Romney's Real Debate Victories
By DICK MORRIS / DickMorris.com
Obviously, Romney won last night's debate. His
passion, charisma, energy, eye-contact, personality, force of argument,
and earnest compassion showed through and contrasted with a washed out,
tired, hesitant Obama.
But seeing the debate from a professional's eye,
Romney scored a number of key victories in the turf wars that underlie
this campaign. These victories are likely to last and shape the final
month of this race long after the glow from Romney's performance has
faded.
1. Romney got out from under Obama's
character assassination negative ads. By failing to raise the Cayman
Islands bank account, the 47% speech, Bain Capital or the tax return
issue in the debate, he almost dismissed them from the campaign.
Good-bye two hundred million dollars in advertising.
If Obama really believed that Romney was as callous,
heartless, and dishonest as his ads make him out to be, he would have
raised the issues in the debate. It almost belies the statement, "I'm
Barack Obama and I approve this message," that begins or ends every one
of his negative ads. If the candidate doesn't believe in his own
negative attacks enough to articulate them in a debate, why should the
rest of us base our vote on them?
2. Romney insulated himself -- with
Obama's consent -- from the doubts of the elderly about his policy on
their benefits. After the 47% comments, Romney risked losing the
elderly for fear that he meant to curtail their entitlements. But Obama
helpfully agreed that his Social Security policy did not differ from
Romney's at all and that either way the benefits would be ok. And he
agreed that neither he nor his opponent would cut Medicare for those now
over 65 or those closing in on retirement. So the 47% is now aimed at
welfare, food stamps, and Medicaid which is the target Romney originally
intended and Obama let him get away with it.
3. Obama let Romney sell the notion
that he was cutting Medicare for current beneficiaries by $716 billion
and let Romney repeat that stat without contradiction. And he let
Romney inject the 15 member board -- the rationing board -- into the
debate without trying to blunt Romney's accusation that it would decide
on who gets what treatment. Obama could have embarrassed Romney by
pointing out that Ryan kept that cut in his budget (since backed away
from it) but didn't do so. Now this campaign will be about two issues,
not just one. Now the economy and Obamacare will be the fulcrums on
which this race with hinge.
4. Romney was able to make the
debate, and therefore the race, about big issues like the size of
government, the impact of taxes on growth, the need to drill for oil,
Obamacare and rationing. He elevated not just his game but the race to
these fundamental questions on all of which Republicans and Romney have
an advantage.
5. He explained well how a tax
increase for the "wealthy" was really a tax increase on small businesses
that hire half of all American workers. By explaining that these
owners are taxed as individuals not as corporations (Subchapter S)
without getting into the weeds, he made us understand that fighting
these taxes is not about battling for yachts and private planes but
about creating jobs.
Therefore, Romney took away Obama's negative campaign,
his class warfare, his entitlement issue, the Medi-scare tactic, and
much of the president's case. In subsequent debates, Obama will be bound
by what he said last night. He cannot undo his concessions and without
doing so, it will be very hard for him to reconquer the ground he has
lost.
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