What Did We Learn in New Hampshire?
The June 13th New Hampshire debate, as moderated by John King of CNN, came off as a media-driven attempt to pit Republicans against one another with pointed set-ups calling into question the few issues that separate the candidates. The seven Republicans who posted in New Hampshire did not take the bait, instead adhering to Ronald Reagan’s 11th Commandment given from on high in 1966 when Dutch was running for Governor of California– “Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” King’s failed efforts to “Jerry Springerize” the first meeting of the GOP heavyweights, did not make for exciting television, but we did learn two things: 1) without a clock to limit answer response times, the GOP candidates will talk your ears off ; and 2) the Republican candidates recognize that the common opponent is Barack Obama. The media wants them to cannibalize one another, and each of them clearly choose the vegetarian plate.
Each candidate in Manchester is pro-life, strongly anti-union, and anything but Hawkish – with all seven suggesting that American troops need to come home. Michele Bachmann – who filed her paperwork to run for the Republican nomination earlier today –reminded viewers that as President, she would be making military decisions as Commander-in-Chief an hour after she introduced herself as a tax lawyer. Not too reassuring. Ron Paul came off like an angry grandfather drifting from issue to issue, so much so that if he were in the livingroom at a family function instead of a televised debate, his kids would say, “Okay, Dad, that’ll do.” Gingrich actually sounded the most sure of himself, filled with facts and good detail. It’s too bad for his supporters that at this point, Newt is playing from two sets down. Herman Cain and his point-by-point analysis played well in SC, but an encore performance was too much of the same: no answers, just lots of consultant-speak analysis. Santorum did not do anything to hurt is bid – read: no change in his long-shot odds. T-Paw was adequate, but Romney was stronger tonight. Is Gary Johnson de facto out?
The Plus-Minus breaks down as follows: The Bench Jockeys think Bachmann’s performance tonight knocks out Sarah Palin as a candidate. Pluses go to Gingrich & Romney. Minuses goes to Cain & Paul. Santorum, Pawlenty and Bachmann held serve.
Tags: 2012, debate, election, GOP, politics