Pressure mounts on Joe Biden, Paul Ryan ahead of VP debate
Vice President Joe Biden, a man with
nearly four decades of experience in politics, has not been taking
lightly his preparations for his debate this week against Rep. Paul
Ryan, R-Wis., holding practice sessions and perusing briefing books in
recent months.
Now, in the wake of President Barack Obama's widely
panned performance last week in his first debate against Mitt Romney,
the stakes for Biden are higher than ever.
In the Oct. 11 vice
presidential debate, he must not only avoid making any gaffes but also
try to puncture his Republican opponent's arguments on taxes,
entitlement reform and deficit reduction, something Obama was criticized
for failing to do last week.
The pressure on Ryan has risen as
well. Romney greatly exceeded expectations, appearing both presidential
and in command of the debate stage. Ryan, who has never before debated
at the national level, must prove that he is potential presidential
material — while also defending the numbers that Romney put forth last
week, especially on tax cuts.
Both sides offer sky-high predictions for the other team.
"There's
a lot on the line," said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, a chief
Romney-Ryan ally. "President Obama failed to defend his record and could
not articulate a vision for the future. So I think that challenge now
falls to Vice President Biden."
Bill Burton, former White House
deputy press secretary and co-founder of the Democratic super PAC
Priorities USA, argued that the burden is actually on Ryan.
"Ryan
is going to face pressure to explain some of the dishonest claims he and
Romney have been making, especially on things like Medicare, taxes and
the auto industry," he said.
One point on which both sides appear
to agree is that Biden will be more aggressive in his faceoff against
Ryan than Obama was debating Romney.
Speaking with reporters last
Thursday before a Cedar Rapids, Iowa, rally at which he criticized both
Romney and Ryan, Biden previewed the debate by noting that he has been
"studying up on Congressman Ryan's positions on the issues."
"I
just want to make sure that when I say these things, I don't have the
congressman [say] — 'No no no, I don't have that position,' or, 'That's
not the governor's position,' " Biden said. "So, it's mainly getting the
factual predicates for everything that — not everything, but the key
issues on which Governor Romney has spoken and Congressman Ryan has."
Ryan,
for his part, said that he thinks Biden will be an aggressive opponent.
"I expect the vice president to come at me like a cannonball," Ryan
told the conservative Weekly Standard on Thursday night. "He'll be in
full attack mode, and I don't think he'll let any inconvenient facts get
in his way."
Both White House contenders have been engaged in
preparations even as they maintain busy schedules on the campaign trail.
For Biden, that has meant squeezing in time for debate preparations
while visiting his family in Delaware, as he did one weekend this month.
For Ryan, it's meant practice sessions in Washington, as well as his
hometown of Janesville, Wis.
www.denverpost.com
No comments:
Post a Comment