Obama strong, and so is Romney in second debate:
(CNN) -- President Barack Obama fought back and Republican challenger Mitt Romney mostly stood his ground.
A forceful Obama defended
his record and challenged Romney on shifting positions in the 90-minute
debate, arguing his Republican rival's policies would favor the wealthy
if elected.
Romney repeatedly
attacked Obama's record, saying millions of unemployed people and
sluggish economic recovery showed the president's policies had failed.
Obama was more animated
and engaging than his understated and widely panned performance in their
first debate nearly two weeks ago.
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He and Romney, who also
aggressively made his points, walked the floor at Hofstra University in
Hempstead, New York, holding microphones, raising their voices and
repeatedly challenging each other's points.
"Governor Romney says
he's got a five-point plan. Governor Romney doesn't have a five-point
plan; he has a one-point plan. And that plan is to make sure that folks
at the top play by a different set of rules," Obama said about his
opponent's approach for boosting the economy.
Romney shot back that Obama was "great as a speaker, but his policies don't work."
"That's what this
election is all about," Romney said, saying he would prioritize middle
class growth. "It's about how we can get the middle class of this
country a bright and prosperous future."
However, Romney failed
to provide further specifics of his tax policy, even when one audience
member asked about unspecified deductions and loopholes the candidate
says he will eliminate.
On a sensitive foreign
policy topic, the candidates clashed at the front of the stage over the
September 11 terrorist attack in Libya that killed four Americans, with
Romney suggesting the Obama administration played politics by failing to
immediately acknowledge what happened.
Obama shot back that the
suggestion anyone in his administration would play politics on such an
issue was "offensive." When Obama said he called it a terrorist attack
shortly afterward, Romney challenged him, and Obama responded "check the
transcript."
Moderator Candy Crowley,
the CNN chief political correspondent, cut in to say both men were
right -- Obama called it a terrorist attack when he said he did, but the
administration took longer to fully explain what occurred.
Unlike the first
presidential debate, the format was town hall-style, with audience
members asking the questions. Crowley was the first woman to serve as
moderator of a presidential debate in 20 years.
The first question came
from a 20-year-old college student, worried about whether he'd be able
to support himself after graduation.
"More debt and less
jobs. I'm going to change that. I know what it takes to create good jobs
again," Romney said, addressing the first-time voter. "When you come
out in 2014 -- I presume I'm going to be president -- I'm going to make
sure you get a job."
Obama needed a
strong debate to try to blunt Romney's rise in the polls since their
first showdown in Denver, when analysts and polls indicated the GOP
challenger won a clear victory.
The most recent CNN
"poll of polls" -- an aggregate of the latest major surveys -- showed
Romney with a slight edge nationally at 48%-47%. In the battleground
states considered up-for-grabs, polls show Romney has narrowed Obama's
lead or caught the president just three weeks before the election.
The Obama campaign
conceded he had a bad night in the first debate and promised a more
aggressive approach in New York. A third and final debate focusing on
foreign policy will take place October 22 in Florida.
Polls show voters consider the economy to be the most important election issue.
Unemployment fell below
8% in September for the first time since the month Obama took office in
2009. However, millions remain out of work and U.S. economic growth is
anemic.
Romney and his campaign
have sought to frame the election as a referendum on Obama's presidency,
citing joblessness, slow recovery from the recession and chronic
federal deficits and debt as reasons to deny a second term.
For their part, Obama
and Democrats have tried to make the election about competing visions
for the future. They argue Republican proposals to repeal major
legislation, such as health care and Wall Street reforms, while cutting
government and expanding tax cuts without identifying additional revenue
sources would stall a sluggish but steady recovery.
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