A Couple Quick Thoughts on the Debate

You can go to any number of news websites for super, in-depth analysis so I’m just going to give a few quick impressions I had from the debate.

I’m not sure why everyone keeps saying that McCain is so good in townhall style forums.  He seemed as awkward as he always looks to me.  I thought Obama was completely equal to him in the townhall setting.

If I was playing a drinking game where you had to take a drink every time McCain said “my friend” I would have been hammered by the end of the debate.

McCain is missing something from his funny.  I didn’t follow his attempts at cracking jokes and it was sort of awkward when he laughed after he made them and no one else was really laughing.  Some of his zinger attempts also made him look a little petulant.

I thought Obama was more articulate in explaining his viewpoint and laying out what plans he had.  Problem with that was when he dodged a simple direct question, which he number a number of times, there was absolutely no mistaking that he was completely dodging the question.  I’m not sure it could have been more obvious.  He might as well have said, “that’s a great question, but I’m not going to answer it b/c its too hard or it puts me in a situation that I don’t want to be in.”

Lastly, I don’t understand how McCain’s plan to have the government buy up all the bad mortgages would work.  How is that going to get paid for, and how will they get paid off?

Bottom line, I think they were relatively equal on substance, but Obama was better on style.  Though substance should matter more, style plays a huge part in presidential politics.

Update:  So I asked the McCain housing plan question too soon.  Listening to NPR on the way home from work, apparently the outline of the plan is to take some of the bailout money that was just passed to pay for the plan.  I don’t remember all of the details, but it didn’t seem near as far fetched when it was explained a little more thoroughly.

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Thoughts on the VP Debate

I expected this thing to be an immensely entertaining debate, largely b/c I really didn’t know what to expect from Biden or Palin.  Biden has a well known history of foot-in-mouth disease, and Palin’s image in the press over the last couple of weeks hasn’t been great.  With Biden, the question really isn’t if he’s going to stick his foot in his mouth, but when.  With Palin, her interviews over the last couple of weeks had lowered expectations so much that it would be hard for her to do really poorly.

I think Joe Biden is smarter on the issues than Sarah Palin is, but I’m a little skeptical that that translates well to a general audience.  I think he uses too many number, facts, and figures and Biden being Biden, he gets long winded.  I also got tired of his numbered list.  Not saying its a bad rhetorical tool at times, but I think he trots it out too much.

On the other hand, Palin does what she does very well.  She doesn’t try to rattle off a lot of facts and figures, but I think she does a better job of trying to talk to the people.  She is more capable of talking on the same level of the listener without getting overly wonky.  She also has this ability to say almost everything with a smile, even if she’s trying to stick it to her opponent.  I have to say that her “aw shucks” and “dog gonnit” plain spokenness reads as not real to me.  It very well could be how she really is, but it just feels like she’s overdoing it sometimes.

I personally would prefer to have more smarts than style, but I’m probably a little bit of a nerd sometimes so it wouldn’t be off-putting to me.  Someone who isn’t so concerned with finite details could easily be put off by all of the facts and figures, and could see it as being condescending.

I also think its interesting how many times Palin tried to turn Biden’s past record on him, such as voting for the war in Iraq before he turned against it.  I’m not sure how effective it was for her, but the advantage she had in that regard is that Biden couldn’t turn it back on her b/c she doesn’t have a record to question.

I agree with the comment that I heard earlier today that neither of them could raise the poll numbers for either Obama or McCain, they could only drop them.  I don’t know what the talking heads are going to say about who won, but for me I don’t think either of them really won.  I can’t really think of anything where either of them screwed it up.  Personally, Biden’s knowledge of the details speaks to me more than Palin’s style so I have a more favorable view of his performance, but I’m sure there will be plenty of people that will see it exactly the opposite.

By the way, the reaction meter and pundit scoring are still mesmerizing.  I still don’t know how they work, but they’re awesome.

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