The New Zealand Herald

Winners & Losers

The first presidenti­al debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump is in the books. Chris Cillizza tweeted, took notes and picked some winners and losers.

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WINNERS Hillary Clinton

Clinton wasn't perfect in this debate. At times she came across as overly rehearsed and robotic. I thought her answer on race relations was way too much head and not enough heart. But, Clinton was head and shoulders better than Trump. She was, unsurprisi­ngly, very well prepared — using a slew of facts and figures to not only make her positive case but also to slam Trump. She was terrific in bashing Trump on taxes. Her response to Trump's attack on her temperamen­t — the shoulder shimmy! — was effective. Her birtherism response — while lowhanging fruit — was effective. And, on her biggest weakness — her decision to establish a private email server at the State Department, Clinton skated. She delivered a full and unequivoca­l apology — what a concept! — and the debate moved on without much of a stir. This was a clear win for her on virtually every front.

Split screen

I'm not sure who made the call at networks to keep Trump and Clinton on screen at all times during the debates, but whoever did it: good job! Debates are aimed at revealing not only policy proposals but also personalit­y and temperamen­t. Split screens help illuminate who these people are when under duress and attack, when they are nervous and when they feel backed into a corner. Trump didn't fare as well as Clinton with the split screen. He sighed, made faces and looked, well, not very presidenti­al.

Lester Holt

My guess is that the NBC anchor will be criticised in some circles for a) not fact-checking Trump enough and b) often disappeari­ng during the debate. On point A, it's impossible to fact-check every single thing Trump says in real time without making the debate seven hours long. On point b, I applaud Holt for disappeari­ng at times. Good moderators are the ones you don't remember; they're like referees in that regard. Holt let the two candidates duke it out time and time again. He avoided forcing a format on them or demanding that they move on when they were discussing real disagreeme­nts. That's what he's supposed to do! Want a testament to how well Holt did? I guarantee you no one is talking about him today. That's a win.

Twitter

I really don't know how I watched debates before Twitter. Sure, it can be distractin­g at times. And mean. And snarky. Also, I just described why I love it so much.

The ‘bigly’ vs ‘big league’

I am certain Trump says “big league”. Other are convinced he says “bigly”. Regardless, he said one of those things a bunch yesterday.

LOSERS Donald Trump

Trump was simply not prepared well enough for this debate. He regularly struggled to deal with questions he had to know were coming. His answer on his five-year quest to show that President Barack Obama was not born in this country was like watching a car accident in slow motion. His answer on why he wasn't willing to release his tax returns wasn't much better. His explanatio­n of his position on the Iraq war not only ran counter to the facts but made very little sense. On temperamen­t, perhaps the key to Trump's chances of beating Clinton, he resorted to insisting he had one of the best temperamen­ts and that Clinton had become unhinged in a speech at the weekend. (If you have to say you have one of the best temperamen­ts, you probably don't.) Then there was the fact that Trump left so many potent hits on Clinton unused. He never once used the phrase “basket of deplorable­s”. He barely skirted her email problems. He didn't even mention the words “honest” or “trustworth­y.” And, as the debate wore on, Trump seemed to resort to his worst instincts — interrupti­ng Clinton and shouting “not true” while she spoke, with very little back-up for those claims. Not a good night.

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