by
Ben Shapiro
While the left cheers President Obama’s second debate performance with the excitement of Chris Matthews on a prom date with The One, the fact remains that this was not just a bad debate for President Obama. It was a disastrous debate for President Obama. He may have achieved firing up the base, but the base had already been fired up by Vice President Joe Biden’s bizarre performance in the vice presidential debate. He may have achieved not looking comatose, but instead he looked angry and puerile.
Actually, Obama lost in three major ways.
Economy. The first loss is the most obvious. Mitt Romney absolutely dismembered Obama on economics. Obama wasn’t merely outclassed. He was out-leagued. Take, for example, the Romney-Obama exchange on gas drilling. After Obama blathered on about how he’d been great for oil supply (false), Romney gutted him with a single line:
The proof of whether a strategy is
working or not is what the price is that you're paying at the pump. If
you're paying less than you paid a year or two ago, why, then, the
strategy is working. But you're paying more. When the president took
office, the price of gasoline here in Nassau County was about $1.86 a
gallon. Now, it's $4.00 a gallon.
Obama’s response was perhaps the worst economic gaffe in modern debate history:
Well, think
about what the governor -- think about what the governor just said. He
said when I took office, the price of gasoline was $1.80, $1.86. Why is
that? Because the economy was on the verge of collapse, because we were
about to go through the worst recession since the Great Depression, as a
consequence of some of the same policies that Governor Romney's now
promoting. So, it's conceivable that Governor Romney could bring down
gas prices because with his policies, we might be back in that same
mess.
This is perhaps the dumbest economic
argument ever. Obama is essentially arguing that gas prices were low
four years ago because low gas prices cratered the economy. He even says
that if Romney brings down gas prices, it would crater the economy
again. This is pure insanity.
The highlight of the debate was
Romney’s thorough, two-minute dismantling of the Obama record on the
economy after Obama gave a tepid defense of his awful record. Never has
the case against Obama been made so eloquently:
I think you know
better. I think you know that these last four years haven't been so
good as the president just described and that you don't feel like you’re
confident that the next four years are going to be much better either. I
can tell you that if you were to elect President Obama, you know what
you're going to get. You're going to get a repeat of the last four
years. We just can't afford four more years like the last four years.
He said that by
now we'd have unemployment at 5.4 percent. The difference between where
it is and 5.4 percent is 9 million Americans without work. I wasn't the
one that said 5.4 percent. This was the president's plan. Didn't get
there.
He said he would
have by now put forward a plan to reform Medicare and Social Security,
because he pointed out they're on the road to bankruptcy . He would reform them. He'd get that done. He hasn't even made a proposal on either one.
He said in his first year he'd put out an immigration plan that would deal with our immigration challenges. Didn't even file it.
This is a
president who has not been able to do what he said he'd do. He said that
he'd cut in half the deficit. He hasn't done that either. In fact, he
doubled it. He said that by now middle-income families would have a
reduction in their health insurance
premiums by $2,500 a year. It's gone up by $2,500 a year. And if
Obamacare is passed, or implemented -- it's already been passed -- if
it's implemented fully, it'll be another $2,500 on top.
The middle class
is getting crushed under the policies of a president who has not
understood what it takes to get the economy working again. He keeps
saying, "Look, I've created 5 million jobs." That's after losing 5
million jobs. The entire record is such that the unemployment has not
been reduced in this country. The unemployment, the number of people who
are still looking for work, is still 23 million Americans. There are
more people in poverty, one out of six people in poverty.
How about food
stamps? When he took office, 32 million people were on food stamps.
Today, 47 million people are on food stamps. How about the growth of the
economy? It's growing more slowly this year than last year, and more
slowly last year than the year before.
The president
wants to do well. I understand. But the policies he's put in place from
Obamacare to Dodd-Frank to his tax policies to his regulatory policies,
these policies combined have not let this economy take off and grow like
it could have.
You might say,
"Well, you got an example of one that worked better?" Yeah, in the
Reagan recession where unemployment hit 10.8 percent, between that
period -- the end of that recession and the equivalent of time to today,
Ronald Reagan's recovery created twice as many jobs as this president's
recovery. Five million jobs doesn't even keep up with our population
growth. And the only reason the unemployment rate seems a little lower
today is because of all the people that have dropped out of the
workforce.
The president
has tried, but his policies haven't worked. He's great as a -- as a --
as a speaker and describing his plans and his vision. That's wonderful,
except we have a record to look at. And that record shows he just hasn't
been able to cut the deficit, to put in place reforms for Medicare and
Social Security to preserve them, to get us the rising incomes we need.
Median income is down $4,300 a family and 23 million Americans out of
work. That's what this election is about. It's about who can get the
middle class in this country a bright and prosperous future and assure
our kids the kind of hope and optimism they deserve.
This is the sort of monologue that
gets people elected. Blaming your predecessor, channeling Occupy Wall
Street, and whining about Mitt Romney’s specificity on tax deductions
does not.
That’s why the polling universally showed a vast gap in favor of Romney on the economy last night.
Libya. At first
glance, this issue looked like a loss for Romney. Romney’s attack on
Obama’s Libya policy was anything but smooth, and he allowed Obama to
play the wronged man of honor – even though it is Obama who refused to
take responsibility for a month, lied for weeks about whether Benghazi
was a terrorist attack, blamed a YouTube video, and threw the
intelligence community under the bus.
But the exchange drew light to the
Libya issue. And not in a way Obama liked. When Romney called out Obama
for not labeling the murder of our ambassador in Libya and three other
Americans a terrorist attack, both Obama and moderator Candy Crowley
wrongly claimed that Obama had immediately labeled it a terrorist
attack.
If that were true, why did Obama appear on The View on
September 25, a full two weeks after the attack, and refuse point blank
to call it a terrorist attack? Why did he show up at the UN and mention
a YouTube video 12 times, but never describe the Benghazi assault as a
terrorist attack once? Now we’re going to spend another week or two
hashing out just why this president, who wants to claim he’s tough on
terror – and a quick labeler of terror – has trotted out administration
official after administration official to deny that Benghazi was a
terrorist attack. Even Candy Crowley admitted that Romney was basically
right, and that Obama had not called Benghazi a terrorist attack for
weeks.
The Media. The
greatest threat to a Romney victory after a good debate tonight was the
mainstream media. It was obvious before this debate that they would spin
anything but a full-on catatonic episode from Obama as a full-on Obama
triumph. And it was also obvious that they’d jump all over Mitt Romney
as a liar, a cheat, a fraud, a racist, a murderer, and a genocidal
maniac. A desperate media with the patina of objectivity would have been
Romney’s worst nightmare.
Thanks to abysmal moderator Candy
Crowley, however, the mask is gone. Crowley handed Obama three minutes
of extra time. She interrupted Romney far more than she did Obama. She
stacked the questions two-to-one in favor of Obama-friendly questions.
And she jumped into the Libya question to save Obama when he was on the
ropes. Even Crowley recognized what a booboo she’d committed with that
one. Meanwhile, as Obama played his class warfare card, media types
cheered – literally cheered – in the other room.
The media is out of the closet. We
know who they are. As the details of Crowley’s catastrophic intervention
hit the airwaves, the American public will be wide awake to the
mainstream media’s agenda. And they won’t believe them.
Here’s the bottom line: Mitt Romney
got everything he needed from this debate. Obama didn’t. He got
everything he already had: a devoted media and a vitriolic base. There
are no independents who will turn his way after that debate. He turned
them off with his aggressive style and his failure to even bother
defending himself on his record.
Mitt Romney was the big winner last
night. And he’s an even bigger winner if the media continues to pretend
that last night was an Obama victory, even as the American people ignore
them and move toward the Republican challenger.
No comments:
Post a Comment