Mitt Romney went for the jugular in the first presidential debate last night, overwhelming a lacklustre President Barack Obama with a relentlessly forceful performance that could give a significant boost to his White House hopes.
Trailing by several
points in the polls, the Republican challenger needed to put in a strong
performance in the first presidential debate in Denver. He more than rose to
the occasion with even some of Obama’s most dedicated supporters declaring him
the clear winner.
From the outset, Mr
Romney chided Mr Obama for promising to halve America’s annual deficit but
instead doubling it and even compared him to a little boy who can’t tell the
truth.
‘Look, I’ve got five boys,' he said. 'I’m used to people saying something that’s not always true, but just keep on repeating it and ultimately hoping I’ll believe it.’
‘Look, I’ve got five boys,' he said. 'I’m used to people saying something that’s not always true, but just keep on repeating it and ultimately hoping I’ll believe it.’
Hitting Mr Obama with
a blizzard of statistics, Mr Romney also hit back hard at what he saw as the
President mischaracterising his plans: ‘Virtually everything he just said about
my tax plan is inaccurate.'
Mr Romney was at the
top of his game from the outset, coming across as pithier and punchier than Mr
Obama, who seemed taken aback by being confronted so relentlessly and struggled
to speak concisely.
The challenger's
dominance came despite his having four minutes less talking time than the
incumbent - Mr Romney spoke for 38 minutes and 32 seconds, while Mr Obama held
the spotlight for 42 minutes and 50 seconds.
A CNN poll of
registered voters who watched the debate reflected Mr Romney's perceived
victory, as 67 per cent of respondents regarded him as the night's winner
compared to just 25 per cent for Mr Obama.
Additionally, 58 per
cent thought that the Republican came across as a stronger leader than the
Democrat, while twice as many said the evening had made them more likely to
vote for Mr Romney as said they were swayed towards the President.
At the start, Mr
Obama tried to make the debate about the next four years rather than his four
years in office, saying: ‘The question here tonight is not where we've been but
where we're going.’
But Mr Romney
pummelled him repeatedly on the state of the economy. ‘The people who are
having the hard time right now are middle-income Americans. Under the
president’s policies, middle-income Americans have been buried,’ he said.
‘They’re just being
crushed. Middle-income Americans have seen their income come down by $4,300.
This is a tax in and of itself. I’ll call it the economy tax. It’s been
crushing.
‘At the same time,
gasoline prices have doubled under the president. Electric rates are up. Food
prices are up. Health care costs have gone up by $2,500 a family. Middle-income
families are being crushed.’
He added: ‘The
President said that he’d cut the deficit in half. Unfortunately, he doubled
it.'
Mr Obama spent much
of the debate looking down at his notes and pursing his lips as Mr Romney
spoke. He also appeared hesitant at time and his occasional attempts at humour
fell flat.
While Mr Romney
maintained his aggressive stance throughout, Mr Obama was surprisingly gentle
on his opponent, failing to mention common attack lines on subjects such as
Bain Capital outsourcing, the notorious '47 per cent' video and the supposed
Republican ‘war on women’.
But Mr Romney
declared: 'This is bigger than an election about the two of us as individuals.
It’s bigger than our respective parties. It’s an election about the course of
America.'
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