By Debra J. Saunders
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
My theory as to why President Barack Obama fell flat
during the first debate: He looked at the crowd and the cameras and thought:
"I've been saying this stuff for five years, and I
don't believe myself anymore. I don't have a strong plan to jump-start the
moribund economy. Come on, everyone knows that presidents aren't responsible
for private-sector job creation. I don't really want to cut the deficit. This
isn't fun anymore."
In the second presidential debate with Mitt Romney on
Tuesday night, Obama brought more energy, but he couldn't rustle up a stronger
economy, and he couldn't give much hope to his erstwhile fans. Undecided voter
Michael Jones, for example, told the president he voted for him in 2008 but no
longer felt optimistic about four more years under this administration.
Obama's policies haven't delivered as promised. The
president keeps talking up "energy of the future," and he says that
he wants more oil, natural gas and renewable fuels, but he stopped the Keystone
XL pipeline, bankrolled the failed Solyndra solar venture and appointed an
energy secretary who doesn't even try to lower prices at the pump.
"I know what it takes to make an economy work,"
Romney pressed. Obama means well, but his policies hurt job creation.
The president promised voters that his health care
program would save families $2,500 per year. Problem: Premiums are almost
$2,000 higher than they were when Obama signed the Affordable Care Act.
And, Romney argued, small-business owners tell him the
Obamacare mandates keep them from hiring new workers.
Romney hit Obama hard on the president's failure to
deliver on his promise to push for a comprehensive immigration bill in his
first year in office. In fact, Obama did not push for said legislation during
his first two years in office, when Democrats controlled the House and Senate.
(Congress didn't vote on an immigration bill until the Republicans retook the
House.)
It would have been nice if moderator Candy Crowley had
corrected the president when he claimed otherwise.
Crowley did correct Romney when he said the president did
not attribute the Sept. 11 attack in Benghazi, Libya, this year to terrorism.
Obama countered that he mentioned terrorism during remarks he made in the Rose
Garden the following day. (Actually, the president said, "No acts of
terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character
or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for." Obama also
suggested that efforts to "denigrate" Islam had a role in the attack
-- the phony video scenario.)
The real problem for Romney in that exchange, however,
was that he seemed too opportunistic about the violent assault that left
Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans dead.
Obama hit Romney for putting out a critical press release
during anti-American demonstrations. Romney hit back by observing that hours
after the president's Rose Garden remarks, Obama flew to Las Vegas for a
fundraiser.
It was not a high note for America.
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