Rick Warren Forum




NBC News' Andrea Mitchell said today on Meet the Press that some in the Obama Campaign are saying privately that John McCain may not have been in a "cone of silence" last night at the Rick Warren "Civil Forum on the Presidency" - meaning they are suggesting McCain cheated at the event by hearing the questions Obama was receiving and had time to prepare his answers! Apparently, so bad was Obama's performance compared to McCain's, that Obama's campaign has already resorted to claiming McCain must have cheated to have done so well. The discussion in which Andrea Mitchell makes this statement begins at the 33:08 mark of the video (you'll have to hit play and wait a minute or two for the video to load past that point - then click the progress bar to move to that point).

Methinks John McCain really rattled the opposition with his performance last night!









Here is an outstanding piece at National Review Online by Byron York on "How McCain Won Saddleback." He essentially says that the way the forum was structured with each candidate answering the same questions revealed the fact that John McCain has lived a "much bigger life" than Barack Obama -- and most people for that matter. Here is the first portion of York's excellent piece:


It’s fair to say that in the hours before John McCain appeared with Barack Obama at the “Saddleback Civil Forum on the Presidency,” here at Pastor Rick Warren’s famed southern California mega-church, there were at least a few McCain insiders who were a bit nervous about their candidate’s prospects. Obama can be remarkably polished in this sort of situation. Unlike other Democrats, he’s not afraid to hang out with evangelicals. McCain, on the other hand, can at times be cranky and take pleasure in irritating his base. Could he come out ahead in this one?

Team McCain needn’t have worried. This was not your usual political TV show. Warren — Pastor Rick, around here — asked big questions, about big subjects; he wasn’t concerned about what appeared on the front page of that morning’s Washington Post. And his simple, direct, big questions brought out something we don’t usually see in a presidential face-off; in this forum, as opposed to a read-the-prompter speech, or even a debate focused on the issues of the moment, the candidates were forced to call on everything they had — the things they have done and learned throughout their lives. And the fact is, John McCain has lived a much bigger life than Barack Obama. That’s not a slam at Obama; McCain has lived a much bigger life than most people. But it still made Obama look small in comparison. McCain was the clear winner of the night. Read it all here . . .







Here is analysis of how the candidates did at the Rick Warren "Civil Forum on the Presidency" by CNN's panel of "talking heads."







Here are the answers Barack Obama and John McCain gave at the Rick Warren Forum on the issue of "when do babies get human rights?" Obama says that question is "above his pay grade." McCain says without equivocation - "at the moment of conception."

OBAMA


MCCAIN









Here is the stark contrast between John McCain and Barack Obama on the question of "Evil" and what to do about, from the Rick Warren Forum tonight. The video first shows Obama's answer - a rambling 1:30 of "evil is hard to define and we have to be careful in confronting it because we (U.S.) might be doing evil when we think we are doing good." Then comes McCain's two word answer to the question - "Defeat it." What more can you say about the difference between these two men?









If John McCain could afford to show by 2-hour commercial the contrast between himself and Barack Obama that emerged tonight at Rick Warren's "Civil Forum on the Presidency," he would win this election in a landslide! McCain was that strong and Obama was that weak.

If nothing else, Obama and the Democrats know that it will not be a cakewalk to the White House. On question after question, the contrast between McCain and Obama was beyond stark -- Obama slow, nuanced, halting in his answers, while John McCain was the picture of a leader - direct, concise, and bold. As we have said before here, when Obama is not behind a teleprompter giving a command performance at a rally, he is not a formidable candidate. John McCain can think on his feet, and he is not afraid to tell Americans what he believes. After seeing tonight's performances, we know why the Obama Campaign has been unwilling to join John McCain for Town Hall Meetings across America.

In summary, this night was beyond a "home run" for John McCain. He was in another universe compared to Barack Obama.








Sen. John McCain and Barack Obama will both be at Rick Warren's Saddleback Church in California tonight for a question and answer session with the pastor.

Warren is calling this a "Civil Forum on the Presidency," where he has pledged to not ask "gotcha" questions. We'll see if that means a total absence of substantive issues that could show the great moral and ethical differences between the candidates (such as Abortion), or if Warren has questions that deal with critical issues that the candidates don't already have memorized answers for. He says both candidates will receive the exact same questions. Only Warren will question the candidates, one hour with each candidate appearing separately. The forum will be televised on CNN and Fox News Channel from 7-9 PM CDT.

At the candidates’ request, this two-hour event will be held in a non-debate format, and will be open to all media. Both candidates also requested that questions be posed exclusively by Warren rather than by a panel or members of the audience. Each candidate will converse separately with Warren for approximately an hour, beginning with Sen. Obama, as determined by a coin toss.

This historic forum will be the only joint event for the two, and the last public appearance for either candidate prior to the two-week hiatus during each party’s national convention.






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