BUSH WATCH...Bennet Kelley
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Judging the Presidential Debates on Substance by Bennet Kelley If you were picking a surgeon, would you select a surgeon whose strongest praise was that he avoided any major screw ups?Ê Would you select a job applicant who managed to exceed your limited expectations over the candidate who truly did best in the interviews?Ê In the real world, none of us would make such foolish choices.Ê So why do we allow this to be the standard in selecting the President? Consider the 1988 Bentsen-Quayle vice-presidential debate.Ê Two comments that night made a lasting impression.Ê The first, obviously, is when Senator Bentsen smacked a very green Quayle with his "you're no Jack Kennedy" response.Ê The second was when network analysts declared the night a success for then-Senator Quayle because he avoided a major screw up.Ê Is that the standard by which we determine who should be vice president?Ê Woody Allen always said "eighty percent of success is just showing up," but until that night we never thought that was sufficient to qualify someone to be vice president. Jump forward to 2000 where George Bush was deemed to have "won" the debates not on substance but because he exceeded the pre-debate "C student" expectations of him which his campaign actively cultivated.Ê It appears that there is a higher bar for the presidency, as the candidate must not only show up but also demonstrate that he or she is not as dumb as you may think.Ê The Bush campaign is shamelessly trying the same strategy for the upcoming debates with Senator Kerry -- even though Bush has served as President the past four years.Ê After four years in office shouldn't the standard be higher than "I'm still not as dumb as you think"? Ê It is time for an end of this "soft bigotry of low expectations." We must judge debates on the merits and not like a beauty pageant.Ê A Committee of Concerned Journalist's study of the coverage of the 2000 campaign found that the Bush-Gore debates were the number one story of the campaign's final stages but only 11% of this coverage addressed the substantive policy issues discussed.Ê Instead, the media focused on the sporting aspects of the debates and reported on the candidates' strategies and whether their performance met "expectations." Ê If the political media is going to cover the debates like a sporting match, they could learn two things from their colleagues covering boxing.Ê First, any reporter covering a boxing match would keep score for each round.Ê Political analysts should do the same if they want to talk about the debate in substantive terms.Ê They can either follow the boxing methodology which is based on hits, aggressiveness and controlling the ring or standard debate scoring which is based primarily on the strength of the argument and how well it is presented. ÊÊ Second, if the Rocky Balboa - Apollo Creed fight from the movie Rocky took place in the real world, the sports headline would read "Creed Wins Split Decision," and not "Balboa Goes the Distance, Proves He's Not a Bum."Ê Such an approach makes sense since, regardless of the type of competition, readers want to know who won, who was better and what was the score. Ê Ê In 2000, viewers heard analysts herald Bush's debate performances for such things as reciting global hot spots such as Sierra Leone, but what was barely mentioned was that debating coaches found that Gore won each debate.Ê For some reason the media believed that the crucial information voters needed to know was "Bush Goes the Distance, Proves He's Not a Bum" and not who was the best. With the first debate this week, it is time that the media recognizes that these debates are not a reality game show but a job interview for the most important position in the country.Ê If this truly is "the most important election" in ages, then we deserve to have these debates judged on substance and measured by the voters' expectations for the next four years and not pre-debate spin. ÊThis means that the real question the media should address is not whether a candidate exceeds someone's pre-debate expectations, but which candidate performs best in their job interview with the American public. --posted 09.30.04 Ê Bennet Kelley is publisher of BushLies.net and author of "President Bush: The False Prophet of the Christian Right" which appears in Big Bush Lies (RiverWood Books 2004).
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