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Vice presidential debate was 90 minutes of political theater

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But Biden gave the Obama base a reason to start believing again in their presidential ticket. By relentlessly counterpunching, and playing the aggressor, he may have given Obama more running room in his next faceoff with Romney.

Ryan’s main goal was the reverse of Biden’s. He needed to sustain Romney’s gains from the first presidential debate, and by coming across as a thoughtful and non-threatening figure — and avoiding serious blunders — he may well have met that test.

In the biggest moment of his career, Ryan stood his ground. In contrast to Biden’s often overheated responses, the Wisconsin congressman coolly delivering his ticket’s indictment of Obama administration failures at home and abroad.

Like Biden, he, too, directed many of his remarks squarely at his party’s base, with little of the shift toward the center that has marked some of Romney’s recent statements. And in an echo of his mentor, former vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp, he couched his ticket’s austere policies in more hopeful language than is sometimes employed by his running mate.

He only seemed to be stumped once, when moderator Martha Raddatz asked whether a Romney administration would intervene militarily in a humanitarian crisis.

“Each situation will — will come up with its own set of circumstances. But putting American troops on the ground, that’s got to be within the national security interests of the American people,” Ryan responded.

For the most part, the candidates followed campaign talking points, avoiding specifics whenever possible, despite the moderator’s best efforts. But the debate rarely lacked for a sharp repartee, as in this exchange over how Romney would pay for his $4.8 trillion tax-cut plan:

Ryan: “You can cut tax rates by 20 percent and still preserve these important preferences for middle-class taxpayers — “

Biden: “Not mathematically possible.”

Ryan: “It is mathematically possible. It’s been done before. It’s precisely what we’re proposing.”

Biden, chuckling: “It has never been done before.”

Ryan: “It’s been done a couple of times, actually.”

Biden: “It has never been done before.”

Ryan: “Jack Kennedy lowered tax rates, increased growth. Ronald Reagan — “

Biden: “Oh, now you’re Jack Kennedy.”

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