I was happy to see McCain hitting Obama pretty hard. My impression was that McCain was doing more outreach to the base on issues that get them fired up. McCain is pretty obviously not the most intellectual and articulate guy in the world, which is unfortunate going up against a candidate who can outright lie convincingly to your face, and it not only sounds believable, but wonderful. Obama is now apparently against partial birth abortion. That’s news to me! I think that’ll be news to the media too.
Sadly, the Second Amendment has been silent in this presidential election. I doubt the media is going to force Obama to talk about it, and I wouldn’t be shocked if “no gun control questions” was a condition of Obama doing the debates.
Overall, I would say, in the last two debates, there was no clear winner. In this debate, I actually think McCain came out ahead. He hit Obama on several issues that I think will scare even independents. Obama was clearly uncomfortable. But the rhetorical edge has gone to Obama in all three debates. I’ll be honest, I think Obama has a better understanding of the current economic mess than McCain does, but Obama’s problem is he looks for solutions through the lens of “Government First.” There’s no problem to which Obama thinks the solution lies in less government. His grasp of the issues is meaningless if his solution is wrong.
UPDATE: David Bernstein thinks McCain blew it, namely blew a lot of opportunity to deal a knock out punch to Obama. I agree that he wasn’t as strong as he needed to be, even if I do think his performance was better than the other two debates. One thing McCain has going against him is that conservatives are rather tired of having a president who can’t articulate our principles. We can’t expect voters, many of which barely pay attention to this stuff, to vote with us, when the leader of our ticket can’t successfully articulate the principles. We’ve had to deal with that for eight years. I’m happy to deal with it for eight more if that means we don’t have to deal with Obama, but I would really like an articulate candidate for conservative principles to take up the mantle and run with it. We’ve been sorely lacking that, and it shows.