NASHVILLE (By Richard
Wolffe, Newsweek) October 8, 2008 — In some ways, it wasn't a fair
contest. John McCain was facing not one but two opponents. One was
the Democratic nominee sitting on the bar stool across the
red-carpeted stage from him. The other was his own veep nominee —
who drew 70 million viewers to her debate against Joe Biden last
week.
Sarah Palin understood
clearly the techniques that work on television. The substance is not
what matters most; rather it's the optics, and the angles, and the
ability to project affability and warmth through the lens of the
camera perched over the moderator's shoulder.
That lesson was lost
on John McCain in Nashville on Wednesday, who seemed to think that a
town hall debate on television was the same as a town-hall debate in
a real town hall.
He paced up and down
in fits and starts as he spoke. He leapt from subject to subject,
sound byte to sound byte. Between answers, he sat down and scribbled
page after page of notes, then jumped up and paced around silently.
Early on, he seemed ill at ease in engaging with his questioners;
how close should he stand? And how much should he look at them? His
approach seemed to present a serious challenge to the show's
producers, as they struggled to find the best way to frame McCain's
interactions.
There was no
questioning the GOP nominee's energy level; he seemed to have enough
pent-up force to power a sub-station.
Barack Obama, by
contrast, barely touched his note pad, sat firmly in his seat when
he wasn't answering, picked a spot to stand in addressing his
questioner and stuck to it. He didn't light the place up with his
energy level, and critics will maintain that his cool demeanor still
doesn't connect with Main Street voters. But he moved easily about
the stage, and seemed far more comfortable without a podium than his
rival did.
Which is unusual,
given McCain's professed love of the town-hall setting. It was the
McCain camp, after all, that had proposed a town-hall forum every
week during early discussions about the debate schedule. Given the
instant polls gauging the outcome Tuesday night, McCain ought to be
grateful that Obama said no: a CNN poll showed a 24-point lead for
Obama.
Heading into the
showdown in Nashville, the pressure was largely on McCain. Trailing
in national polls and in a number of the key battleground states, he
knew he needed to play up his national security credentials, raise
questions about Obama's experience-and try to reverse voters' rising
confidence in the Democratic Party's ability to address their
economic concerns. He came out swinging, as he had done in the first
debate. He bashed Obama on earmarks, and hit him again over his
diplomatic posture vis-à-vis talks with Iran.
But at times, McCain
seemed to sense that the audience might not be buying it — as though
he was aware of the risks of attacking when many surveys suggest
that the blows have driven his own negatives up. Addressing a
question that touched on the Bush administration's energy
legislation, he said: "By the way, my friends, I know you grow a
little weary with this back and forth. It was an energy bill on the
floor of the Senate loaded down with goodies, billions for the oil
companies, and it was sponsored by Bush and Cheney. You know who
voted for it? You might never know. That one," McCain said, pointing
to Obama. "You know who voted against it? Me." With that, he grinned
like he'd just hit the jackpot on the slots.
Obama smiled through
the attacks, but he was less generous with his praise than he'd been
during their previous meeting in Mississippi. Gone were the frequent
nods to "John" being "right", or absolutely right, on a whole host
of issues. At one point, he feinted in that direction, allowing that
his opponent regarded him as "green behind the ears" (cliché police:
that's green, senator, or wet behind the ears). But even as McCain
called out a thank you, Obama wheeled and stuck in the shiv,
reminding audiences that the supposedly mature one on stage had been
the guy who once sang "Bomb Iran" to the tune of a Beach Boys ditty,
and called for the "annihilation of North Korea."
Obama also seemed
determine to defuse another line of criticism — that he fails to
connect with voters on a personal and emotional level. He talked
about how his mother had scrapped with insurance companies on her
death bed, how the family had been on food stamps, and how his
grandmother scrimped so that the family could afford to give him a
first-class education. And he sought to express empathy with his
questioners as they described their own financial struggles. He
hardly rivaled Bill Clinton's ability to feel their pain — but he
did express some of his own.
McCain remains a
formidable presence — a tough debater relentlessly on the attack.
But he needed a knockdown Tuesday night to help change the narrative
of the campaign. At the end, Obama was still standing, and smiling.
On to Round Three.