Sunday, July 02, 2006

Fun with Ned and Joe

Chapter #27,493: Debate Week

It’s Fourth of July week. Everyone is tuned-out, taking off and basically in a mood for baseball, hot dogs and hitting the beach.

In other words, it’s a perfect time for what may be the most crucial and fascinating debate of the year: Lieberman vs. Lamont.

Yes, this Thursday at 7pm, Ned Lamont and Joe Lieberman will face one another in the eerie, otherworldly stillness of a television studio, with a few news anchors and the cameramen as their only live audience. Even reporters will be sequestered in a different room. The debate will be broadcast live on WVIT (Channel 30) to them as well as to the rest of us.

Joe Lieberman is an old hand at high-stakes debates, although the jury's out on whether he's ever actually won one. Lamont, as is the case with just about everything else, is untested.

Lieberman's been off-balance for the entire campaign so far. There's a good chance he'll try to use the debate to regain his footing. The best case scenario for Lieberman is if he essentially has one of his better debates, and Lamont makes a couple of rookie mistakes. That gives Lieberman a chance to define Lamont for voters, while looking like the seasoned statesman his campaign wants him to be.

The worst-case scenario for Lieberman is if he comes off as an angry, bitter, self-important jerk--which is exactly what he's been doing for most of the campaign. If this happens, all Lamont has to do is keep his head above water and hope his weird charisma translates well to live television.

I'm betting on a polished, gracious and wise Joe Lieberman to show up at the debate. Note that I said that he'll show up that way. Where he'll be by the end of it is largely up to Ned Lamont.

2 comments:

Genghis Conn said...

I have no doubt that the day after it is all over people will be on this blog praising their candidate and mocking the other.

Guaranteed.

Authentic Connecticut Republican said...

TrueBlueCT said... "
I want to know more about how someone could have graduated college in 1964, and avoided Vietnam.
"

History's not your long suit eh?

Hardly anyone over 22 was getting drafted in 64; the war was just warming up at that point.

By 67 (I graduated high school in 69 an remember the era well) if you weren't in college you were in boot camp.

Not everyone was out to dodge either; I had several friends enlist and I tried to too (I wound up 4-F (asthma, not a big deal they should have taken me)).
Some people thought that fighting tyranny was a good idea.

It still is.