Miami Herald (Sunday)

Presidenti­al debates can leave an indelible impression, both good and not so good

- BY ROBERT M. SHRUM InsideSour­ces.com

What nominee would bet on the propositio­n that the presidenti­al debates don’t matter and then choose not to prepare?

Jimmy Carter’s desultory prep in 1980, combined with Ronald Reagan’s reassuring and masterful performanc­e — “There you go again” — arguably turned a close election into a landslide that reshaped American politics for a generation.

Barack Obama‘s uncharacte­ristic lack of discipline in the lead-up to his first encounter with

Mitt Romney in 2012 led to an excruciati­ng 90 minutes that drove Democrats into mass hysteria. He won the election anyway, although only after a hypersonic Joe Biden dominated Paul Ryan in their vice-presidenti­al exchange, and then Romney himself was shredded on the issue of Benghazi in the second debate — by a tag team of Obama and the debate moderator.

So do debates matter? Like most things in life and politics, sometimes yes, and sometimes no. Here are some other examples:

1960: Vice President Richard Nixon was running on the slogan “Experience Counts” when he made the mistake of debating John F. Kennedy. JFK used his opening statement — eight minutes long, without a single note — to define the terms of this high-stakes clash, which Nixon then largely accepted as he quibbled like a point-by-point high school debater with Kennedy’s arguments, while often repeating them literally word for word.

Without the debates, especially the first one, it’s hard to imagine that the youngest president elected in one of the closest contests in history would have reached the White House. (And Kennedy’s triumph wasn’t all about image. The oft-told story that voters who listened on the radio instead of watching on television believed Nixon prevailed ignores the reality that those voters couldn’t watch: They were concentrat­ed in pre-cable rural areas and the mountain west, which already heavily favored Nixon.)

1976: After an unexpected­ly strong performanc­e in the first debate, with the once-beleaguere­d Gerald Ford having closed a yawning gap with Jimmy Carter to just 2%, Ford’s momentum stalled for a crucial period after he insisted in their second confrontat­ion that, “There is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe.”

There is a convincing case that rhetorical­ly freeing Poland did make the decisive difference in an election where a switch of a few thousand votes in a few states would have yielded an Electoral College majority for Ford.

1992: This is when an indelible image truly did matter. The most memorable moment of the debates that year was incumbent George H.W. Bush glancing impatientl­y at his watch as an earnest questioner in the town hall audience asked him how the recession had affected him personally. The episode was a powerful metaphor for a presidency that appeared tired and out of ideas in a country yearning for change. Did it determine the results? Not by itself, but it does suggest a guideline: Maybe candidates should take their watches off before mounting the debate stage.

In other cases, assessing the effect of these face-toface encounters is hard. How much did Donald Trump’s crass antics hurt him in 2016 and 2020 — and less noticed, how much did his emphasis on trade and immigratio­n in the early innings of his first clash with Hillary Clinton help him in the Blue Wall states that crumbled on Election

Day?

And sometimes, as in 1988, 1996 and 2008, debates won’t bend the campaign arc at all unless the likely winner’s performanc­e is the unlikely political equivalent of bellyflopp­ing into an empty swimming pool.

And, for me, there’s also a painful irony here: You can win all of the now customary three presidenti­al debates and still lose the election — which, as the Gallup Poll showed, is precisely what happened with John Kerry’s narrow defeat in 2004.

Robert M. Shrum is the director of the Center for the Political Future at the University of Southern California Dornsife and a veteran Democratic political operative. He worked on presidenti­al campaigns from George McGovern to John Kerry.

InsideSour­ces.com

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