Romney, Obama set to meet in first of three debates Wednesday night | PRI.ORG
Support PRI's Global Reporting Fund. Support PRI's Global Reporting Fund.

Romney, Obama set to meet in first of three debates Wednesday night

Home | Stories | Politics and Society | Romney, Obama set to meet in first of three debates Wednesday night
email

Email to a friend

 
image
Zach Gonzales, left, represents Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, and Dia Mohamed representing President Barack Obama during rehearsal on stage for the first 2012 presidential debates at the University of Denver. (Photo by Jim Urquhart/Reuters.

Mitt Romney and Barack Obama will both try to score points, convey a vision and push their candidacy closer to winning on Election Day in November. While the election is still some 30 days away, early voting is already going in a number of states.

President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney meet on the stage at Denver University Wednesday night for the first of three televised debates they'll have with each other.

For Obama, it's a chance to open up a wide lead with just more than a month to go until election day. For Romney, it could be a chance to score points and close — or at least narrow — a persistent deficit he's faced.

But is that even possible? According to an analysis from the Washington Post's Ezra Klein, no presidential election was ever decided by the debates.

Of course, Richard Nixon's poor debate performance against John F. Kennedy certainly contributed to his defeat. And Sarah Palin didn't do herself any favors in 2008 either. Overall, Klein wrote, debates can make elections closer, but rarely tip them one way or another. Of course in a race as close as 2012, anything is possible.

This first debate, moderated by Jim Lehrer, will feature a simple format: six segments of 15 minutes each. No rigid time limits, with the debate designed to encourage robust exchanges between both Romney and Obama. The debate is slated to focus on domestic issues, which should give plenty of room for debate on job creation and the economy in general.

While the two men have certainly spent a great deal of time talking about each other, they actually haven't really crossed paths in years. According to The New York Times, the last time the two shared a stage was actually eight years ago. at a Gridiron Dinner in winter 2004.

"The challenge for both men in the debate, to be moderated by Jim Lehrer, will be to enliven the conversation with fresh details, rather than offering a line-by-line replay of the campaign so far," the Times wrote.

While the men debate, Americans are already voting. In dozens of states, early voting has started and more will open up in the days before as well.

The debate begins at 9 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m. Central and will be carried on most major broadcast and cable news networks. 

Found in:   elections   government   USA   Barack Obama   politics   Mitt Romney
email

Email to a friend

 

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (1 posted)

avatar
Nikos Retsos 03 October, 2012 10:30:17
Would it really be a debate? I don't really see it, because I don't expect anything new to come up. Both candidates have actually covered so far every subject imaginable that was thrown at them, and there is nothing new left to sink their teeth into. The candidates have been preparing for this debate by checking their menus, and re-spicing or re-portioning issues descriptions to make their answers more palatable and easier for the audiences to swallow. I don't expect, therefore, to see any jaw-dropping in the national audience, but I expect a lot of shrugging and listeners recalling: "I heard that before!"

What do I expect from tonight's debate? A lively rehash! I predict plenty of smirking by the weakling Romney, an Obama trying to look presidential, and the national audience struggling to make sense of the unavoidable flip-flapping by the candidates!

Whereupon, I view the debate as the confetti of the presidential campaign, with the balloons to come later - after November 6! Nikos Retsos, retired professor
Reply Thumbs Up Thumbs Down
0
total: 1 | displaying: 1 - 1

Post your comment

    Bold Italic Underline Quote

Please enter the code you see in the image:

Captcha

JOIN PRI COMMUNITIES:


Rate this article
0