Vice
President Joe Biden and Republican challenger Paul Ryan hit the campaign trail
on Friday after a combative debate in which they challenged each other's facts
and claims while offering starkly different visions for the direction the
country should follow.
In the
lone debate between the vice presidential contenders, Biden achieved his goal
of bringing the fight to his GOP foe in battling Ryan to a draw, boosting the
spirits of Democrats disheartened by President Barack Obama's lackluster
performance in the first presidential debate last week.
Ryan,
meanwhile, made a positive impression with his command of both domestic and
foreign policy issues that showed him to be a formidable national candidate
after a career of local congressional races in his native Wisconsin.
A snap
CNN-ORC International poll showed voters who watched Thursday's debate narrowly
favored Ryan over Biden by 48%-44%, a statistically even result after GOP
presidential challenger Mitt Romney scored a clear victory over Obama last week
in their first of three debate
Martha
Raddatz of ABC News aggressively moderated the debate, challenging both
candidates on some claims and moving on to various topics covering both
domestic and foreign policy.
Ryan
repeatedly said the Obama administration has taken the nation in the wrong
direction, asserting it has hindered economic recovery and weakened U.S.
influence around the world.
"The
choice is clear: a stagnant economy that promotes more government dependency or
a dynamic, growing economy that promotes opportunity and jobs," Ryan said.
"Mitt Romney and I will not duck the tough issues, and we will not blame
others for the next four years."
He also
repeated several times, in reference to the recent terrorist attack on a U.S.
diplomatic compound in Libya and other anti-American protests, that "what
we are watching on our TV screens is the unraveling of the Obama foreign
policy."
Biden
called several of Ryan's remarks "malarkey" and challenged Americans
to trust their common sense when judging proposals by the Republican
challengers.
The tax
and entitlement reforms proposed by Romney and Ryan would harm the middle class
and favor the wealthy, Biden said in seeking to depict Republicans as
protectors of the privileged.
"You
think these guys are going to go out there and cut those loopholes?" Biden
asked about unspecified moves promised by Romney and Ryan to balance broad tax
cuts they propose.
On the
topic of reforming the Medicare program for senior citizens, which Romney and
Ryan seek to partially privatize, Biden referred to a Ryan proposal to provide
partial government payment for seniors in the future to buy private health
care.
"Folks,
use your common sense. Who do you trust on this?" Biden asked, saying
Ryan's plan would increase Medicare costs to recipients by $6,000 a year. Ryan
disputed the claim, which was based on a proposal that he has since altered.
The lone
vice-presidential debate before the November 6 election pitted Biden, 69, and
his almost four decades of experience in national politics against the
42-year-old Ryan, a 14-year congressional veteran who rose to the chairmanship
of the powerful House Budget Committee.
Privately,
senior Democrats told CNN they believed a strong showing by Biden could help
the Democratic ticket, but wouldn't be enough to erase problems created by
Obama's self-admitted bad debate performance against Romney.
Obama and
Romney will square off again Tuesday in New York and October 22 in Florida.
Polling
after the first presidential debate showed Romney tightening the race
nationally and in some of the nine battleground states considered vital to
either candidate's chances of garnering the 270 electoral votes needed to win
the White House.
"I do
think Joe Biden did his boss a lot of good tonight," CNN Senior Political
Analyst David Gergen said after Thursday's debate. CNN Chief Political Analyst
Gloria Borger said Biden's job "was to right the ship, and he did
it."
Both
analysts criticized Biden for his tendency to smile and roll his eyes in
response to some of Ryan's comments, especially early in the debate, with
Gergen saying Ryan won on style but the debate was even with regard to
substance.
Biden also
was more aggressive in his demeanor, repeatedly cutting off Ryan and sometimes
talking at the same time as his rival to challenge specific comments.
At one
point, Ryan told Biden that "I know you're under a lot of duress to make
up for lost ground, but I think people would be better served if we don't keep
interrupting each other."
Biden
responded: "Well, don't take all the four minutes then" in reference
to how much time the candidates had to respond to a particular question.
Overall, Biden spoke for about a minute more than Ryan during the
90-minute-debate.
Republican
strategist Alex Castellanos, a CNN contributor, said Biden "had to buy his
boss a week until the next debate, and he did that tonight."
"He
wasn't charming Joe Biden tonight, that wasn't his mission," Castellanos
said.
Ryan
repeatedly sought to focus the debate on the Obama-Biden record of the last
four years, arguing the administration's policies hindered economic recovery
and weakened the nation's standing and influence in the world.
For his
part, Biden tried to frame the election as a choice between differing
directions for the country by contending policies of the Romney-Ryan ticket
would hurt the middle class and move the nation backward on social issues such
as gay rights and abortion.
Unlike
Obama last week, Biden made sure to mention Romney's controversial comments
secretly recorded at a May fundraiser in which the former Massachusetts
governor spoke dismissively of 47% of Americans who he said depend on
government benefits and don't pay taxes.
In one of
his most effective moments, he gave a passionate defense of Americans who
participate in the social safety net of entitlement programs and other
benefits.
"These
people are my mom and dad -- the people I grew up with, my neighbors."
Biden said. "They pay more effective tax than Governor Romney pays in his
federal income tax. They are elderly people who in fact are living off of
Social Security. They are veterans and people fighting in Afghanistan right now
who are, quote, 'not paying any tax.'"
In the
biggest laugh line of the night, Ryan conceded Romney didn't express the
thought exactly as he wanted at the fundraiser, then needled the gaffe-prone
Biden by saying: "I think the vice president very well knows that
sometimes the words don't come out of your mouth the right way."
Biden
immediately responded "but I always say what I mean."
Ryan, a
staunch conservative congressman, criticized Obama's administration for its
failure to protect four Americans killed in the Libya attack last month, and
for mixed messages about what transpired.
"This
Benghazi issue would be a tragedy in and of itself. But unfortunately it's
indicative of a larger problem," Ryan said, adding that illustrated an
unraveling of the administration's foreign policy.
Biden
smiled and shook his head as Ryan delivered his criticism, then responded that
"not a single thing he said was accurate."
However,
Biden then claimed that the administration received no requests to increase
security at the Benghazi compound, which contradicted testimony from State
Department officials at a congressional hearing this week.
The Romney
campaign hammered Biden for the remark after the debate, releasing a statement
listing a string of media reports pointing out Biden's mistake.
On Iran,
widely backed international sanctions pushed by Obama have devastated that
country's economy, Biden said. He rejected assertions that Obama failed to work
closely with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and that the United
States lacked commitment to a possible military strike to prevent Iran from
becoming capable of developing a nuclear weapon.
"This
president doesn't bluff," Biden said.
Ryan,
however, insisted that Iran was closer now to having a nuclear weapon than it
was four years ago, blaming the administration for allowing that to happen. He
bluntly said that Tehran must not be allowed to become a nuclear power.
"This
is the world's largest sponsor of terrorism," he said. "And if they
get nuclear weapons, other people in the neighborhood will pursue nuclear weapons
as well. We can't live with that."
Last week,
Obama was chided for being passive, and polls conducted after the debate
indicate the White House race is now extremely tight ahead of the election.
Key
surveys indicate that Obama and Romney are knotted up in the battleground
states of Virginia, Florida, Ohio, Wisconsin and Colorado. Most experts believe
that nine swing states will determine the next president.
On Friday,
Ryan joins Romney at a campaign event in Ohio after Romney attends an earlier
event in Virginia. Biden will campaign in Wisconsin while Obama spends the day
at the White House.
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