In answer to the poll question I voted
Edwards but only by a hair. I thought Edwards effectively continued to make the case that foreign policy
is not the shining star of the Bush administration and I think he got in a few good quips during the domestic policy section of the debate as well. I also think that Cheny made quite a few mistakes but also came off as more likeable than I thought he would. The performance of both men waned towards the end of the debate, but I don't think that Edwards fell off as much.
From the
Washington Post:
QUOTE
The Democrat was more effective, and more on point, in challenging Mr. Cheney on rationales for the Iraq war that have proven false, in particular connections between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda, and for the vice president's continuing failure to acknowledge the difficulties of the Iraq mission [...] Mr. Cheney was as cutting as a school principal lecturing a delinquent student on the subject of Mr. Edwards's Senate 'attendance record.' But if the question was whether he has the grounding to assume the presidency if need be, Mr. Edwards delivered a solid performance on both foreign and domestic policy last night.
From the
LA Times:
QUOTE
As the evening wore on, Cheney's chin sank down his chest, his gravelly voice turned into an inarticulate rumble and he even started passing up opportunities to talk at all. When Edwards, with that boyish smile that worked magic with jurors, stuck a knife in his gut (for example, about his role as CEO of Halliburton), Cheney more than once said he didn't know where to begin, and then didn't. Some of his own demagogic thrusts, meanwhile, were bizarre. Surely many GOP small businessmen were alarmed to hear the vice president denounce so-called S corporations (a common tax-favored setup apparently used by Edwards' law practice).
From the
NY Times:
QUOTE
Mr. Cheney, who won over many voters four years ago with his grandfatherly demeanor during a debate with Joseph Lieberman, seemed tired and angry. He was particularly dyspeptic when he responded to criticism of his relationship with Halliburton by claiming that Mr. Edwards had a bad attendance record in the Senate.
Mr. Edwards is normally known for his wide grin and boyish appearance, but he was serious and tough last night. If his main task was to show that he could stand up to the older and more experienced vice president, he did everything he needed to do, especially during the discussion of foreign policy - the area that is supposed to be his weak suit. Mr. Edwards was particularly on point when Mr. Cheney attacked John Kerry as a lawmaker who had consistently voted against military expenditures. Much of the arms spending Mr. Kerry voted against, Mr. Edwards noted, was for the same programs Mr. Cheney had fought to cut when he was secretary of defense.
Which candidate did more to help his ticket's chances in November?As far as this question goes, I think that the answer has to be once again
John Edwards. I'll admit that Cheny did much better than I expected him to up on stage, and he certainly didn't do even remotely as poor of a job as Bush did.
However, the task that Cheny needed to accomplish was to give some credibility back to Bush on foreign policy and make up for the poor performance in the first debate. I think he tried to do that but ultimately failed, he would have had to do a stellar job to pull that off and would have had to be clearly declared the winner of the debate just as clearly as Kerry was declared the winner of the first debate.
Edwards on the other hand only had to maintain the momentum that Kerry built, come off as likeable and intelligent and try and do as much damage to Bush/Cheny as possible. So for him, the task was much easier in my opinion. I think that he
mostly succeeded in those objectives as I see them. He kept Cheny on the defensive about foreign policy, kept Iraq disconnected from the WOT, exposed cheny's position on trying to tie Iraq to terrorists even as he continued to do it in the debate and I think that he damaged Bush/Cheny on domestic issues too like jobs, the economy, the deficit, healthcare and taxes as a pre-emptive strike if you will for the third debate. Edwards made some mistakes during the debate, and there were several times that myself and the friends I was watching the debate with wanted him to finish the job and go for the kill and he didn't, but overall I think he was successful and Kerry's momentum will continue.
Were there any lines that stuck out for you?From the
transcript:
I thought this was one of edwards better moments, although there were several so it is hard to decide.
QUOTE
But we had Osama bin Laden cornered at Tora Bora. We had the 10th Mountain Division up in Uzbekistan available. We had the finest military in the world on the ground. And what did we do?
We turned -- this is the man who masterminded the greatest mass murder and terrorist attack in American history. And what did the administration decide to do?
They gave the responsibility of capturing and/or killing Saddam -- I mean Osama bin Laden to Afghan warlords who, just a few weeks before, had been working with Osama bin Laden.
QUOTE(Amlord)
For me, the fact that Cheney said he had never met Edwards before that night was very telling. Edwards is a Senator, Cheney as Vice President is President pro temp of the Senate. He said he chairs the Senate most Tuesdays. To me, that was very telling.
Too bad it is a lie
Amlord. In fact they met
back in 2001. So while that might play well as a sound bite, I really hope the media picks up on it and turns it against Cheny. I'm certain that at the very least the Daily Show will.