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US election - presidential debate live
Telegraph [UK], by Raf Sanchez    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:36:36 AM     Post Reply
Live reaction after Barack Obama and Mitt Romney's first time head-to-head in Denver, Colorado. 04.50 (23.50) The snap post-debate poll from CNN/ORC is decisive and will make for very unhappy reading in Chicago. Voters felt Romney won by a margin of almost 3-1.[Snip] Romney won the debate because he knitted together a political philosophy and specific economic policies far better than Obama. Whether it was on the role of government or how to create jobs for small businesses, Romney was clearer and more articulate. The debate offered little new in the way of specific policies beyond

There Went the Boom
National Review Online, by Jonah Goldberg    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:35:02 AM     Post Reply
I’ve been getting more and more cautiously optimistic about Romney in the last few days and, going in, I had a pretty good feeling about tonight’s debate. But I had no expectation that Romney would simply control the night the way he did. I don’t think Obama did terribly on the merits, even though he clearly lost by a wide margin on points. But you don’t really score a debate like this on points. Romney simply dominated and deflated Obama. This was the first time millions of people ever heard Mitt Romney make a case for himself at any length. Most Americans didn’t watch the GOP debates.

Mitt Romney Absolutely Destroyed
Obama In Tonight's Presidential Debate
Business Insider, by Grace Wyler    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:32:34 AM     Post Reply
Republican nominee Mitt Romney has clearly been practicing for tonight's presidential debate. He really hit his stride in the second 15-minute segment of the debate, when the questions turned to the issue of the debt and the federal deficit. Asked about the deficit, President Barack Obama launched into a pseudo-rambling spiel attacking Romney on everything from Big Energy subsidies, to refusing to raise taxes on the highest income earners, to tax breaks that go to companies moving jobs overseas. But Romney was ready for all of it. Asked to respond, Romney shook his head, "Well, he covered a lot of

  


  

Incumbent Debate Curse:
Barack Obama Falls to Mitt Romney
National Journal, by Ron Fournier    Original Article
Posted By: Emerson- 10/4/2012 12:32:17 AM     Post Reply
Correction: The latest version of this story incorrectly reported the year of the Bush-Kerry race. It was 2004. Call it the curse of incumbency. Like many of his predecessors, President Obama fell victim Wednesday night to high expectations, a short fuse, and a hungry challenger. If Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney didn’t win the first of three presidential debates outright, he more than covered the spread. He was personable, funny, and relentlessly on the attack against a heavily favored Obama. The president looked peeved and flat as he carried a conversation, for the first time in four

Obama aides concede
Romney won on 'style'
Politico, by Byron Tau    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:30:13 AM     Post Reply
Obama campaign aides are conceding that Mitt Romney won the debate on "style points," but are hammering the Republican nominee over the substance of his remarks. "He wins the style points," deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter said on CNN in the aftermath of the debate. "But that's not what's been dogging his campaign. What is dogging his campaign are the policies that he doubled down on tonight." But she launched into an attack on the substance of what Romney said, saying that he had backed away from his own tax plan in Wednesday's debate "He's not being honest with

Romney Comes Out Swinging
ABC News, by Russell Goldman    Original Article
Posted By: Emerson- 10/4/2012 12:29:34 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney came out swinging in the first presidential debate, challenging President Obama over his health care reforms, treatment of the economy, taxes and funding for Sesame Street's Big Bird. Romney jabbed the president, calling his approach "trickle-down government" and accusing him of spending his time in office concentrating on passing his health care plan at the expense of creating jobs. "Under the president's policies, middle-income Americans have been buried. They're just being crushed," Romney said. The debate in Denver was the first of three debates the two candidates

Resurfaced ’07 Talk by Obama
Renews Questions on Race
New York Times, by Jeremy W. Peters and Jim Rutenberg    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:26:42 AM     Post Reply
In the summer of 2007, his campaign for the White House well under way, Senator Barack Obama waded into the minefield of racial politics and accused President George W. Bush of sitting idly by as a “quiet riot” simmered in black communities. (Snip)On Tuesday, the eve of the first presidential debate between Mr. Obama and Mitt Romney, Mr. Carlson’s current venture, The Daily Caller, a Web site started with financial help from the conservative donor Foster Friess, put the video back in circulation.

  


  

Romney triumphs in first debate
American Thinker, by Thomas Lifson    Original Article
Posted By: magnante- 10/4/2012 12:23:12 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney won a clear victory on points in the first presidential debate in Denver. Even Journolist conspiracy member Ben Smith, formerly of Politico and now of Buzzfeed, called the debate for Romney 40 some minutes into the debate. (Snip) To my eyes, Obama looked uncertain and a little scared -- especially his eyes. Romney looked far more confident and in charge. Obama's continual mention of a Romney tax cut of 5 trillion dollars, despite Romney claiming he had no such tax cut planned, worked against the president. Romney was aggressive, yet polite and friendly, and demonstrated a

Slam Dunk
National Review Online, by Mona Charen    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:22:57 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney rocked President Obama back on his heels tonight. There were a couple of moments when I would have liked a more full-throated explanation of conservative ideas, but on balance, this was the most thorough take down of a sitting president I’ve ever seen. Romney was organized, logical, articulate, and went after Obama’s biggest weaknesses — without ever seeming vicious or ungentlemanly. He pointed out that Obama was lying without growling about it. He wasn’t intimidated or cowed by Obama’s stale accusations. It was a brilliant performance. Now let’s hope he follows up with an ad

Denver debate:
A dominating night for Romney
Washington Post, by Jennifer Rubin    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:21:07 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney dominated almost from the start of the first presidential debate tonight, and he never looked back. A key early point was when Romney repeatedly and forcefully rebutted President Obama’s persistent effort to mischaracterize his tax plan as a massive tax cut for the rich. He went on to explain why America needed lower tax rates. And in the process, he showed flashes of good humor, telling moderator Jim Lehrer he would even cut subsidies to PBS. Romney plainly had prepared well for the debate, moving quickly to correct the president’s misstatements on energy and hitting him again

Obama's 5 best debate lines
Politico, by Kevin Cirilli    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:20:45 AM     Post Reply
Here are President Barack Obama’s five most memorable lines from the first presidential debate Wednesday night with GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney in Denver: (Snip) “Under Gov. Romney’s definition, there are a whole bunch of millionaires and billionaires who are small business. Donald Trump is small business. And I know Donald trump doesn’t like to think of himself as small anything.” 3. “By the way, I have become fond of this term Obamacare.” 4. “For 18 months he’s been running on this tax plan and now, five weeks before the election, he is saying that his big, bold idea is

  



Presidential debate: no zingers,
but Romney finally gets off the ground
Guardian [UK], by Gary Younge    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:18:57 AM     Post Reply
In the end there were no zingers; no knockout blows; no major blunders. But there was a winner: Mitt Romney. After several reboots and roll-outs he finally, finally found his voice. He wasn't likeable, but he was believable. Gone were the gaffes, the stiff, wooden persona and the excessive caution. He came out fighting and he kept on swinging. Fluent, strident, confident--he made his case. Barack Obama on the other hand appeared nervous, distracted and unprepared. After four years in the Oval Office, he'd lost his voice. Gone was the charisma, the optimism and the eloquence. Defensive, halting and

Colorado presidential debate:
Mitt Romney’s 5 best lines
Politico, by Katie Glueck    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:18:24 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney squared off with President Barack Obama Wednesday night at the University of Denver in Colorado. Here’s a look at the GOP nominee’s five most memorable lines during the debate, which was moderated by PBS’s Jim Lehrer: (Snip) “Mr. President, you’re entitled to your own house and your own airplane, but not your own facts.” 3. “I’m sorry, Jim, I’m gonna stop the subsidy to PBS… I like PBS. I love Big Bird. I actually like you, too.” 4. “Look, I got five boys. I’m used to people saying something that’s not always true, but just keep on repeating it and ultimately hoping I

Mitt Romney's Hostile
Takeover of the Debate
Bloomberg Businessweek, by Joshua Green    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:18:06 AM     Post Reply
On Wednesday night, Mitt Romney attempted a hostile takeover of the presidential campaign, manhandling the debate moderator, Jim Lehrer, and dominating President Obama. I wasn’t in the debate hall, so my impressions came from watching on television, as they did for most voters. Romney struck me as briskly efficient, affable, and (shock!) convincingly bipartisan in how he presented himself. Obama, at least until the final 30 minutes, was discursive, meandering, and seemed poorly prepared.

Obama’s Debate Strategy:
Unilateral Disarmament?
TIME, by Joe Klein    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 10/4/2012 12:15:30 AM     Post Reply
Well, I’m with all the other talking heads: Mitt Romney won this debate. Barack Obama lost it. I mean, he got his butt kicked. It was, in fact, one of the most inept performances I’ve ever seen by a sitting President. Romney–credit where it’s due–was calm, clear, convincing (even when he was totally full of it) and nearly human. The real mystery was Obama. Where on earth was he? Why was his debate strategy unilateral disarmament? Why did he never speak in plain English:

  


  

Not debatable: Obama stumbled
Politico, by Glenn Thrush    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:14:42 AM     Post Reply
Denver - It had been nearly 1,400 days since Barack Obama strode onto a debate stage — and it showed in a major way Wednesday at the first presidential debate of 2012. Obama, who has spent most of the past four years speaking to hand-picked interviewers or lecturing audiences required to remain mostly mute while he spoke, struggled to shake off the rust in a jostling debate environment that gave his opponent Mitt Romney parity, equal time — and a new lease on political life. There were no game-changing gaffes and the debate was a substantive break from months of caustic negative campaigning on both

Mitt Romney suggests limiting tax deductions
to $17,000 as a way of making the
rich pay for his tax cuts
Daily Mail [UK], by Toby Harnden    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:14:38 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney has floated the idea of a $17,000 limit on tax deductions as a way of lowering taxes while making higher-income earners bear the burden pay more tax to make the plan deficit-neutral. 'As an option, you could say everybody's going to get up to a $17,000 deduction; and you could use your charitable deduction, your home mortgage deduction, or others--your healthcare deduction,' Romney said in an interview with Denver's FOX31. 'And you can fill that bucket, if you will, that $17,000 bucket that way. And higher-income people might have a lower number.'

Awkward! First ladies embrace as Barack
thanks 'sweetie' Michelle on 20th wedding
anniversary in opening debate remarks
Daily Mail [UK], by Louise Boyle    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:12:32 AM     Post Reply
Ever the romantic, Barack Obama used the opening moments of the first 2012 presidential election debate, to acknowledge his 20th wedding anniversary to wife Michelle. The President opened with the words: 'Twenty years ago I became the luckiest man on the earth because Michelle Obama agreed to marry me. I just want to wish, you, sweetie, happy anniversary.' He promised that next year, their celebration would not take place before 40 million viewers. Romney also had words of congratulations for the first couple before the debate got underway in Denver, Colorado. Romney joked to Obama: 'I’m sure this was

Poll: Uncommitted voters
say Romney wins debate
CBS News, by Lindsey Boerma    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:11:48 AM     Post Reply
By a 2 to 1 margin, uncommitted voters crowned Mitt Romney the winner over President Obama in the first presidential debate in Debate, Colo., on Wednesday night, according to a 500-person instant poll taken by CBS News. In the moments following the candidates' performances on the University of Denver stage, 46 percent of voters gave the economy-centric debate to Romney, 22 percent said they believed the president was the winner, and 32 percent called it a tie. More good news for the GOP nominee: 56 percent of those polled said they viewed Romney in a better light after watching the

Mitt seizes his moment: Dominant
Romney hammers lackluster Obama
to claim undisputed victory in
first presidential face off
Daily Mail [UK], by Toby Harnden & Hugo Gye    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:10:01 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney went for the jugular in the first presidential debate tonight, overwhelming a lacklustre President Barack Obama with a relentlessly forceful performance that could give a significant boost to his White House hopes. The Republican challenger needed to put in a strong performance in the first presidential debate in Denver and he more than rose to the occasion with even some of Obama’s most dedicated supporters declaring him the clear winner. Romney chided Obama for promising to halve America’s annual deficit but instead doubling it and even comparing him to a little boy who can’t tell the

  



How Did Voters React
to the Debate?
ABC News, by Elizabeth Harfield    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:09:39 AM     Post Reply
A focus group of Walmart moms in Las Vegas, sponsored by Walmart and moderated by bi-partisan pollsters, revealed mixed reactions to each candidate in tonight’s debate but a broad sense that Romney was the victor. In a break-off group of non-Latina women afterwards, the general consensus in the room was that Romney won. But even so, the women didn’t walk away seeing Romney in a very positive light. When asked to describe their impressions of Romney, the women used words like “rude,” “pushy” and “assertive” – and when asked to clarify if assertive was positive or negative, the woman who

Romney humiliated Obama
in the presidential debate.
This election isn't over
Telegraph [UK], by Tim Stanley    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:07:27 AM     Post Reply
Last night was a good example of what happens when you take President Obama off an autocue. He falls to pieces. Obama’s performance during the first presidential debate was a mess. The subject was domestic policy--passing through economics, the debt, healthcare and the role of government. Through it all, the President looked distracted and tired, his eyes often drifting to the notes on the podium as if he might be sneakily answering texts.[Snip] Perhaps the goal was to appear statesmanlike, but the result was somewhere between bored and superior. His debating technique was no better.

How Mitt Romney won
the first debate
Daily Caller, by Matt Lewis    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/4/2012 12:07:22 AM     Post Reply
Mitt Romney brought it. The preparation paid off. He had energy — and a command of the facts. If you were Joe Sixpack just tuning in for the first time, you would probably come away with the impression that Romney knows what he’s talking about — and has the energy to actually accomplish his goals. Romney, who has often been light on details, also took time to explain his conservative philosophy in a very reasonable and common sense (and more specific) manner. This, of course, can be done, though until Wednesday night Romney had shown little aptitude for it.

CNN Poll: Romney wins
debate by big margin
CNN, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: BuckeyeRon- 10/4/2012 12:07:14 AM     Post Reply
Sixty-seven percent of registered voters who watched the debate said GOP nominee Mitt Romney won the debate, while 25% said President Barack Obama came out as the winner, according to a CNN/ORC International Poll released late Wednesday night. For the survey, 430 adult Americans were interviewed by telephone after the end of the debate. The poll does not and cannot reflect the views of all Americans. It only represents the views of people who watched the event. The poll has a sampling error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.

Presidential debates:
round one to Romney
Telegraph [UK], by Janet Daley    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/4/2012 12:05:43 AM     Post Reply
I would call the first presidential debate a pretty clear win for Mitt Romney. Not that it was walk-over: both men were competent and eminently rational. There was no silly behaviour (in the Al Gore tradition) and there were no gaffes on either side. But it was Romney who was stunningly on top of his argument with a faultless command of detail and a confident fluency that made Barack Obama seem hesitant, defensive and occasionally evasive. What will be most significant for the mass audience was that Romney repudiated so completely the images of him which the media has

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