Horserace
October 15, 2008 9:47 AM

Starting Gate: Five Questions For The Final Debate

By
Vaughn Ververs
Topics
Starting Gate
With less than three weeks now remaining in this marathon presidential election, Barack Obama and John McCain meet tonight for the final presidential debate. It's a moment when the race appears to be at a tipping point and it couldn't come at a more crucial point in the campaign. Here are five questions heading into the final showdown:

1. What Can McCain Do? The Republican nominee hinted at an intent to "take the gloves" off and go after Obama on issues of character prior to last week's debate but that didn't exactly pan out. Even if the debates have yielded little in the way of personal attacks, the McCain campaign has done little else but talk about Obama's associations with the likes of William Ayers for the past few weeks.

But that tactic appears to have backfired big-time against McCain as respondents in the new CBS News/New York Times poll cited those attacks as one of the main reasons why more see him unfavorably and, in turn, why he finds himself 14-points behind among likely voters in the poll. Given that, what does McCain do in tonight's debate? He needs something to turn around the momentum Obama is clearly riding. But if he goes on the attack, it could backfire. If he tries for that out-of-the-blue proposal or pronouncement, it could seem desperate or gimmicky (like his decision to suspend his campaign last month). If he sticks to his campaign talking point, that isn't likely to change the current dynamic. Is McCain out of debate options?

2. Can Obama Close It Out? Obama won the past two debates according to just about every single measure, and is widely expected to finish up with another "win" tonight. Those expectations could be a problem if the Democratic nominee stumbles in any major way but he's shown almost no proclivity to do so in the many, many debates he's been in throughout the past year.

For Obama, it's an opportunity to clear one more hurdle. Most voters see McCain as better prepared overall to be president and give him higher marks on the Commander-In-Chief issue. So far, focus on the economy has negated those advantages for McCain but it remains one of the only remaining threats to Obama. Another solid performance could help ease any remaining concerns about him the way it has with other presidential candidates in the past, like Ronald Reagan. Can Obama erase those lingering doubts?

3. Is There A "Sigh" Factor At Work? Since their inception, televised presidential debates have arguably been more about perceptions than what the candidates actually say. Richard Nixon looked pale, unshaven and sweaty in his encounter with John Kennedy. George W. Bush looked at his watch while Bill Clinton and Ross Perot felt the pain of voters. Al Gore sighed obnoxiously at George W. Bush's answers in the 2000 debates.

There may be something similar at play here. While Democrats generically have maintained a huge advantage overall throughout the year, voters have signaled at least a willingness to be open to McCain's candidacy. His body language through the first two debates, however, may have closed that door to some. He seemed unwilling to even look at his opponent in the first debate and in the second, he called him "that one." Rather than the happy warrior, McCain appears agitated, if not angry, to be facing off against a first-term Illinois Senator for the highest office in the land. While Obama routinely allows that McCain is "right" about one point or another, McCain more often says his opponent just doesn't "understand." Is this dynamic part of the reason Obama has surged ahead in the polls and will it continue tonight?

4. Is There Room For A Game-Changer? If the first two debates did not produce that definitive "moment," is it too late for it to happen in the this last one? One thing about political perceptions is they almost always change over time, not in an instant. Even casual voters who have tuned into the campaign in the past couple of months have formed their impressions of each of these candidates and most have begun making up their minds. That means it will take more than a flub or stumble to reverse them, it will take a momentous mistake of some sort that cements concerns that are already there. Can that happen in one final 90-minute exchange?

5. Who Will Be Watching? After a rather low-rated first debate, last week's face-off drew a much larger audience. Over 63 million people tuned in for the town-hall forum in Nashville (still smaller than the nearly 70 million who watched the VP debate). Who will tune in tonight? While the debate is more or less "roadblocked," meaning it's carried on most every major channel, there is a playoff baseball game on and plenty of other diversions for voters. If, as polls indicate, more and more voters have begun deciding, will they even tune in? Even though the debate will be thoroughly reported on and any big moments replayed again and again, a smaller live audience may lessen McCain's chances to change voters' minds.

Add a Comment See all 22 Comments
by jessiejade October 16, 2008 2:02 AM EDT
I feel that McCain is a very Smart Man and has a lot of positive that he wants to give the world....Look at what Obama wants to give us.
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by DebbieBrooks001 October 16, 2008 12:54 AM EDT
Whenis someone going to address the impact of the economic conditions for the folks that have paid their mortgages and bills yet losing their retirement via 401k plams? Everyone wants to bail out Wall Street, banks and the mortgage holder that purchased far more than their income would support.

I''m bloody tired of taking care of others and no one giving a second thought to the people that played by the rules and noqw left holding the bag to bail everyone else out.

Buy stock in mattress companies as there is no comfort in saving to have your 401K trashed.

I''m so tired of getting screwed after doing the "right thing" by paying off debt and daving for my retirement for 25+ years
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by rushlimpdrug October 15, 2008 11:56 PM EDT

Questions for Obama:

Since you admit to using illegal drugs,
1. What do you think of the laws
pertaining to illegal drug use?

2. Do citizens that got "caught"
using illegal drugs deserve to be
in prison?

3. Do you consider yourself lucky
you did not get caught?

Reply to this comment
by tannerbird October 15, 2008 11:54 PM EDT
WELL LADIES AND GENTS IT''S ABOUT THAT TIME TO GO AND WATCH THE BIG SHOW!!!!!!!!!
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by pughenry3 October 15, 2008 11:16 PM EDT
Why Bill Ayers is important to this campaign?

John McCain should make the argument personal and something that the American people can identify and understand.

John McCain views Bill Ayers as a founder of the Weathermen and Weather Underground and also founder of the Students for Democratic Society SDS on the campus of the University of Michigan. The University of Michigan had held the first sit-in against the war. John McCain and the other 600 Vietnam POWs believe Bill Ayers was responsible for prolonging the war and causing them to receive extra beatings by the North Vietnamese for refusing to show their exuberance for the antiwar effort in the United States. The North Vietnamese fought even harder and refused to negotiate or return our POWs given the organized antiwar protests in the United States. All the North Vietnamese had to do was wait and domestic antiwar protests orchestrated by Bill Ayers would cause the United States to surrender.
John McCain spent five and half years as a POW and personally received extra beatings because of Bill Ayers. Barack Obama views Bill Ayers as a reformed domestic terrorist who did despicable things in the past but should be given a second chance today. For Barack Obama there was never a need to keep a distance from Bill Ayers.
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by pughenry3 October 15, 2008 11:15 PM EDT
Maybe if Barack Obama could have walked in John McCain%u2019s shoes for just one day and suffered just one of the extra beatings that John McCain endured for five and a half years because of Bill Ayers and his Weathermen antiwar movement then maybe Barack Obama might appreciate a need to keep a distance from Bill Ayers.

Along with the SDS Students for Democratic Society, Weathermen Underground, the Black Panther Party also actively opposed the Vietnam War. Barack Obama received the support of Southside Chicago Congressman and former Black Panther party member Bobby L. Rush during his bid for the Illinois US Senate seat.

The Black Panther Party along with the Weathermen Underground prolonged John McCains captivity and caused him to receive extra beatings.

It is ironic, that Bill Ayers led the antiwar protests during the Vietnam era that caused John McCain to receive extra beatings and to experience nearly six years of captivity, and today Barack Obama has been leading antiwar calls against the Iraq war.

Barack Obama can not understand why John McCain is not happy that Barack Obama has not kept a distance from Bill Ayers.

If Barack Obama had walked in John McCains or any of the other 600 American POWs shoes one day, he would have no problem understanding why he should have kept his distance from Bill Ayers.

If Barack Obama would have shunned Bill Ayers and members of the Black Panthers Party there would be no issue in tonights debate.
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by tannerbird October 15, 2008 11:14 PM EDT
1 John do you wear depends---------2 John do you wear depends---------3 John do you wear depends---------4 John would please answer the queston
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by igorvitch October 15, 2008 11:13 PM EDT
Obama''s 14 pts up and rising. If McCain goes to ad hominem attacks tonight it will be a landslide for Obama. Go for it, John.
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by igorvitch October 15, 2008 11:11 PM EDT
Republicans have done NOTHING about abortion and for most of his career McCain was actually pro-cholice. Supreme Court has ruled on our right to bear arms so it''s a dead issue. Voter fraud is not a good topic for McCain considering the irregularities in Florida in 2000 and Ohio in 2004.
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by PacificGatePost October 15, 2008 11:08 PM EDT
TIME FOR A RADICAL CHANGE IN THE ELECTORAL PROCESS

Taxpayers deserve independent representation with teeth. NOT suppliant gofers taking orders from special interests.

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2008/10/electoral-process-urgent-change-is.html

WILL EITHER CANDIDATE BRING THIS UP? Not likely.
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