| |
Romney
barrels
out of
first
debate
on
offense
By KASIE
HUNT and
NANCY
BENAC
Associated
Press
DENVER
-
Little
more
than a
month
from
Election
Day,
Republican
Mitt
Romney
is
barreling
out of
the
first
presidential
debate
energized
by a
solid
performance
that
telegraphed
his
determination
to take
it to
President
Barack
Obama
with
gusto.
The
president,
intent
on
keeping
his
momentum
from
stalling,
is
warning
Americans
that his
GOP
rival's
policy
prescriptions
for a
fragile
economy
are more
fantasy
than
reality.
Standing
toe-to-toe
with the
president
for the
first
time in
the
campaign,
Romney
held his
own and
more at
a time
when
there
already
were
signs
that the
race is
tightening
in some
of the
battleground
states
where
Obama
has
enjoyed
an
advantage.
Obama
kept his
cool and
signaled
that he
won't
let up
on his
message
that
Romney's
plans on
taxes,
health
care,
the
deficit
and more
just
don't
add up.
"It's
fun,"
Romney
declared
well
into
Wednesday
night's
90-minute
faceoff,
clearly
relishing
the
back-and-forth.
"It's
arithmetic,"
said
Obama,
hammering
at
Romney's
conspicuous
lack of
details
with far
less
enthusiasm.
After a
few days
of
relative
calm as
the
candidates
prepared
for the
first of
their
three
debates,
the
campaign
now
bursts
out of
Colorado
in all
directions,
with an
itinerary
that
touches
down in
some of
the most
hotly
contested
battleground
states
over the
next few
days:
Obama
campaigns
in
Colorado
and
Wisconsin,
then on
to
Virginia
and
Ohio.
Romney
and
running
mate
Paul
Ryan are
off to
Virginia
on
Thursday,
then
Romney
spends
more
time in
Virginia
before
moving
on to
Florida.
Vice
President
Joe
Biden is
bound
for
Iowa.
With a
13-day
break
before
their
next
debate,
Obama
and
Romney
have
time to
hone
their
arguments
while
their
campaigns
continuing
to
bombard
the most
hotly
contested
states
with
negative
ads that
go far
beyond
the more
restrained
jibes
the
candidates
leveled
from
their
respective
podiums.
Obama
made no
mention,
for
example,
of
Romney's
caught-on-tape
remark
that
he's not
worried
about
the 47
percent
of
Americans
who
don't
pay
taxes.
Democratic
ads,
though,
have
been
making
hay with
the
comment.
Asked
why the
president
didn't
raise
the
video,
Obama
senior
political
adviser
David
David
Axelrod
suggested
on
MSNBC's
"Morning
Joe"
that he
didn't
need to
since it
has been
so
widely
seen and
heard.
"The
president's
belief
is
that's
something
that has
been
very
much a
part of
the
discussion,"
Axelrod
said.
In next
few
weeks,
Romney
is
expected
to give
a number
of
policy
speeches
filling
in
details
as he
tries to
sharpen
the
contrast
with
Obama
while
answering
criticism
that he
hasn't
clearly
outlined
his
plans.
The
Republican
challenger
begins
with a
foreign
policy
speech
in
Virginia
on
Monday.
Subsequent
speeches
are
expected
to focus
on his
plans
for job
creation,
debt and
spending.
Romney
has
promised
to
balance
the
budget
in eight
years to
10
years,
but
hasn't
explained
just how
he'll do
it.
Instead,
he's
promised
a set of
principles,
some of
which -
like
increasing
Pentagon
spending
and
restoring
more
than
$700
billion
in cuts
to
Medicare
over the
coming
decade -
work
against
that
goal. He
also has
said he
will not
consider
tax
increases.
Obama
argued
that
it's all
too
much.
"At some
point, I
think
the
American
people
have to
ask
themselves,
is the
reason
that
Governor
Romney
is
keeping
all
these
plans to
replace
secret
because
they're
too
good?"
he said.
"Is it
because
that
somehow
middle-class
families
are
going to
benefit
too much
from
them?
No."
The
president
went on
to say
the
nation
faces
tough
problems
that
defy
simple
solutions
and said
his own
choices
were
"benefiting
middle-class
families
all
across
the
country."
Romney
maintained
it was
Obama
who was
crushing
the
middle
class
and
getting
the
numbers
wrong,
telling
him,
"Mr.
President,
you're
entitled
to your
own
airplane
and your
own
house,
but not
your own
facts."
The two
candidates
planted
themselves
behind
wooden
lecterns
and
faced
off
before
about a
crowd of
fewer
than
1,000
people
at the
University
of
Denver.
But
their
policy-heavy
debate
really
was
aimed at
the tens
of
millions
of
television
viewers
who
tuned
in,
particularly
those
who are
undecided
or soft
in their
support
for a
candidate.
Just the
sort of
voters
who may
be less
partisan
and more
interested
in
hearing
specifics.
Karl
Amelchenko,
an Obama
supporter
who
watched
the
debate
at a
storefront
art
gallery
in
Raleigh,
N.C.,
thought
Romney
did
himself
some
good.
"I think
he won,
unfortunately,"
Amelchenko
said. "I
think he
might
change
some
minds."
But some
voters
still
aren't
ready to
commit
one way
or the
other.
Cynthia
Gerst, a
state
worker
in Ohio
who
attended
a
nonpartisan
debate
watch
party in
downtown
Columbus,
confessed
she's
"been
under a
rock,
but now
I'm
ready"
to pay
attention.
She
leans
Democratic,
but
hasn't
made up
her
mind.
"I
couldn't
distinguish
who was
in the
right,"
she said
after
the
debate.
Axelrod
said on
NBC's
"Today"
show
Thursday
that the
former
Massachusetts
governor
had "big
gaps in
truth
that we
saw" and
said
that
Obama
will set
the
record
straight.
He
charged
that
Romney
"refused
to offer
any way
to pay"
for the
broad-ranging
tax cut
he
advocated.
"I give
him
credit
for a
strong
performance.
I give
him an F
for
being
honest
with the
American
people,"
Axelrod
said.
Ed
Gillespie,
a top
aide to
Romney,
said
that
what
people
saw in
the
debate
was a
presidential
challenger
"who had
a
command
of the
facts."
"He had
a very
fact-based
critique
of
Obama's
policies,"
Gillespie
said on
NBC,
adding
that "we
didn't
hear
very
much,
frankly,
from
President
Obama
about a
second-term
agenda."
Both
candidates
came
into the
debate
with
distinct
missions,
and
largely
achieved
them:
Romney
needed
to
project
leadership
and
dispel
the
image of
an
out-of-touch
elitist.
Obama
needed
to avoid
making
any
major
mistakes
and
press
the case
that he
still
has more
to
offer.
The GOP
nominee
began
his
charm
offensive
from the
outset,
offering
20th
wedding
anniversary
wishes
to the
Obamas
and
joking
that the
debate
hall was
quite
the
romantic
setting.
And then
he
quickly
segued
to the
campaign's
central
issue -
jobs -
and
called
it "a
very
tender
topic."
Obama
sketched
out his
familiar
agenda
of
improving
schools,
expanding
energy
sources,
increasing
tax
fairness
and
paying
down the
debt,
then
made a
simple
but
all-encompassing
promise:
"All of
this is
possible."
Each
candidate
wielded
studies
and
experts
to
buttress
his
arguments,
and each
hauled
out
anecdotes
about
ordinary
Americans
to
connect
with
voters.
Romney
spoke of
the
woman in
Ohio who
grabbed
his arm
and told
him
she's
been out
of work
since
May.
Obama
recalled
the
teacher
he met
in Las
Vegas
who had
students
sitting
on the
floor
and
using
10-year-old
textbooks.
Biden
and Ryan
were
probably
two of
the most
attentive
viewers:
Their
own
debate
is up
next, on
Oct. 11
at
Centre
College
in
Danville,
Ky.
Their
rival
rehearsals,
with
stand-ins
for
their
opponents,
already
are well
under
way.
Obama
and
Romney
go back
at it on
Oct. 16,
in a
town
hall-style
format
at
Hofstra
University
in
Hempstead,
N.Y.
Their
final
faceoff,
on
foreign
affairs,
is Oct.
22 at
Lynn
University
in Boca
Raton,
Fla. |