The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

To speak in public, or not?

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vote for President Barack Obama in November. (In a July interview with Daniel Malloy, the AJC’s Washington correspond­ent, Barrow did just that. But Malloy didn’t have a TV camera.)

If the object is simply to tie Barrow to Obama, why not simply haul the congressma­n up on stage and demand he explain himself?

“When he won’t be truthful to the people, why let him get on the air and tell other scenarios and situations where he’s not being truthful?” Anderson replied.

Anderson says he has no fear of debating Barrow, but his position has drawn criticism from the home front. “Republican­s for the past three years have loved beating up on President Obama for using a teleprompt­er during even the most mundane speeches. What are we to say about a candidate who won’t even speak?” wrote Barry Paschal, publisher of the Columbia County News-Times, on Wednesday.

Shortly after his selection as the GOP nominee for vice president, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin was asked how he would match up against Vice President Joe Biden in next month’s national debate between the pair.

“I’ve been in Congress 14 years and this is what we do, especially in the House. The Senate, they don’t debate as often and as frequently. That’s all we do in the House, is we debate,” Ryan said.

Barrow says Ryan is spot on, and declares that he’ll meet Anderson on any stage, any time. Just as Anderson wants to tie him to Obama, Barrow wants Anderson to answer for Republican plans — put forward by Ryan and others — to make fundamenta­l changes to Medicare and Social Security.

“They ought to sharpen the focus on what they’re proposing and who’s going to get screwed by it, but they avoid any opportunit­y to explain it. Instead, they basically say, ‘So’s your old man,’” Barrow declared in his own, softer Southern accent.

Barrow would surely agree that a talent for public speaking is no guarantee of intelligen­ce – else the world would be ruled by TV news anchors. But unlike Anderson, Barrow contends that talking is an essential part of the job.

“You have to be able to explain the issues to the voters, explain yourself, explain the options to the voters and why you support what you do,” he said.

More importantl­y, a member of Congress is the voice of his district, Barrow added. In the 12th, he becomes the buffer between the Savannah River Site, a nuclear disposal area, and the U.S. Department of Energy. He monitors cuts to Fort Gordon in Augusta and Fort Stewart on the coast proposed by the Pentagon.

“If the word comes down that they want to cut out Fort Gordon, and it all comes down to your congressma­n trying to talk them out of it, who do you think would do the best job of doing that?” Barrow asked. “Words matter. Ideas matter. And ideas find their expression in words.”

Anderson says his nodebate position isn’t rocksolid. “We’re still considerin­g it. We’ll still be looking at it,” he said. In the meantime, Anderson said, he’ll be concentrat­ing on one-on-one conversati­ons with voters.

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