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October 06, 2004,
12:00 a.m. Score this one to Vice President Dick Cheney. Passing a few fundamental tests was the task and tonight it was mission accomplished.
Second, while Senator John Edwards was well prepared with his planned answers, and is clearly a skilled and eloquent debater, he left himself open to effective Cheney zingers. Unlike the first debate where President Bush suffered from some poor body language and several missed opportunities, Cheney missed a couple too, but also delivered some rhetorical body blows that nearly knocked Edwards out of his chair. Three that rocked Edwards, causing him to stumble over his responses were:
Not quite "You're no John Kennedy, Senator," but still powerful. Edwards was also thrown off by Cheney challenging him on excluding Iraqi casualties in his litany about America bearing 90 percent of the burden. Finally, Cheney effectively brought the Kerry/Edwards Senate record back in play. Time and time again, on taxes, the war, litigation, and spending, the vice president effectively raised the issue of "consistency." Edwards started strong and had a polished, well-rehearsed, better-delivered close, but the vice president clearly accomplished his goals tonight and won the aspects of this debate most important to reelecting the Bush/Cheney ticket: demonstrating competence/dispelling myths, landing some rhetorical body blows, and reinforcing the flip-flop/liberal image by raising the Kerry/Edwards Senate record. Gary Andres is vice chairman of research and policy at the Dutko Group Companies and a frequent NRO contributor. * * * YOU’RE NOT A SUBSCRIBER TO NATIONAL REVIEW? Sign up right now! It’s easy: Subscribe to National Review here, or to the digital version of the magazine here. You can even order a subscription as a gift: print or digital! |
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