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Vice presidential debate was 90 minutes of political theater

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Those on gaffe patrol for Biden — who famously fails to parse his words carefully enough at times — came away empty-handed. Ryan, too, avoided any damaging slips.

The last national opinion surveys show a very close 2012 election contest. The complexion of the race changed significantly after last week’s debate, and Biden is unlikely to have fully flipped the campaign narrative despite his assertive performance.

Vice presidential debates — like vice presidential candidates — simply don’t have that much influence over voter opinions. And this one will have even less time than prior ones have to generate reverberations in the contest, coming as it does only days before the next presidential clash.

Next Tuesday’s presidential debate, the second of three, could well be the most important event of the entire campaign. The two presidential candidates will meet in a different format — a town hall-style gathering that could well solicit different approaches by the candidates.

With that encounter on the horizon, it may have been enough that the vice presidential candidates set the stage by showing their bosses that a televised debate doesn’t have to be dull, but can be substantive and enlightening.

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