Overall, Obama didn’t embarrass himself — though he had better
hope that bracelet gaffe isn’t the takeaway, because that is much
worse than John Kerry’s global test. If I were an Obama partisan, I
would be happy with the way my candidate acquitted himself on
issues that aren’t his strength and that he looked non-scary and
presidential.
That said, I thought this was John McCain’s night. I say this as
someone who thinks McCain is wrong on most of the major foreign
policy issues of our time, including Iraq. McCain simply pinned
Obama’s ears back during the foreign policy and military exchanges.
I don’t agree that his nonsensical campaign suspension and bailout
participation aided this in any significant way. But I haven’t seen
an old Washington hand mop up the floor with a smarmy,
inexperienced but glib pol like this since Cheney kicked Edwards’s
posterior in the 2004 vice presidential debate. Obama was on the
defensive most of the time, and his “not true” interruptions were
mostly ineffectual.
The weak spots for Team McCain were as follows: He was
absolutely pathetic on the domestic portion of the debate (thus my
contention that the bailout business hasn’t helped him in the
least) and if I were part of his campaign I’d be very worried about
an economic debate. Earmarks and a spending freeze that excludes
most federal spending — it reminds me of Poppy Bush’s “flexible”
freeze in 1988; who would skate on a flexibily frozen river? —
just aren’t going to cut it. Neither will the Obama Lite Wall
Street greed mewlings.
McCain’s lecturing of Obama on Pakistan was also a gaffe. First,
it isn’t as if McCain really opposes snatch-and-grab operations in
Pakistan. (If he does, that makes him more dovish vis-a-vis al
Qaeda than Ron Paul.) Second, did he not see the “Bomb, Bomb, Bomb,
Bomb, Bomb Iran” reference coming? Finally, some of his geeky
laughter during Obama’s responses might come across like Al Gore’s
sighs.
But this is all just quibbling past the graveyard. McCain was
dominant throughout the portion of the debate that concerned
Obama’s readiness to be commander-in-chief, a key hurdle for the
Democrat to clear. And McCain forced Obama to debate Russia, Iran,
and post-2007 Iraq almost entirely on Republican terms, something
that would have been unthinkable as recently as the last election.
I’d say McCain did what he needed to do tonight and needs to hit
the briefing books on domestic policy before their next
encounter.