Look, there were polls that showed Edwards edging Cheney in the
2004 vice presidential debate and that doesn't change my evaluation
of who won that exchange in the least. Obviously, pre-election
debates are ultimately remembered for their political impact, which
sometimes goes against who won on debating points. Nixon-Kennedy
1960 and the Bush-Gore debate in 2000 are two examples that quickly
come to mind. I don't at all dispute that apolitical people are
going to judge these things differently than well informed people
and that there is some benefit to trying to get inside their heads
-- and casting aside ideololgy -- to assess electoral impact.
Ultimately, what the candidates need to do in these debates and the
rest of the campaign is try to win votes.
But for journalists writing for an informed audience, I think
there is more to analyzing these things than just trying to guess
the outcome of (sometimes dubious) post-debate snap polls. And even
though we all know what the political impact of that famous
Bush-Gore debate was, I'm not going to pretend that Bush won that
one on debating points just because Gore sighed a lot and turned
off voters by acting like a jerk. If the political environment is
such that a plurality of voters prefer a Democrat so long as he
seems likable, competent, and reasonable, Obama is likely to "win"
all of the debates no matter what McCain does. In the first debate,
there is a sense in which Obama won just by getting McCain to show
up.
UPDATE: This Nate Silver post over at TNR strikes
me as a pretty good explanation for why the polls say what they do
and why us non-Quin pundits missed it.
topics:
Environment