Analyse The Final Presidential Debate (Obama Vs Romney.
Mitt Romney, with the backing of the Republican establishment, and the growing support of the base, can now devote his resources for a one on one showdown against President Barack Obama. Recent polls indicate that he is behind by only a few points in a head to head match-up against the President.
And while national polls suggest that Obama and Romney are running neck-and-neck, a flurry of recent surveys show Obama leading in the battleground states key to winning 270 electoral votes. A Washington Post-ABC News poll on Monday showed that even though the presidential contest was nearly even nationally, Obama had opened up a double-digit lead across swing states.
A Rhetorical Analysis of the 2012 Presidential Debate. Second Presidential Debate of 2012 On October 16, 2012, President Barack Obama and former governor Mitt Romney of Massachusetts met at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York for their second presidential debate.The debate, moderated by Candy Crowell of CNN, was much more relaxed than the first debate taking on a “town hall” format.
Fox news reported, “Romney spent the day before his convention speech visiting the American Legion conference in Indianapolis, where he talked exclusively about national security and America’s veterans. President Obama, by contrast, addressed that conference in the form of a three-minute video aired at the conference site.” (News).
Campaign Strategy: Barack Obama vs Mitt Romney Essay - Rick Santorum’s departure heralded the beginning of the general election. Mitt Romney, with the backing of the Republican establishment, and the growing support of the base, can now devote his resources for a one on one showdown against President Barack Obama.
Obama flew to a resort in Henderson, Nev., to take part in mock debates against Senator John Kerry, who stood in for Romney. According to ABC News, Kerry had been studying years of tape of past.
The topic of the Supreme Court has received very little attention in the presidential race. Neither Barack Obama nor Mitt Romney referred to it at all in his convention speech, nor did the matter.