The expectations were set incredibly low for Joe Biden. As Ryan
would put it to him during the debate, “Sometimes words don’t come
out of your mouth the right way,” eliciting laughter
from the gallery. As a man who wouldn’t be taken seriously entering
this debate, he couldn’t possibly be more buffoonish. So
why not go ballistic and interrupt Ryan at every
turn?
The move paid off. The only times Ryan got to enjoy
uninterrupted time to make his pitch to the American people were
during his opening and closing statements. Every other moment was
shared with Biden or the moderator, Martha Radditz.
Ryan’s strength comes from his knowledge of the math and the
numbers. He needed to establish with the American people that he
was a competent, thoughtful aspiring vice presidential candidate
who could work across the aisle. Just a month ago, he was being
protrayed as a right-wing radical with ideas too crazy for
independents. That’s why his pitch was so focused on how he would
focus on working with Democrats to reach a solution on the budget
or on foreign policy, contrasting that to the experience of Obama’s
first term.
While David Freddoso argues that Biden needed to reinvigorate
the base to reassure them that Obama’s lousy first debate
performance was not representative of the campaign’s energy level,
Biden also needed to appeal to independents and undermine Ryan’s
own working class credentials. Laughing at Ryan was supposed to
make him look silly, unqualified, unpresidential. Instead, Biden
looked like an impatient bully, unconfident in his own record and
desperate to change the subject.
One place this most stood out was in Biden’s carping about how
it was somehow novel for a Republican to call for bipartisanship.
The past Republican Congresses were nowhere close to bipartisan in
their approach, he argued. But in political years, that was long
past history. Yes, Joe, you might have disliked how Republicans in
Congress behaved under George W. Bush. But who cares?
Biden might have come closer to resonating with viewers if he’d
allowed his points to stick. His arguments about how We Are All The
47 Percent might have stuck (if only those in the 47 percent would
admit to themselves that’s who they are!). But instead, his
over-the-top interruptions took the stage. Most mainstream
reporters on Twitter I
noticed caught it and repudiated it to some degree.
In other words, Biden had a choice: Play the elder statesman who
knows better, or the smart alec who wants to put the upstart kid in
his place. Doing both meant being the elder statesmen who
condescended to his opponent, and it won’t play well.
After all: The independents, and not the base, are the ones who
matter.
PS. I have another theory about why Biden was smiling so
much:
