed to have no theory of the debate at all. It will be interesting to find out whether Obama just forgot what they were going to try to do, or just couldn’t get a solid punch in through the barrage he was taking from Romney.
In baseball there is a saying that you just try to win series. Two-out-of-three over the course of the season is plenty good enough to get you to the playoffs.
Romney clearly won this first of three. Obama will need to come back with his A game for the second one.
Throughout his campaign, Mitt Romney has attacked President Obama for, well, attacking him—and he doubled down on this approach Monday night: 'Attacking me is not an agenda,' Romney scolded.
Obama and Romney duked it out on foreign policy Monday night. Watch the most memorable moments.
As of mid-October, the Obama campaign has 755 offices nationwide for its get-out-the-vote effort—nearly three times as many as the Romney campaign. PLUS: John Avlon and Michael Keller break down what the office edge could mean on election day.
Dukakis and the rape question. Reagan and his age joke. See the highest and lowest moments of debates past.
Big Bird, Binders Full of Women, and, now, Horses and Bayonets. The funniest meme photos from the latest debate catchphrase.
Ahead of Tuesday’s presidential debate, a look at the more entertaining showdowns from film and TV.
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