By

Jake Miller /

CBS News/ October 4, 2012, 4:26 PM

Obama campaign readies post-debate counterpunch

Seeking to rebound from a debate performance widely panned as lackluster, President Obama and his campaign on Thursday staked out their message for the days ahead, painting Romney as a "serial evader" whose slick performance belies a troubling lack of policy specifics.

Obama's campaign seemed to concede the strength of Romney's performance last night, with the president describing Romney as a "spirited fellow" at a campaign stop in Denver on Thursday, and with deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter, during post-debate spin on Wednesday, allowing that Romney "wins the style points."

But the president and his team believe that Romney, smooth onstage operator that he was, nonetheless opened himself to criticism that his tax reform, health care, and Wall Street regulation proposals are a smokescreen - all show, no substance.

Mr. Obama began prosecuting the case against Romney's vague proposals at the debate, explaining, "He says he's going to close deductions and loopholes for his tax plan. That's how it's going to be paid for but we don't know the details. He says that he's going to replace Dodd-Frank, Wall Street reform. But we don't know exactly which ones. He won't tell us. He now says he's going to replace Obamacare and assure all the good things that are in it are going to be in there and you don't have to worry."

"And at some point I think the American people have to ask themselves: Is the reason that Governor Romney is keeping all these plans to replace secret because they're too good?"

The moment was largely lost amid the near-unanimous verdict that Mr. Obama failed to connect, but Cutter pressed the narrative further immediately after the debate, telling CNN, "[Romney] talked to the American people about his plan to repeal Wall Street reform, but couldn't name one single regulation he'd put in place on Wall Street. Talked to the American people about how he doesn't really have a $5 trillion tax cut, which he has been campaigning on for 18 months. So I don't think they leave this debate tonight having any better idea of where Mitt Romney is going to take this country."

Chief Obama campaign strategist David Axelrod sounded a similar note in a post-debate interview with NBC, saying, "Gov. Romney has always been good on the attack. You saw that during the primaries. What he's not very good at is offering specifics."

It was a charge that Mr. Obama took up himself in Denver on Thursday, delivering a stump performance that was as energized as his debate performance was effete. "When I got onto the stage I met this very spirited fellow who claimed to be Mitt Romney. But it couldn't have been Mitt Romney, because the real Mitt Romney has been running around the country all year promising $5 trillion in tax cuts for the wealthy. The fellow onstage last night said he didn't know anything about that," the president said.

"So you see, the man onstage last night -- he doesn't want to be held accountable for the real Mitt Romney and what he's been saying for the last year, and that's because he knows full well we don't want what the real Mitt Romney has been selling for the last year."

The emerging rejoinder was crystallized in a new ad from the Obama campaign released Thursday in which the narrator asks, "Why won't Romney level with us about his tax plan, which gives the wealthy huge new tax breaks? Because according to experts, he'd have to raise taxes on the middle class - or increase the deficit to pay for it."

The ad links Romney's vague proposals to a broader question about trustworthiness, asking voters how they could trust Mitt Romney in the Oval Office if he will not level with them at a debate.

Romney, for his part, didn't brag about all the plaudits thrown his way at an event in Colorado this morning. "Last night I thought was a great opportunity for the American people to see two very different visions for the country," Romney told a Denver crowd, following a standing ovation. "I think it was helpful to be able to describe those visions."

The Romney campaign, however, seemed content to brag on their candidate's performance, with campaign senior adviser Eric Fehrnstrom calling Romney the "clear victor" and spokesman Ryan Williams suggesting the Obama campaign is "in full damage-control mode."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
16 Comments Add a Comment
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suziel813 says:
romney and his smirk also his bullying tactics were very visible. the smirk is reminiscent of a sneaky underhanded devil, trying to push his way through. i see it with all his opponents. oh, and watch his hands. he is the most disgusting man i have seen since my abusive ex boyfriend and abusive ex husband. on the other hand, women who have been abused will see right through him. his eyes show, that his thoughts are deceitful. i for one want to throw up every time i look at him. he should not be our president. he is underhanded and demeaning to his fellow many. he is not able to be diplomatic, and true. all his efforts are of selfish needs and worried about taxation of his monies. OBAMA/2012
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DestructoMax replies:
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Thank god Obama got his Tell Him "O" promter back so he could be told how to respond to Romney!
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bluejacket2-2009 says:
I have to get a note to the Obama campaign to focus in on Romney's evading and flip-flopping... they should get three or four Democrat Massachusetts folks who voted for him to be Governor but are switching to Obama because of his lies... He was for abortion before he wasn't, he was for Romney care before he wasn't, he was for trashing 47% of America before he wasn't....

Which way is it Romney? What are you lying about now that you will change if elected?
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barcar55 says:
BUCKEYECHUCK.....To answer your question...hmmm...did you watch the debate? Did you notice every time Obama said something that the biased Dems & media have thrown up about Romney or his policies, he disputed them? Did Obama dispute Romney when he talked about Obama's failure as a president with high umemployment, deficit out the roof, billions taken from Medicare? No! And why not don't you think? Because Obama didn't have a leg to stand on. You could see from his body language that he was irritated by all this. Yet, he could not defend himself because Romney was telling the truth.
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SoCal_Gridlock says:
You know how after you've just been in an argument you realize later that "I shoulda said this or I shoulda said that"? Well, today was Obama's day of finally thinking about what he should have said last night.

He has proven time and time again he can't function without a teleprompter and there won't be teleprompters at either of the next two debates. He can't think fast on the fly and every time he ad libs he says stupid things. No amount of preparation will keep him from getting his buns kicked in the next 2 debates and he'll be out there in the following days trying desparately to control the damage.
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kbbpll says:
Mr. Romney, in 2009 did you take amnesty for tax evasion?
In my view, there's no better way to judge this man's character than by watching him answer this simple question.
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Filmguy870 says:
We'll see...stay tuned!
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CarmenKnows says:
David Axelgrease and Obama's latest spin: "I Swear, Romney's Got a $5 Trillion Tax Cut Plan For the Rich!". It's a lie of course, but strawman Mitt is so much easier to debate.

Oh, and Biden proudly vows to raise taxes by $1 Trillion
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Renegade98 says:
The counter punch will not be enough to undo the damage from the 1st debate. There is no going back to the 50 million people to 'out' Romney on his lies to the American people.
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ugacrew replies:
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"Damage from the first debate?" Are you saying that you really think you base your decision on a man's qualifications for the Office of the Presidency of the United States on a 90 minute speech routine?

God help us all if too many will use that as a basis for their decision!
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nadorick01 says:
The bad economy isn't Obama's fault, the lack of unity is not Obama's fault, the mountain of debt is not Obama's fault - now we find out Obama's poor performance at the debate was not his fault. My o my.....
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ugacrew replies:
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One thing is for certain, people who can't see any good in all that he has done...is NOT his fault! Remember, sometimes it is all in the eye of the beholder and people who focus on the negative will seldom even acknowledge the existence of any positive. It runs counter to their objective.
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johnfrank says:
I thought Romney won the human energy debate and he muddied the water on education. But he needed to make headway on women, immigration, and those folks that need to know the impact of his budget and policies. The national polls may move some, but nothing was said last night to change the fundamental issues driving the swing states.

Neither person talked about women and immigration issues. Obama had nothing to gain in talking about these issues, but Romney needed to make large gains with these groups. Romney made no gains.

On taxes, Romney needed to set a consistent message and explain the specifics with his plans and his budget. The general take away was that he plans on offering a tax cut that is 5 times larger than Bush, but Romney says there will be no consequences. Romney changed his message and offered no specifics. Those undecided that are using their heads got more confusion and no specifics from Romney. This is a huge issue for Romney.

On the debt, Romney lost ground. He indicated that he was gong to increase education spending, the president pointed out that he wants 2 Trillion more in defense spending and his tax plan costs 5 trillion. Romney came across as a big spending republican.

As far as health care, as soon as Obama mentioned AARP... that is the way seniors will vote.
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ccp49 replies:
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Not this senior. AARP has become nothing more than another insurance company (looking after their own interests).
ugacrew replies:
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WARNING TO READERS:

...An intelligent poster! Beware. Such honest and objecive posts are rare. Read very s-l-o-w-l-y, you might gain some real insight.
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