Obama comes out swinging in second debate
Democrats had nervously awaited the debate, fearing another
limp display from Obama could provoke a slide to defeat :
US: An intense Barack Obama bounced off the ropes and
accused Mitt Romney of untruths Tuesday in a furious opening to his bid to
blunt his foe's momentum surge in their second presidential debate.
Minutes into the debate, Republican Romney and Democrat
Obama stood toe-to-toe a few feet apart, angrily accusing one another of
distorting each others policies and future plans on oil production and energy.
“Governor Romney says he has a five-point plan.
He doesn't have a five-point plan. He has a one-point plan,
and that is to make sure that folks at the top play by a different set of
rules,” Obama blasted.
In a high energy start to the face-off in Long Island, New
York, Obama displayed more energy and passion than he showed in the whole of
his limp 90 minute performance two weeks ago, which sent his poll numbers
tumbling.
Romney, a 65-year-old former governor of Massachusetts, took
the first question of the town-hall style debate, about the jobs crisis, and
bemoaned the plight of ordinary Americans who he said had been “crushed over
the last four years.”
“I know what it takes to create good jobs and to make sure
you have the opportunity you deserve,” Romney said. Obama, 51, was quick off
his stool in response, looking 20-year-old questioner Jeremy Epstein straight
in the eye, fixing him with an intense stare as he promised to quicken the US
economic recovery.
He rapped Romney for opposing the auto industry bailout
which he engineered and which he said had saved a million jobs, and brushed off
his Republican rival's denials. “What Governor Romney said just isn't true. He
wanted to make them into bankruptcy without providing them any way to stay
open,” Obama said. Obama's team had promised a “strong” and “passionate”
performance by the president after his lifeless showing in the first debate in
Denver, revived Romney's campaign, which many Republicans thought was doomed to
defeat.
Democrats were severely rattled by Obama's no show, so his
first mission Tuesday was to reboot enthusiasm among his core supporters, with
early voting already under way in a clutch of states ahead of election day on
November 6. The town hall setting, which had each candidate seated at a stool
on a red carpet, and free to roam around, tested the body language of the two
candidates, and capacity to empathize with the anxieties of everyday Americans.
AFP
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