Saturday 13 October 2012

Fiery Biden sets stage for Obama recovery attempt

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Joe Biden's spirited performance in Thursday's vice presidential debate had Republicans criticizing him for snide grins and a comment on Libya, but it set the stage for President Barack Obama to try to regain his footing in a rematch with challenger Mitt Romney next Tuesday.

After Obama was seen as largely passive against resurgent Republican Romney last week in their first debate before the November 6 election, Biden fired up Democrats in Thursday's vice presidential debate by aggressively challenging Paul Ryan, Romney's running mate, on taxes, healthcare and foreign policy.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll done after the debate showed that 42 percent of registered voters felt Biden had won, versus 35 percent who picked Ryan. Twenty-three percent said they did not know who had come out ahead.

"Vice presidential debates don't change electoral outcomes, but it may have done a little bit to stem the tide," said Ipsos pollster Julia Clark.

In a sign the race is tightening again, Romney led Obama by 1 percentage point, 46 to 45 percent, among likely voters in the Reuters/Ipsos daily online tracking poll released on Friday. Romney led by 3 percentage points in Thursday's poll. Most poll respondents were questioned before the vice presidential debate.

Republicans tried to prevent Biden's performance from giving momentum for the Democratic ticket by criticizing the vice president's demeanor during the debate. They said Biden grinned too much and was rude to Ryan during their animated encounter.

And they made Biden's comments about security at the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, on September 11 their theme of the day, hoping to puncture Obama's credibility on foreign policy.

When asked in Kentucky about whether the mission had requested more security in the months leading up to the attack, Biden said, "Well, we weren't told they wanted more security again. We did not know they wanted more security again."

At a campaign rally in Richmond, Virginia, Romney accused Biden of contradicting testimony by U.S. State Department officials who said this week the consulate had raised fears about security before the attack, which killed Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.

"He's doubling down on denial," the former Massachusetts governor told a cheering crowd.

Democrats dismissed the Republicans' stance as a bid to politicize a tragedy.

MOMENTUM SHIFTS

Biden's strong performance gave Obama a chance to stabilize his campaign after a bad week and deliver his own vigorous argument for why he deserves a second term in the White House.

About 46 million Americans watched the vice presidential debate.

A good showing at the presidential debate set for Tuesday at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, could give Obama a chance to halt Romney's rise since the two went head-to-head in Denver on October 3.

Fresh off that performance, Romney grabbed a small lead in many national opinion polls, reversing what had been a small but growing advantage for Obama since the Democratic convention in early September.

Obama was to travel to Williamsburg, Virginia, on Saturday to spend three days getting ready for the next debate. After his Virginia rally, Romney traveled to Ohio where he and Ryan were holding a joint rally in Lancaster.

Democrats said they expected Obama to come out swinging during the town-hall style contest on Tuesday.

"The president watched the debate last night, thought the vice president did an excellent job presenting this administration's case," said White House press secretary Jay Carney, who was formerly Biden's main spokesman.

"I'm confident he (Obama) will make that case when he has the opportunity to go before the American people again in a debate next week," Carney told the daily White House briefing.

Carney said Biden's laughter on Thursday night was a sign of the "enormous amount of passion and joy" he brings to his position as vice president.

Biden, 69, scored points against Ryan, the 42-year-old congressman from Wisconsin, with a fiery delivery that highlighted his experience in foreign policy and hit hard on domestic issues.

Ryan largely met his challenge of trying to show he was knowledgeable and presidential - and that Romney had not made a mistake in choosing him as his running mate.

The two campaigns both claimed victory.

"Most people who saw last night saw Paul Ryan as someone who had a command of the facts, had a clear, positive agenda for the future, and someone who's very serious about the serious issues that we face as (a) country," Republican advisor Ed Gillespie said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

Biden sharply questioned many of the Romney-Ryan team's positions, hitting Ryan hard on issues that Obama frustrated supporters by failing to contest in the first presidential debate.

Biden pounced upon Romney's tax returns, the Republican's position to let U.S. automakers go bankrupt, his proposal to let struggling homeowners lose their houses and his dismissal of 47 percent of the American public as unproductive parasites.

The third and final presidential debate will take place on October 22 in Florida.

(Additional reporting by Susan Heavey and Matt Spetalnick in Washington, Alina Selyukh in Columbus, Ohio, and Steve Holland in Richmond, Virginia; Editing by Alistair Bell and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chuckling-fiery-biden-sets-stage-obama-recovery-161048249.html

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