I know you saw the Presidential Debate. I have a great deal of respect for Jim Lehrer, but he was completely negligent in his duties tonight. The clearest loser in tonight's debate wasn't either candidate, but
Lehrer, who became Romney's little bitch within the first 15 minutes. Apparently, Jim Lehrer thinks the best moderator is no moderator at all.
Of
course, considering tonight's first presidential debate was the
12th presidential or vice presidential debate Lehrer has moderated
since 1988, it's likely that he knew most of his efforts to move the
candidates off their talking points were going to fail. Which might be
why, fairly quickly in, he seemed to give up.
He asked President
Obama and Romney to stick to the questions asked. They didn't. He asked
Romney, after the first statement, to ask President Obama a direct
question. He didn't. He objected to Mitt Romney taking the last word on
the first question. He took it anyway. He told President Obama his time
was up. He took more time.
He asked them both, at the start, to stick to the limits set. And then he, and they, acted as if the limits didn't exist.
Clearly, Lehrer lost control, early and often. But just as clearly,
he had a goal beyond presiding over a tightly structured debate -- which
was to stay out of the way as much as possible and make the candidates
run the debate themselves. And for better or worse, that goal he largely
achieved.
"We're way over our first 15 minutes," Lehrer said at
around the 20-minute mark, as the men continued to talk around the first
question -- which was supposed to be about jobs and moved on to taxes
and the budget before cycling back, sort of, to jobs. That was all
right, Lehrer said, because the discussion was still about the economy.
It just wasn't about that part of the economy he had asked them to
discuss.
Of course, you could forgive the candidates and viewers
alike for forgetting exactly what Lehrer's vague, open-ended question
was from segment to segment -- which is what happens when the moderator
seems to float with the tide. As a drinking game, you could count how
many times one of the candidates talked over Lehrer, or how often Lehrer
was reduced to sputtering "but" or "OK" or "no, no, no." Or you could
just count how many times Lehrer asked Romney if he supported vouchers
for Medicare before he seemed to just give up on getting an answer.
To
be fair, the format put Lehrer in an almost impossible situation. If
you give the candidates free rein, as he pretty much did, you end up
with a debate that wanders, sometimes incomprehensibly, from surface
point to surface point. If you step in too often, you risk grabbing the focus at an event that is supposed to be
centered on the two candidates -- and you get slammed as biased by
whichever candidate suffers under your tighter control.Still, some control might have been nice. Perhaps Lehrer can keep that in mind if a 13th debate comes his way.
How do you think it went?
03 October 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
I'm actually disgusted by the debates. I think Lehrer lost control early in the debate and Romney took advantage of it. I really wish President Obama would stand up for himself and disregard the fact that GOP party have labeled him as an angry black man. The Republicans will never have anything positive to say about a democratic POTUS anyway. Lol.
Romney took this debate although he answered no questions (not really), hardly appeared aware of anything besides the fact that he wants to be POTUS.
Hopefully, the forty-seven percent thing is brought up by President Obama during the next debate.
Good read.
I watched last night and I definitely thought Lehrer had no control whatsoever. It was comical.
Maybe after Mitt announced,if elected President, he was going to cut government funding to PBS, Jim got flustered and couldn't keep focus, let alone control.
Post a Comment