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Vice presidential debate was 90 minutes of political theater

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DANVILLE, Ky. (MCT) — Whether Thursday’s debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan moved the needle in the presidential contest may have been the only major question left hanging at the end.

The vice presidential showdown was everything the first presidential debate was not: wide-ranging and lively, with very different sorts of passion from each side. It was, in short, 90 nonstop minutes of political theater of a kind that rarely materializes in these high-profile, and often stiff and predictable, televised encounters.

And as a result, both sides had reason to cheer when it was over. Biden revived the spirits of Democrats depressed by President Barack Obama’s underwhelming showing in the last week’s debate. Ryan offered a calm defense of his running mate Mitt Romney’s proposals and a firm denunciation of Obama’s handling of the nation.

Going in, Biden had one overarching, and widely recognized, goal: to halt the damage to the Democratic ticket from Obama’s weak debate performance. In the days since that clash with Romney, Obama’s momentum had been arrested and the Republican nominee took the lead in national polling that had eluded him for months.

Taking up the running mate’s traditional attacker role, Biden was aggressive from the start. He was quick to seize openings against Romney and Ryan that Obama had not — attacking Romney’s dismissive comment about “the 47 percent” and his personal income tax rate, which is lower than that what many far less affluent Americans pay — and describing the Republicans as warmongers. Even in a quietly personal discussion about abortion, he homed in on Ryan’s past objections to allowing the procedure for rape victims.

His performance was not an unadulterated success: Biden frequently appeared dismissive of his younger rival to the point of condescension. He loudly mocked him with repeated laughter that may recall, for some viewers with long memories, Al Gore’s repeated sighs into a debate microphone in 2000 against George W. Bush. (Those sounds wound up hurting Gore.)

The vice president frequently struck a pose of incredulity as Ryan spoke, describing his rival’s answers, more than once, as “malarkey” and at one point as “a bunch of stuff.”

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