Tuesday 13 September 2011

Winners of the republican debate?:Who did best? Who stumbled

Narrow winner, on points: Mitt Romney, for the second debate in a row. He pressed his attack on Rick Perry's Social Security position pretty effectively. He parried attacks on his healthcare plan, something on which he's had plenty of practice. He made no significant errors. The "tea party" crowd in the hall wasn't on his side, but let's see what happens in the polls.


Biggest survivor: Perry, battered but unbowed. As the front-runner, he was the target of almost everyone else on the stage -- attacked on Social Security (by Romney), HPV inoculation (by Michele Bachmann) and immigration (by almost everyone). He wasn't as smooth and sure-footed as Romney, but he held his ground. He's in this race for the duration.


Mini-comeback: Bachmann. She focused most of her fire on Perry, her main rival for the top spot as the anti-Romney conservative in the race. She was sharp, quick-witted and rigorous in her adherence to tea party doctrine. It probably wasn't enough to knock Perry off his pedestal as the front-runner, but it should keep her in the race in case the Texan stumbles.


Biggest loser: The Republican Party as a big-tent organization that can appeal to the center. If the tea party gets the kind of candidate it demands, the GOP will face trouble in the general election. Fed-bashing, immigrant-bashing and uninsured-patient-bashing won't win a majority.


But for the second time in a week, Mitt Romney may have turned in the best overall debate performance. He was prepared and crisp in his answers, and he differed with Rick Perry and others without seeming angry.


“Romney proved yet again that he is the best debater in this field with another solid performance in which he effectively downplayed his liabilities on health care and accentuated his strengths on jobs and the economy,” concluded Washington Post columnist Chris Cillizza.


On Social Security, for instance, Mr. Romney kept hammering at Governor Perry’s past statements questioning the retirement program’s constitutionality. At one point, Perry started to say he wanted to have a conversation on the subject – presumably, with the American people. But Romney brought him up short.


“We’re having that conversation right now, governor.... We’re running for president,” said Romney.


That said, Romney did show the 59-bullet-point boring side of his public persona – an aspect that comedian Jon Stewart has mocked as being just right if you’re “running for president of Pundit-town.”


At one point, for instance, Romney answered a question on the viability of a national sales tax by noting that such a tax is refundable to exporters under the rules of the World Trade Organization. The audience, largely tea party adherents, seemed unmoved by this reference to an international economic group.


So what about Perry? Some conservatives believe he did well at the debate, too.


“... Rick Perry won .... He had a stellar one hour and fifteen minutes,” concluded Erick Erickson, editor of the conservative RedState blog.


However, the debate was two hours long. In the last section, Perry seemed to tire as Michele Bachmann hammered at his decision as governor to order all preteen girls in Texas vaccinated against a virus that doctors say can cause cervical cancer. (Perry has said he regrets that decision and should have consulted with the state legislature.)


SOUND OFF on Facebook: How important is one debate this early in the GOP campaign season?


Then Perry became a piƱata on the subject of immigration, as almost all the other candidates criticized his decision to allow illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition rates at Texas universities.


If you’re working and paying taxes in Texas, “it doesn’t matter what the sound of your last name is," said Perry, while the audience booed his position. "That is the American way.”


As for Social Security, Perry emphasized that current seniors should see no change, but he seemed to stick with some of his most inflammatory past statements. He implied that Social Security should be a state-based program, for instance, instead of a federal one, at least for some workers.


“The issue is, are there ways to move the states into Social Security for state employees or retirees?” Perry said at one point.


As for the undercard, the other candidates all had their moments. Compared with last week’s debate at the Reagan library, Monday’s debate was more inclusive, as moderator Wolf Blitzer of CNN worked to involve everyone in the conversation.


Rick Santorum teamed with Representative Bachmann to bash Perry on the forcible vaccination issue, for instance. Ron Paul continued to attack Perry from the right, noting that as a Texas state resident, his own taxes have increased during the Perry administration. Herman Cain said, “I would bring a sense of humor to the White House because America’s too uptight.

No comments: