Breitbart News: Big Government / Joel B. Pollak
Gov. Mitt Romney eviscerated a staggering and bewildered President
Barack Obama tonight in one of the most lopsided presidential debates in
American history. Throughout the debate, which focused on domestic
policy, Obama looked shaken, rarely looking at the camera, reciting old
talking points and filibustering as Romney gave a master class at the
University of Denver.
The debate had been described as a must-win for Romney--and he
delivered. Using a rapid-fire style that had not been seen even in the
numerous Republican primary debates, he bobbed and weaved through
Obama’s attacks and moderator Jim Lehrer’s interjections, launching
bullet-point policies that displayed not just a familiarity with the
wonkish details but a focus on the travails of ordinary people he had
met on the trail.
Again and again, Romney returned to his theme: creating jobs. He
did--as expected--take Obama to task for misrepresenting his policies,
principally his tax policy, which Obama referred to, even after being
corrected, as a $5 trillion tax cut. But he exceeded expectations in
focusing on the end result he wished to attain--and which, he said, the
President wished to sacrifice: creating jobs for a struggling American
workforce.
Obama could not have pleased anyone except those playing drinking
games at home, with familiar references to corporate jets (drink!), job
training programs (drink!), and tax cuts for shipping jobs overseas
(drink!). And for these tired suggestions, most of which appeared in
Obama’s talking points in 2008, Romney reminded the president that he
had four years in which to enact those policies, to which the president
could only nod.
Romney came armed with some memorable one-liners. He called Obama’s
economic policy “trickle-down government.” He called the decline in
household incomes under the Obama administration the “economy tax.”
And--most memorably--he attacked Obama’s green energy subsidies,
including Solyndra, Fisker, Tesla, and other failures: “You don’t just
pick the winners and losers. You pick the losers.” Obama had nothing in
response.
Obama refused--as he has done throughout the campaign--to adopt the
stance of the incumbent, and tried to fight as the insurgent challenger,
as if his own record were not up for debate. But Romney refused to let
him escape--and soon Obama began making several blunders, stating at one
point that he had conversations with Americans about their health care
“four years ago”--i.e. not since he has taken office. He even turned his
frustration upon moderator Jim Lehrer at one point, accusing him of
interrupting him.
Lehrer, for his part, was quicker to pounce on Romney with follow-up
questions, giving Obama a wider berth. Yet Romney did not let Lehrer
divert him from his message or cut off his defenses. He even teased the
moderator with his proposal to cut funding from PBS, among other
government programs. It was a fearless and clarifying performance.
On health care--which might have been Romney’s weakest issue--Romney
argued for the repeal of Obamacare as the best Tea Partier might have
done, attacking the board that the law sets up to ration care as a cost
control mechanism. The best that Obama could do was remind voters--as if
they did not already know--that Romney had passed a health insurance
law in Massachusetts. He had to concede one of the best arguments Romney
offered--that Obamacare has actually increased the cost of insurance so
far.
Romney missed a few--very few--opportunities, taking a long time to
defend his tax policy by pointing out that it would be revenue-neutral
because it would encourage economic growth. And Obama did put a few
points on the board, reminding viewers (twice) of his popular Race to
the Top education program, and that he had amassed experience as
commander-in-chief with which Romney cannot (yet) compete.
Yet Obama seemed uneasy simply to have a worthy opponent on the other
side of the stage. He could not even articulate his oft-repeated
philosophy of government in the most basic terms, borrowing from the
likes of Barney Frank in describing government as “the things we do
together.” Romney gave a straight answer: that the role of government is
simply to defend the principles of the constitution and the founding
documents, without replacing the roles of individuals and communities in
helping the less fortunate.
Even conservatives who predicted that Romney would do well could not
have imagined that he would do this well. It was as complete a victory
as any presidential challenger has ever scored--and it exceeded even the
hopes of Romney’s most fervent supporters. Obama came across as a
politician--a rattled one, grinning and frowning, searching for a way
out. Romney came across as a problem-solver, and--amazingly--more in
touch with the American people.
There are two more presidential debates, following next Thursday’s
debate between the vice presidential candidates. And so Obama will have a
chance to redeem himself. But it will be back to the drawing board for
Team Obama, while Team Romney will build upon a win they have
anticipated for many months and may enjoy for many months hence.
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