Debates a shot at finding that ‘defining moment’
Topics: From the Wires, Politics News
FILE - In this Oct. 11, 2000 file photo, Democratic presidential candidate, Vice President Al Gore, right, and Republican presidential candidate Texas Gov. George W. Bush wait for the start of a debate, at Wait Chapel at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C. In presidential politics, everybody's searching for "the moment." The campaigns don't know when or how it will come, but they watch for something _ awkward words or an embarrassing image _ that can break through and become the defining symbol of the other guy's flaws. Now all eyes are on the series of three presidential debates that starts Wednesday. (AP Photo/David Phillip) (Credit: AP)WASHINGTON (AP) — In presidential politics, everybody’s searching for “the moment.” The campaigns don’t know when or how it will come, but they watch for something — awkward words, an embarrassing image — that can break through and become the defining symbol of the other guy’s flaws.
Now all eyes will be on the three presidential debates, especially the all-important first one Wednesday night, a perfect incubator for such a moment.
The unpredictable nature of the debates is part of what attracts tens of millions of live-TV viewers. A big blunder or “gotcha” quip is sure to be remembered. And President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney will be fielding questions for 4½ hours in all, a long time to stay on message.
“If we have any moment in terms of seeing the true, the real, the unscripted candidate, it’s likely to happen on the debate stage,” said Mitchell McKinney, a University of Missouri associate professor who studies the presidential match-ups.
It’s the all-too-human slips that live on. Think of Al Gore sighing loudly and often, a bored-looking George H.W. Bush checking his watch, or Richard Nixon appearing clammy and tired next to a tanned and rested John F. Kennedy in the first televised debate in 1960.
“Whether it’s sighing or looking at your watch, people will remember that. And they’ll have a lot of help because the press is going to replay it and replay it and it’s going to show up on ‘Saturday Night Live,’” said Tad Devine, who was a senior adviser to Gore’s campaign. “It becomes part of their daily conversation, and it takes hold.”
The killer moments are the ones that seem to verify what voters already suspect, Devine said, usually after weeks or months of priming by the opposing camp.
Romney and Obama know the risk firsthand.
During the GOP primary debates, Romney played into worries that his wealth distances him from ordinary people by offering to back his words with a friendly wager — a $10,000 bet.
In the 2008 Democratic primaries, Obama reinforced criticism that he’s arrogant and aloof. As Hillary Rodham Clinton good-naturedly tried to deflect a question about her likability, Obama cut in. “You’re likable enough, Hillary,” he said dismissively. He didn’t even look up.
A defining moment can sprout anywhere, of course.




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