Polls Show Biden Won Debate
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Updated: 5:59 PM Oct 3, 2008
Polls Show Biden Won Debate
Republicans John McCain and Sarah Palin on Friday played up her debate performance as polls showed voters judging her Democratic rival, Joe Biden, to be the winner of the only vice presidential face-off of the campaign.
Posted: 9:21 PM Oct 2, 2008
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Republicans John McCain and Sarah Palin on Friday played up her debate performance as polls showed voters judging her Democratic rival, Joe Biden, to be the winner of the only vice presidential face-off of the campaign.

"It was a lot of fun. It was a great opportunity to get to speak directly to Americans," Palin said in an interview with Fox News. McCain told supporters at a town-hall meeting in Pueblo, Colo.: "You know, I almost felt a little sorry last night for my old friend Joe Biden. She did a magnificent job." The GOP's presidential nominee drew cheers when he declared, "Viva la Barracuda!"

Two quick polls indicated that Biden fared better in the debate. A CBS News/Knowledge Networks Poll found that 46 percent of uncommitted voters who watched the debate thought Biden won, with 21 percent siding with Palin. A CNN poll found respondents judging Biden the winner by a margin of 51 percent to 36 percent but calling Palin more likable by 54 percent to Biden's 36 percent.

In the 90-minute forum broadcast Thursday night from Washington University in St. Louis, Palin was under intense pressure to show basic competence on issues facing the next president after a series of embarrassing television interviews called into question her readiness for high office. For the most part she appeared confident and folksy, but she also sidestepped certain questions, pivoting at times to talking points and generalities.

In the debate, Palin tried to portray Biden and Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama as obsessed with the failures of President Bush even as she acknowledged his administration was responsible for "huge blunders" in the war and elsewhere.

Biden largely avoided direct challenges to Palin and instead worked to undermine McCain, who has sought throughout the campaign to distance himself from an unpopular president. The Delaware senator repeatedly noted that McCain had sided with Bush on crucial issues, from launching the war in Iraq to tax policies that widened the income disparity between rich and poor.

"He's been a maverick on some issues, but he has been no maverick on the things that matter to people's lives," Biden said.

On other topics:

_Palin criticized the Democratic ticket for opposing offshore oil drilling. Biden chided McCain for voting against proposals to expand the development of alternative energy sources.

_Palin restated her controversial view that climate change is largely due to cyclical changes in the earth's atmosphere and not primarily caused by human behavior. Biden disagreed, saying climate change was caused by man.

_Biden reaffirmed his position that it was "patriotic" for people who earn more than $250,000 to pay additional taxes. Obama's tax plan would cut taxes for about 90 percent of Americans, Biden said. Palin called his position a "redistribution of wealth principle," but Biden shot back that fairness was the issue.

_Both said they supported partnership rights for gays and lesbians but opposed same-sex marriage.

_Palin argued that the Democrats' plan for the war in Iraq "is a white flag of surrender." Biden defended Obama's vote in May 2007 not to fund military operations there unless a timeline was set for withdrawal, even though he sharply criticized the Illinois senator's vote at the time.

Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.


Latest Comments

Posted by: Little Woman on Oct 6, 2008 at 04:37 PM

To Anonymous, if ex-cons pay FED.taxes then they deserve the right to vote. If you take their right to vote then take their right to pay taxes also.
Posted by: Obama 08 4 Prez! on Oct 6, 2008 at 02:05 PM

To: Devil Dog, you are some what correct. There are 3 main races which are taught unless you are going into the study of Anthropology. Those races are Caucasoid, Negroid, and Mongoloid. If you go into Anthropology.....Capoid or Khoisan Subspecies of Southern Africa, Congoid Subspecies of sub-Saharan Africa, Caucasoid or Europid Subspecies, Dinaric race, Alpine race, Ladogan race, Nordish or Northern European race, Armenid race, Turanid race, Australoid Subspecies and Mogoloid Subspecies. That's 5. If I could've listed all the subspecies within each classification, you'd see everyone in the entire world. And this was off the top of my head. Please excuse the typos, it's been a long time.
Posted by: Obama 08 4 Prez! on Oct 6, 2008 at 01:53 PM

Obama isn't even in office yet and people are complaining what it will cost them. So Obama wants to send $825 billion to Africa...hmm. I wonder under Bush, how much is this war costing tax payers.....lets just see shall we? At this moment it is....$560,200,795,463.000 and growing every second. Here is the link so you can check how much it is when you look....http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=182......it's a whole lot more than $845 billion. I guess it depends on how you look at it.
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