Sarah Palin did fine and may have even "won" by exceeding
expectations. She was likeable, she was lookable, but I don't think
she was wildly persuasive on substance. It was clear that they
bought into the "Let Palin be Palin" argument, because she played
to her strenghts: folksiness,"adorability" as the Luntz panel guy
put it, Joe Six Pack and the Hockey Moms. She displayed knowledge
in areas where she was not expected to and whenever she was asked a
question where Biden was clearly better informed she capably
steered the conversation back to things she did know -- Alaska,
personal anecdotes, energy policy, arguments about Democratic tax
increases.
Joe Biden avoided putting his foot in his mouth, was well
informed and crisp if occasionally to Washington-wonkish, and
struck the right balance in terms of challenging Palin without
bullying or patronizing her. He was a little flat in the beginning
but picked up steam as he went along. But the expectations game did
not favor him.
A lot will depend on how you were disposed to view the
candidates going in -- if you like Palin, you'll find her personal
touch charming; if you don't like her, you'll find it grating --
but given the Couric and Gibson interviews I'd have to think Team
McCain is happy with Palin. She was effective on the attack,
comfortable with the format, and willing to turn tough questions to
her advantage. I liked Palin the Buchananite a lot better than
Palin John McCain's Mini-Me and thought this was more of a pillow
fight than a debate, but tonight helped the Alaska governor and
should quiet some of the calls for her to leave the ticket. There
were no "You're no Jack Kennedy" deer-in-the-headlights moments
tonight. A better comparison would be when Dan Quayle held his own
against Al Gore in 1992.
topics:
John McCain, Joe Biden, Sarah Palin, Energy, Alaska