DANVILLE, Ky. (AP) -
Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Paul Ryan
pull up a couple of chairs for a vice presidential debate that has
mushroomed in importance since Mitt Romney's strong showing in the first
presidential faceoff. This time, it's the Obama team looking to put the
brakes on the other guy's momentum.
The veep showdown matches
up two skilled politicians with strong policy credentials and very
different styles. It's 69-year-old Biden's folksy appeal and solid vice
presidential portfolio vs. 42-year-old Ryan's intensity and extensive
knowledge of the federal budget and economy from 14 years in Congress.
"Looking forward to it,"
Biden said Thursday as he boarded his plane for Kentucky with his
children and Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who has been playing Ryan in
practice debate sessions.
Like the second installment
in a miniseries, the debate will help to shape the campaign narrative
until Romney and Obama meet up again Tuesday. Obama is eager to change
the vibe after his lackluster performance in the first debate and
Romney's recent gains in the polls. Romney, for his part, is hoping a
strong Ryan performance will help propel Republicans forward on an
energetic drive through the campaign's final weeks.
Democratic Kentucky Gov.
Steve Beshear encouraged Biden to turn in a tougher performance than
Obama. Beshear said Obama "didn't do well" in the presidential debate
and should have mentioned Romney's dismissive comments about the 47
percent of Americans who don't pay income taxes.
"My guess is that he was
advised to be presidential and don't get into the fray and look like you
are above the fray and all that," Beshear said in an interview with The
Associated Press. "But there is a difference in doing that and being
aggressive and making your points and pointing out the difference
between your two candidates."
The 90-minute debate at
Centre College, a liberal arts school with just 1,340 students in tiny
Danville, is sure to draw a television audience of tens of millions. But
it's unlikely to eclipse the 70 million who tuned in to watch Biden
face off with Republican firebrand Sarah Palin four years ago.
That debate was more of a
curiosity: It allowed Palin to outdo Biden in folksiness and recover
from a series of painfully awkward media interviews but did little to
alter the trajectory of the race.
"Normally vice presidential
debates are good political theater and sort of interesting from a
talent scout standpoint, as you evaluate the up-and-comers on the
political stage," says Alan Schroeder, author of a book on presidential
debates. "But this year could be different because of the negative
reviews of Obama's performance. That heightens expectations for this
second debate."
"Joe just needs to be Joe," Obama said, when asked his advice for the vice president in an interview Wednesday with ABC News.
Senior Obama adviser David
Axelrod, appearing Thursday on "CBS This Morning," said he believes "the
big challenge for him is to pin Congressman Ryan down."
"Right now the Romney campaign is running away from some of their positions like unwanted stepchildren," Axelrod said.
Thursday was a rare day
when the political activities of the running mates were taking center
stage and those of Obama and Romney were seen as secondary. But with
just 26 days left until the election and the race still tight, neither
Obama nor Romney was completely ceding the spotlight. The president
headed to Florida while his GOP opponent had his own debate prep at his
hotel in Dayton, Ohio, Thursday morning before traveling to North
Carolina, another battleground.
Thursday's debate,
moderated by Martha Raddatz of ABC News, will cover both foreign and
domestic topics. The debate is to be divided into nine, 10-minute
segments. At the outset of each segment, Raddatz will ask an opening
question, and each candidate will have two minutes to respond.
Romney and Obama both predicted strong performances by their No. 2s.
"I think Paul Ryan will do great," Romney told supporters at a town-hall meeting Wednesday in Mount Vernon, Ohio.
He said the debates offer people a rare chance to see the candidates directly, unfiltered by misleading and negative ads.
The GOP nominee said he'd
seen some of the anti-Romney TV ads running in Ohio that morning, and
added: "It's a good thing I don't do that very often because my blood
pressure would be very high."
Obama, in a radio interview
Wednesday with Tom Joyner, said he'd been "too polite" in his debate
with Romney - a sure sign that Biden won't be going easy on Ryan. And
that Obama won't make the same mistake in the next two presidential
debates, on Tuesday in Hempstead, N.Y., and Oct. 22 in Boca Raton, Fla.
"We've got four weeks left in the election, and we're going to take it to him," Obama said.
Later, in an interview with
ABC News, Obama minimized the importance of his poor first debate
performance, saying: "Gov. Romney had a good night. I had a bad night.
It's not the first time I've had a bad night."
He added: "What's important is the fundamentals of what this race is about haven't changed."
The president, who had
tried to lower expectations for his own performance before last week's
debate, predicted in his radio interview that Biden would be "terrific."
Ryan signaled he's ready for whatever Biden sends his way.
"I'm not intimidated, I'm actually excited about it," he said on CNN.
Both Biden and Ryan head
into the debate with vulnerabilities: Biden must rein in a freewheeling
manner that can be endearing but also produces plenty of gaffes. Ryan
hasn't been in a campaign debate for more than a decade and is light on
foreign policy experience, a sharp contrast to the vice president, a
former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Ryan also will need to find
a way to reinforce Romney's policy positions without selling out his
own, more conservative credentials.
Romney adviser Kevin Madden
signaled in advance that Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee,
would distance himself from his past proposals for sharp budget cuts.
"You have to remember that
there is a Romney-Ryan ticket and there's one presidential candidate -
there's one person at the top of the ticket - so the focus again will be
on what Gov. Romney's plan is for reforming Washington," Madden said.