President Barack Obama and former Governor Mitt Romney collided at
the Presidential Debate at Hofstra University in a historic and
rancorous face off. The president won this debate, but Romney showed
that his performance in Denver was not a fluke.
Results of a CBS News "snap poll" of uncommitted voters had 37%
calling President Obama the winner, while 30% gave the nod to Romney. A
CNN poll gave Obama the win 46% to 39%.
Both candidates were in full attack mode, each delivering direct
verbal blows on their opponent. The president did not shrink from the
fight, and neither did Romney, who at times came off as bullying the
moderator and the president. There were several raw and emotional
exchanges in response to questions asked by undecided voters chosen for
the town hall debate.
Romney was strongest on the economy, touting his own five-point plan
while calling the president's term a failure. "The president's policies
have been exercised over the last four years, and they haven't put
people back to work." But the president retorted, "He doesn't have a
five-point plan, he has a one-point plan, and that's to make sure people
at the top play by different rules...The last thing we need to do is go
back to the same policies that got us there," into a recession.
Romney spoke of his proposal to lower taxes, "I'm going to bring
rates down across the board...I'm not going to have people at the high
end paying less than they pay now...I will not under any circumstances
increase taxes on the middle class." But the president criticized his
opponent for not specifying how he would pay for the $5 trillion tax
cut. Speaking directly to Romney, he said, "You wouldn't have taken
such a sketchy deal, and neither should the American people, because the
math doesn't add up."
The president scored points on immigration, reminding viewers that
Romney believed in "self-deportation." He also scored points on equal
pay for women when he pointed out that the first thing he did as
president was to sign the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act for women. This
also gave the president a chance to remind viewers that Romney would
defund Planned Parenthood, an all important issue for many women.
One questioner asked about what happened at the U.S. outpost in
Benghazi, Libya, where 4 Americans were killed in a terrorist attack.
The former governor criticized the president's foreign policy in the
region, and the White House's evolving explanation of the incident. But
Romney mistakenly claimed the president did not call it "an act of
terrorism" in the White House Rose Garden the next day, an inaccurate
right wing blog claim. But moderator Candy Crowley, of CNN,
embarrassingly corrected Romney.
Romney' returned again and again to the president's failures in his
first term. For his part, the president listed his successes, including
saving the auto industry, adding more than 5 million private sector
jobs, health care, ending the war in Iraq and decimating Al Qaeda.
Romney kept coming back to the economy, always speaking confidently
about his ability to fix it if he is elected president. He reminded
viewers he was a successful businessman who knows how to create jobs. In
his summation, at the end of the debate, he said, “I care about 100% of
the American people. I want 100% of the American people to have a
bright and prosperous future. I care about our kids.”
President Obama didn't miss this opportunity to remind viewers that
the former governor once told donors at a Florida fundraiser that 47% of
Americans do not pay taxes and are not personally responsible. "Think
about who he was talking about: folks on Social Security who've worked
all their lives, veterans who've sacrificed for this country," the
president said, “That wasn’t a handout, that was something that advanced
the entire country, and I want to make sure that the next generation
has those same opportunities. That's why I'm asking for your vote and
that's why I'm asking for another four years.”
Now the campaigns can look ahead to next week's final debate in
Florida. After the Hofstra debate it is clear that this tightly
contested election will be a fight to the finish.
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