Thursday, 15 December 2011

Lowa Debate, Republican Winners and Losers

As seven Republican presidential contenders began their sprint toward the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3, each of the top candidates ran through a gauntlet of challenges in their Thursday night debate.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich came under fire from Rep. Michele Bachmann, R- Minn., for his consulting work for the government-sponsored enterprise Freddie Mac. Gingrich made more than $1.6 million for his Freddie Mac work.
As he has in previous debates Gingrich said that he had done no lobbying for the agency and that his consulting work was simply a private business endeavor.
But Gingrich won big applause from the crowd in Sioux City, Iowa when he accused President Obama of caving in to “left-wing environmental extremists in San Francisco” by refusing to approve the Keystone oil pipeline from Canada.
Bachmann sharply criticized Rep Ron Paul, R- Texas for saying that there was no evidence that Iran is close to building a nuclear weapon, dismissing it as “war propaganda.” Such thinking, said Paul, “is how we got into that useless war in Iraq.”
“I have never heard a more dangerous answer,” said Bachmann.
This prompted Paul to defend himself by saying, “I don’t want Iran to have a nuclear weapon” -- although earlier in the debate he’d said he could understand why the Tehran regime, surrounded by nuclear-armed powers, would want to acquire nuclear weapons.


Time and time over these last two or three debates, he gets questioned on his inconsistency of his record and every time he has the same response about not having our facts straight,” said Keith Nahigian, Bachmann’s national campaign manager. “And every time, he admits it the next day that we had our facts right.”


Gingrich has essentially acknowledged the accuracy of Bachmann’s criticism in previous debates on immigration and the individual mandate to purchase health insurance – but only after the fact, added Bachmann campaign spokeswoman Alice Stewart.


“Sometimes professors don’t like to be wrong, but sometimes they are,” Nahigian said.


But Gingrich’s Iowa campaign chairwoman, Linda Upmeyer, reiterated the campaign’s disagreement with Bachmann’s criticism tonight, which concerned Gingrich’s paid consulting work and his actions concerning abortion as a member of Congress.


Win


Gingrich


Newt  was clearly relishing his night in the spotlight. Currently leading in the polls, the former House speaker basked in his front-runner status on Thursday, even poking fun at recent critiques of his "zany" reputation. Gingrich almost seem to enjoy being the evening's punching bag, aggressively hitting back his critics and questioning the factual accuracy of complaints leveled against him. (Particularly those by Rep. Michele Bachmann, whose relationship with the facts he called out as dubious.) And despite being hammered hard for his relationship with mortgage giant Freddie Mac in the first half of the debate, Gingrich rebounded quickly in the night's second hour. Plus, he managed to keep his pledge to positivity - and aimed most of his criticism at president Obama.


Romney


Early presidential debates, Romney stayed focused on the candidate he clearly sees himself running against down the line: President Obama. The former Massachusetts governor focused his efforts almost exclusively at criticizing the president, and laying out his vision for the future. Romney took swipes at Gingrich in the debate a few days ago, without much luck. (Remember that $10,000 bet?). Romney returned to comfortable territory Thursday--hitting Mr. Obama--and it worked. Still, at some point the former Bay State governor will have to prove that he can dish it out just as well as he can take it. After all, in a general election, there won't be another candidate to look ahead to.


Bachmann


Bachmann showed on Thursday that she knows how to take a punch. From lambasting Newt Gingrich for having his "hand out" to mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac to blasting Ron Paul for his position in Iran, the candidate went all out against her opponents. She even sent out a release criticizing "Newt Romney" in the middle of the debate. But confidence has never been Bachmann's problem - and some of her statements have already been proven false, including one about Iran's nuclear capabilities.


Perry


Registered any screen time for the first half of the debate, but Texas Gov. Rick Perry seemed more confident on stage Thursday night than he has since the early days of his campaign. "I'm kind of starting to like these debates," he quipped at the beginning of the evening. And he displayed equal aplomb knocking his opponents, taking Newt Gingrich to task for being unable to "tell the difference between a lobbyist or a consultant." But Perry's most memorable moment? Comparing himself to Bronco's quarterback Tim Tebow, who has made come-from-behind victories a personal specialty. Still, if Perry wants a shot at that sort of comeback, he's going to need to boost his poll numbers - and guarantee himself more stage time in debates.


Paul


Ron Paul with Sioux City - He was obviously enjoying his moment in the sun. The candidate, who has a huge base in Iowa and is effectively polling third in the state, got significantly more airtime than in any previous debate. And while the Texas congressman - and staunch libertarian - is pretty far outside of the mainstream when it comes to foreign policy, the crowd in Sioux City, Iowa didn't seem to mind too much. Still, it's hard to imagine that Paul picked up a huge number of new supporters Thursday night.


LOSE


R Santorum


Former Pennsylvania governor did nothing to hurt himself in Thursday's debate, but he also failed to make the leap he needed to significantly raise his profile among the field of contenders. Santorum delivered confident answers on questions about gay marriage and Obamacare - favorite topics of the staunch Christian conservative - but at the end of the day, he failed to deliver the game-changing performance that could have changed his status in the pack.


J Huntsman


J Huntsman has spent most of the Republican presidential debates on the relative sidelines - and that didn't change in Thursday night's debate. The candidate, who has consistently sat at the bottom of the polls, failed to make a deep impression with the little screen time he got. Despite a few memorable one-liners - including telling voters "we are getting screwed as Americans" -- the candidate likely did little to significantly alter his standing in the field.

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