Politico
With the country fighting two wars and economic cancer, McCain and Obama seem smaller than the moment — and their own biographies. (Read More)
: SUMMARY: With the country at one of its most interesting — not to mention terrifying — moments in a generation, John McCain and Barack Obama met in Nashville for what was surely one of the dullest and least satisfying presidential debates in memory.
There have been boring debates before, of course. Truth be told, probably only a fraction of these encounters, over the 32 years since general election debates became a fixture of presidential campaigns, actually delivered on their promise of great political drama. And even interesting debates are inevitably somewhat stilted affairs, as candidates cleave to their scripts and try to avoid blunders.
But the Belmont University showdown was something entirely different. Place the gravity of the moment next to the blah-blah-blah artifice of the rhetoric and overall insubstantiality of the evening, and this is what you get: The worst presidential debate ever.
The day after leaves behind a puzzle: How the hell did candidates manage to be so timid and uninspiring at a time when American troops are in two problematic wars, the world financial markets are in scary free fall and the Dow has lost 1,400 points since Oct. 1? This is a moment history rarely sees — and both men blew it.
It was an odd reversal of the usual optics of power. Ordinarily, the national stage can take even life-size pols such as Michael Dukakis and imbue them with an outsize aura.
Tuesday's debate was a look through the wrong end of the telescope: Men with fascinating biographies seemed conventional. The promise both men once offered of a new, less contrived and more creative brand of politics was a distant memory.
An evening this bad is not the result of just an off night by the candidates. It can flow only from a confluence of circumstances.
Here is our appraisal of the factors behind the most disappointing presidential debate ever.
Submitted by Jasongoldberg
from YouTube:
Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, brought up lipstick on Tuesday in comparing the policies of McCain, his Republican rival for the White House, to those of President Bush. (Sept. 10). (Read More)
Submitted by Jasongoldberg:
WASHINGTON — The Republican National Convention has given John McCain and his party a significant boost, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken over the weekend shows, as running mate Sarah Palin helps close an "enthusiasm gap" that has dogged the GOP all year.McCain leads Democrat Barack Obama by 50%-46% among registered voters, th (Read More)
: Post convention bumps rarely predict elections, but this is a pretty significant increase for McCain. The Obama campaign is going to have to step up their game and start talking about issues now that McCain has appeased the evangelical voter bloc.
Submitted by Jasongoldberg
from Twitter:
Seth Grahame-Smith: 8 Reasons Sarah Palin is More Qualified than Barack Obama [Huffington Post] http://bit.ly/4q61Qu. (Read More)