GUEST COMMENTARY: Obama-Romney debate important but not decisive

2012-10-05T00:00:00Z GUEST COMMENTARY: Obama-Romney debate important but not decisiveBy Arthur I. Cyr nwitimes.com
October 05, 2012 12:00 am  • 

"Are you better off?" Ronald Reagan rhetorically asked the audience during his 1980 debate with President Jimmy Carter. President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney should each take a lesson from Reagan’s performance.

In fact, Americans were better off, as high inflation and unemployment sharply declined, but most people did not feel that way. Reagan projected great confidence and connected with the audience.

Wednesday's debate between Obama and Romney has confirmed each shares Carter’s taste for facts and policy references. However, neither put forward a vision comparable to Reagan’s persuasive performance.

The debate reconfirmed American preoccupation with the economy and health care. Obama has consistently said Romney’s tax and economic proposals favor people in the top income brackets. Not surprisingly, this generated intense disagreement in the debate, as each candidate stressed commitment to that all-important middle class.

Presidential debates are important but only one factor in multifaceted campaigns, and previous presidential elections have seen dramatic late shifts in opinion.

The 1980 debate remains the most important example of directly influencing the election. Carter led Reagan 47 to 39 percent in late October polling. After their single debate encounter on Oct. 28, Reagan surged ahead and won the election by 51 to 41 percent. Reagan was already well known but vulnerable to criticism of extremism. In the televised exchange, he erased the problem.

Additionally, Reagan, in contrast to Carter, was willing to debate insurgent independent candidate John Anderson. Their televised encounter provided the Republican nominee with additional visibility, along with extremely important credit for openness and fair play.

Vice presidential debates can also be important. In 1976, Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. Bob Dole stressed Americans killed and wounded in "Democrat wars." The mean-spirited attack contributed to the Republican election loss.

Youthful Sen. Dan Quayle of Indiana, running mate of George H.W. Bush, became widely regarded as a political liability, and this was confirmed by weak debate performance. He began comparing himself rhetorically to John F. Kennedy. Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Lloyd Bentsen’s debate rejoinder to Quayle that "you’re no Jack Kennedy" had a devastating impact.

Romney’s aggressive approach has been credited by pundits, and is essential to overcome the continuing if narrow Obama advantage in polls. He won the debate on points, and has two more opportunities for a knockout.

Sen. Joe Biden was effective in the 2008 vice presidential debate with Gov. Sarah Palin. This time, he faces a more formidable foe in Rep. Paul Ryan.

All four candidates will have facts, but for each vision is vital.

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguished Professor at Carthage College and author of “After the Cold War.” He can be reached at acyr@carthage.edu The opinion expressed in this column is the writer's and not necessarily that of The Times.

Copyright 2013 nwitimes.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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