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Debating Dubya's Debut
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Issue 1 is the GOP presidential debate. Issue 2 is the Seattle protests
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against the World Trade Organization.
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Most pundits think George W. Bush's performance was tepid and
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formulaic--these include Bill Kristol (ABC's This Week ), Jeff Birnbaum ( Fox News Sunday ), Brit Hume ( Fox ), Paul Gigot (PBS's
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NewsHour With Jim Lehrer ), and Bob Novak (CNN's Capital Gang ). (For Ballot Box's roundup, click here.)
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George F. Will ( This Week )--the only pundit, liberal or conservative,
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who doesn't seem to be pulling for John McCain--scoffs at Kristol's reaction,
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noting that Bush still has a 50-point lead in South Carolina and remains the
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most secure GOP front-runner in "living memory." (Steve Roberts [CNN's
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Late Edition ] and Mark Shields [ Capital Gang ] make
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similar points.)
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Most pundits think McCain won the debate, and many--like Fox 's
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Susan Estrich and Dick Morris--appreciate his jokes about Alan Greenspan's
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mortality and his own temper. (Tony Snow [ Fox ] and Tucker Carlson
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[CNN's Late Edition ] venture that McCain may actually have started the
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"temper" rumors; Brit Hume notes that the issue allows McCain to pose as both a
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victim of unfair innuendo and as a passionate war hero with fervently held
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political beliefs.) The pundits also praise Gary Bauer's eloquence, though none
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thinks the evangelical is a serious threat. Morris says that, according to
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e-mails received at his Web
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site, Alan Keyes won the debate. (Suffice it to say that Morris' empirical
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methods may be open to question; for more on his Web site, click here.)
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The commentariat splits on the merits of the WTO--and not along ideological
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lines. WTO supporters include conservatives Will, Gigot, and Rich Lowry (PBS's
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McLaughlin
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Group ) as well as liberals like Al Hunt ( Capital Gang ) and
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Eleanor Clift ( McLaughlin ). WTO opponents include conservatives Novak,
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John McLaughlin ( McLaughlin ), and Tony Blankley ( McLaughlin )
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as well as liberals like Shields ( NewsHour and Capital Gang )
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and Margaret Carlson ( Capital Gang ). Many pundits flay President
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Clinton for his "I-feel-the-protestors'-pain" comments. Gigot notes that the
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protestors--union members, consumer activists, and environmentalists--are not
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exactly marginal to the Democratic Party, and Clift acknowledges that Clinton
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has done a poor job selling his free-trade stance. Steve Roberts points out
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that Bush has emerged as a stronger supporter of the Clinton administration's
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free-trade policy than the vice president. Kristol and both Carlsons--Tucker
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and Margaret--blame Seattle's mayor for treating the protestors with kid gloves
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("a weak mayor of Seattle, I'm afraid, a kind of cappuccino sipper," jabs
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Tucker Carlson). Lowry argues that the protestors, who favor the imposition of
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higher labor and environmental standards, actually want to give the WTO
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more power. Free traders Hunt and Kristol, however, call the WTO
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arrogant for its highhanded dismissal of the protests. ("The Week/The Spin" and "Frame Game" also give their takes
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on the Seattle demonstrations.)
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Election notes: On NBC's Meet the
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Press , John McCain says he would not accept the GOP vice presidential
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nomination. George Stephanopoulos ( This Week ) announces that McCain
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and Bill Bradley will soon make joint campaign appearances, promising voters
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that if they are the nominees they will devote themselves to campaign finance
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reform. (Stephanopoulos also predicts a more aggressive Bill Bradley on the
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horizon.) Appearing on Late Edition , This Week , and Meet
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the Press , Gov. Jesse Ventura, REF-Minn., speaks in favor of free trade,
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says that John Anderson would be a viable Reform Party presidential candidate,
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and says he plans to go to church on Christmas (a Lutheran service).
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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Shields
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On Friday's NewsHour , Mark Shields gives John McCain's debate
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performance a mixed verdict--McCain inspired idealism and was sharp on foreign
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policy, Shields says, but his knowledge of domestic issues was weak and he
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wasn't aggressive enough. The next day, on Capital Gang , Shields says
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flatly, "I thought John McCain bombed on Thursday night." Why the shift of
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emphasis? Pundit Central suspects that the forum holds a clue: The
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NewsHour format permits a more leisurely, nuanced discussion, while on
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Capital Gang Shields has to moderate four other guests and probably
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felt compelled to foil his fellow panelists' unstinting praise of McCain's
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performance.
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Tea and Crumpets, Mr. McLaughlin?
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Question: Who is more out of place--a Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's
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court or a courtly Brit * on the McLaughlin Group ? To
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give his panel some economic heft for a WTO discussion, John McLaughlin invites
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the Financial Times ' American editor, Robert Thomson, to participate.
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The Right Honorable Gentleman From the FT seems astonished by the
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whole, well, vulgarity of the debate. Every time the camera lands on
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him, he is staring at McLaughlin, Clift, Lowry, and Blankley with mouth agape,
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stone silent. McLaughlin even ribs his new panelist on his wardrobe (Thomson is
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wearing a dapper suit--with vest--and spectacles). Later in the program,
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Thomson looks directly at McLaughlin and says, "Anybody with a temper [like
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McCain's] shouldn't have a distinguished position anyhow," to which the host
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gives a knowing smile.
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* See below.
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