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Body language: confident Obama, combative McCain

时间:2011-09-26 01:14来源: 作者:admin 点击:
The McCains and the Obamas moved about the stage separately for a little while after their debate, greeting people on the stage, but not each other. T
  

  by Scott Olson, AP

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., shake hands before the start of the presidential debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2008. The debate is the second presidential debate of three, the only one being held in the town hall style with questions coming from audience members. (AP Photo/Scott Olson, Pool)

By Jocelyn Noveck, AP National Writer

NEW YORK — The McCains and the Obamas moved about the stage separately for a little while after their debate, greeting people on the stage, but not each other. Then John McCain tapped Barack Obama's back briefly and Obama turned and reached his hand out. Rather than shaking it, McCain directed him to his wife, Cindy.

If it wasn't clear on TV, photos showed that the two men did shake hands after Tuesday's contest. But that awkward physical moment highlighted a reality that viewers were reminded of repeatedly Tuesday evening: There's no love lost between these two men.

And it was McCain, slipping in the polls and increasingly on the attack in recent days, who appeared to have far more trouble concealing his apparent distaste for his opponent. He even began the evening with a dig.

"Sen. Obama, it's good to be with you at a town hall meeting," McCain said. Obama declined to participate in town hall settings with McCain earlier in the race.

And then there was the comment, likely to be much remarked upon, about Obama's vote on an energy bill. "You know who voted for it?" McCain asked, thrusting his finger in Obama's direction but not looking at him. "That one."

It was a comment that could be interpreted several ways -- harmless, offensive, merely annoying -- but it bothered Tim Groeger, an undecided voter from Morristown, N.J.

"I didn't feel that was very professional," said Groeger, 28, an accountant. "I felt McCain was very aggressive. Obama seemed to stay cool and collected."

And yet Groeger said he remained split between the candidates, and hadn't heard enough specifics from Obama. "I feel like Obama has these ideas that sound great, but he hasn't really gone into enough detail for me," Groeger said.

More than in the previous presidential debate, body language proved telling on Tuesday night, and it reflected the status of the race: a contest transformed by the economic crisis, with Obama ahead in the polls and McCain and his running mate, Sarah Palin, stepping up the attacks in a vigorous effort to shift the momentum.

With no lecterns, just chairs upon which to perch while the other was speaking, the candidates showed a lot more of themselves. Obama strolled the stage while speaking, while McCain seemed to pace it. And Obama sat generally still when McCain was talking, while his opponent scribbled notes more frequently, his notebook spilling over the small table.

With the physical contrast -- and their obvious age difference -- more pronounced in this setting, it seemed apt that one of the only humorous bits touched upon that gap between the 47-year-old Obama and the 72-year-old McCain: a quip by McCain that he might need hair transplants.

Though McCain's demeanor was more aggressive, Obama engaged in his share of digs -- this was not the "I agree with John" Obama of the previous debate.

"This is a guy who sang bomb, bomb, bomb Iran, who called for the annihilation of North Korea," he said during a foreign policy discussion. At another point, he surmised, "The straight-talk express lost a wheel on that one." And at another: "I've gotta correct a little bit of Sen. McCain's history, not surprisingly."

And he didn't let the "he just doesn't understand" argument go unanswered this time -- yes, he said, there were indeed things he didn't understand, like how one could invade a country that had nothing to do with 9/11.

Both men tried their very hardest to prove to the undecided voters onstage -- and more importantly, at home -- that they felt their economic pain. How can we trust either of you, asked one blunt onstage voter, Teresa Finch.

"I can understand your frustration and your cynicism," Obama said.

"Teresa, thank you. I can see why you feel that cynicism," McCain said.

As for the town-hall format, a setting McCain enjoys, it hardly felt like a town hall at all. The questions had been selected by moderator Tom Brokaw beforehand, and once they were asked, never was the questioner heard from again. The onstage voters seemed more like bit players in a show than actual participants.

Clearly there was no way of knowing if the debate had changed any of their opinions. If they were anything like Rani Rosborough, an undecided voter who watched from home in University Park, Md., then, well, it didn't.

"I did think Obama commanded the attention better," said Rosborough, a registered Republican. "And I'm displeased with these negative attacks and comments toward Obama. On the campaign trail, as well, Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin seem to be engaging in more personal attacks."


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