Coming into the presidential debate, I
thought that if Hillary Clinton won decisively, she would virtually lock
up the election. Coming out, it was clear that she did win decisively
but I suspect that the campaign will remain ferociously close.
By
all traditional standards of debate, Mrs. Clinton crushed. She
carefully marshaled her arguments and facts and then sent them into
battle with a smile. She rolled out a long list of indictments against
Donald Trump, often damaging. By contrast, he came in unprepared, had
nothing fresh to say, and increasingly gave way to rants. As the
evening ended, the media buried him in criticisms.
Even
so, I doubt she has put him away. For one thing, Trump supporters
aren't judging him by traditional standards. They have heard
establishment politicians over-promise and under-deliver for so long
that they crave something different. They were quick last night to see
yet more signs of media bias. Trump was an angry figure, yes, but he is
also giving voice to their anger. Those who are for him are likely to
stick, despite his ineffectual performance.
Equally
to the point, Mrs. Clinton seemingly struggled in the debate to create
closer emotional bonds with voters. She has been vexed with the issue
of likeability throughout this campaign and in recent months her team
has become concerned about her ability to mobilize millennials in the
way that Barack Obama did so successfully. Her arguments last night
should have made voters think, but I am not sure they will make them
march.
Perhaps
I am wrong. Perhaps Hillary did lock up the race Monday night. Trump
certainly blew it. But I imagine the race goes on, and the ultimate
decision will be left where it should be: with the voters. Stay tuned
for the vice presidential debate next Tuesday!
David
Gergen is a senior political analyst for CNN and has been a White House
adviser to four presidents. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he is a
professor of public service and co-director of the Center for Public
Leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School.S.E. Cupp: Trump (mostly) did the job
I
had two criteria upon which I would judge Monday night's debate. Not
"who looked more presidential," or "who fact-checked whom the best."
Those aspects go to their bases, not the voters who will determine this
election outcome: undecideds.
Hillary
Clinton had one job. She had to make Donald Trump look dumb. For
undecideds, it will matter less that he's a bully or a liar. She has
issues with trust, too. What will scare them is how unprepared he is.
Every chance she gets to point this out has the potential to add points.
Unfortunately for Clinton, she didn't take many of them. While she
pointed out that his "cavalier attitude" toward nuclear weapons was
dangerous, time and again, she punted at opportunities to point out how
ill-informed and unprepared Trump is. Instead, she preferred to argue
his vague platform on its merits. For her, this wasn't damaging, but it
didn't move the needle in her favor.
In
contrast, Trump mostly did the job he had to do. To move undecideds, he
had to hammer one point home: Clinton is a politician who doesn't get
it. Over and over again, he attacked her as more of the same, out of
touch, and a politician who hasn't gotten it right. He didn't go after
her character or personal issues, for the most part -- which voters know
well. She outmanned him on specifics and details. But his attacks were
far more effective than hers.
While
Clinton was right to suggest the fact-checkers get busy on his
statements -- many were misleading -- if I'm looking at who moved the
needle tonight with voters, it was Trump, not Clinton. And, Robby Mook, I
assure you, this anti-Trump conservative isn't grading him "on a
curve."
S.E. Cupp is the author of "Losing Our Religion: The Liberal Media's Attack on Christianity," co-author of "Why You're Wrong About the Right" and a columnist at the New York Daily News.
Errol Louis: Where Clinton damaged Trump
Hillary
Clinton did her homework on Donald Trump in the week leading up to
tonight's debate, and the prep work paid off, especially when it came to
his business record.
The former
secretary of state needled the Donald's business record, hitting on
well-reported incidents and turning his claim to fame against him. She
brought up his handful of bankruptcies, allegations that he's stiffed workers, his pining for the housing crisis for his own benefit and his aversion to releasing his perpetually under-audit tax returns.
"It
must be something really important, even terrible, that he's trying to
hide," Clinton said of Trump's tax returns, turning the tables on
allegations that she's hiding something in her deleted emails. "It just
seems to me that this is something the American people deserve to see."
Clinton
even took a step further and pointed out that Trump didn't pay any
income tax returns in certain years, a strategy designed to chip away at
the blue-collar demographic that he's cultivated in the last few years.
Trump, who's worked up a populist campaign saying that the government
has stiffed the little guy, put his own foot in his mouth, butted in and
said "that makes me smart."
Clinton came into the night neck-and-neck
with Trump in key states like Colorado and Pennsylvania, needing to
weaken her Republican opponent on some of the things that have made him
strong. It's a strategy her campaign has taken since July, when it rolled out an architect
who claimed Trump shortchanged him over work at a golf course. (To
twist the knife in his side, Clinton noted that the architect was in the
audience tonight.)
It was a tough attack to which Trump will need an answer in future debates.
Errol Louis is the host of "Inside City Hall," a nightly political show on NY1, a New York all-news channel.
Mel Robbins: Hillary Clinton got bad advice
As a Clinton supporter, it pains me to say Trump won.
Clinton
was too restrained, too smart -- and as much as I hate to say it -- she
was too presidential. And being presidential won't help her win the
election. She spoke to the intellectuals tuning in; she did not speak
to the average American.
Her advisers told her to restrain from attacking Trump. She got the wrong counsel and it could cost her the election.
Her
rebuttal to Trump's incoherent rants was to chuckle and tell viewers to
check in with the fact checkers. The fact checkers won't win the
election for her.
She
needed to take him out at the knees. We know Clinton is smart, what we
needed to see was a woman who is tough and won't take nonsense from
anyone. She failed to do that tonight. Tonight, she was nice. Nice
won't win the presidency.
Donald spent the night sniffing constantly before he spoke. To paraphrase one tweeter: He's allergic to his own crap.
He lost the 400-pound vote but he won the debate and unless Clinton changes tactics he's going to win the election.
Mel Robbins
is a CNN commentator, legal analyst, best-selling author and keynote
speaker. In 2014, she was named outstanding news talk-radio host by the
Gracie Awards.
Tara Setmayer: Trump kept taking the bait
As
a real estate mogul, Donald Trump is more than familiar with the
expression "location, location, location." In presidential debates, it's
temperament, temperament, temperament. History has not been kind to Dan
Quayle's perceived weakness, George H. W. Bush's time check or Al
Gore's sighs. And it won't be kind to Trump's undisciplined, defensive
rants.
Trump's
debate performance was a combined rehash of the insolence of his
primary debates, the rambling hyperbole of his rallies, with a sprinkle
of detail to bolster his message of economic populism. Although Trump
scored points on that issue, he whiffed badly when confronted about his
failure to release his taxes and struck out on the issues of race,
birtherism and foreign policy. It was, frankly, surprising how easily
Trump took Hillary's bait.
Coming
into Monday night's debate, national polls were essentially tied and
battleground states were tightening. With expectations set historically
low, all Trump had to do was behave well enough to convince undecided
voters he was in fact fit to hold the highest office in the land. In
order to win the White House, Trump needs more moderates, minorities and
women to support him. Yet he engaged in juvenile attacks on Hillary's
looks and stamina instead of her failed record. Trump had an opportunity
to put Hillary Clinton away and failed miserably. He is who is he is
and continues to act unworthy of the office.

Photos: The first presidential debate
Clinton smiles during the debate.
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