McCain wins round one

David Yepsen:

It was one of the most substantive debates in recent presidential campaign history and John McCain won it.

The Arizona senator was cool, informed and forceful in Friday’s first presidential debate of the general election campaign.

He repeatedly put Barack Obama on the defensive throughout the 90 minutes session. Obama did little to ease voter concerns that he’s experienced enough to handle foreign and defense policy. That was his number one task Friday night and he failed.

Instead he was often his old meandering self, unable to state a quick, forceful position. Polls taken in the coming days should show McCain holding on to his trump card in the race - the view that he’s better equipped to be commander in chief.

He condescendingly called Obama “naive” at a couple points in the debate, like an old master lecturing a young understudy. Obama never seemed able to attack back.

McCain’s victory came at a good time for him in the race. He has fumbled around for a week on questions involving the economy and the federal bailout of Wall Street. His vice presidential candidate has become a running joke of late night comedy shows. As a result, his poll numbers sagged.

The debate came against the backdrop of a close presidential election at a time when the country faces its greatest economic crisis since the 1930s and some of its greatest military threats since World War II. The nation’s adversaries - Russia, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela and Taliban terrorists - seem to be on the ascendancy.

It has rattled Americans and between the two, McCain came off as the most reassuring. The crabby, grumbling, hotheaded McCain was nowhere to be seen. Instead we saw a calm, seasoned commander in chief . If you looked at your television and squinted slightly, you could better picture him addressing the country during a time of national crisis than Obama. Obama was often left flashing his smile and shaking his head at McCain.

McCain was expected to win on questions of foreign policy and national defense. That’s been his background. Where he routed Obama was on economic and spending questions as he repeatedly accusing Obama of using earmarks and wanting to spend too much.

When Obama tried his line about how McCain voted with George W. Bush 90 percent of the time, McCain slapped back by ticking off a lit of issues where he has disagreed with Bush - like torture, conduct of the war in Iraq and federal spending and Guantanamo Bay. McCain never got rattled or flustered, he just constantly stayed focused on the attack.

...

Many commentator thought the race a tie and several said Obama won, but they had to be Obama supporters to begin with especially when the argument finally got around to what was supposed to be subject of the debate. I did not think either was that good on the economic issues, but McCain was able to pivot the debate to spending and Obama just has little credibility on that issue.

While McCain kept hammering Obama as not knowing the difference between strategy and tactics, the larger point was that Obama did not comprehend the stratgic significance of winning in Iraq or what a disaster losing would be. Obama seems almost eager to lose to prove some point about his position in 20023 rather than look at it in real time.

Comments

  1. McCain owned Obama on economic issues, by focusing on spending. It was very nice to hear a Republican talk more about cutting spending than cutting taxes. If that could become one of the mandates of his presidency, I could almost get on board. But I don't think it's going to matter, because Palin's inability to think on her feet has got to be scaring away many undecideds.

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