By ,
Published December 14, 2016
Vice President Joe Biden and Republican Paul Ryan gave voters the kind of substantive showdown that was everything the presidential debate was not.
In a spirited exchange that laid out stark choices, Biden and Ryan butted heads on everything from the economy, social policy and America's place in the world.
Biden, eager to make up for the president's lackluster performance in his first debate with Romney, played the aggressor throughout. Ryan came back at him with harsh talking points, a flurry of statistics and a sharp economic warning: In another President Barack Obama term, he said, "Watch out, middle class, the tax bill's coming to you."
Obama gave his running mate a quick thumbs up for delivering with the energy and feeling that he did not. "His passion for making sure that the economy grows for the middle class came through so I'm really proud of him," he said after watching the debate aboard Air Force One on the way home after a day of campaigning in battleground Florida.
I think the vice president very well knows that sometimes the words don't come out of your mouth the right way.
Mitt Romney, who watched the debate at the end of a campaign day in North Carolina, got on the phone with Ryan immediately afterward to congratulate his running mate.
Now attention shifts to the two remaining debates between Obama and Romney: Tuesday's "town hall" style face-off in Hempstead, N.Y., and a final showdown, over foreign policy, on Oct. 22 in Boca Raton, Fla.
With just 25 days to go until Election Day on Nov. 6, and throngs of people already voting, Obama and Romney will try to answer two questions that their running mates posed to the tens of millions of Americans who watched Thursday's hard-fought, 90-minute debate.
"Who do you trust?" Biden asked.
"Wouldn't it be nice to have a job-creator in the White House?" asked Ryan.
Abandoning his boss' caution, Biden uncorked a combative repair job.
"Not a single thing he said is accurate," Biden shot back when Ryan leveled a charge that Obama was projecting U.S. weakness.
So it went from Biden all night -- from taxes to Iran, where he suggested Republicans wanted a war. He looked directly at the camera to implore seniors like him not to trust Ryan on his Medicare plan: "Folks, follow your instincts on this one."
By going all in, Biden aggressively tried to score on two critical fronts: relating Obama's message in more heartfelt terms and blistering Ryan on multiple fronts so that Romney would lose his recent surge.
In one of the most memorable moments of the night, he brought up that Romney was videotaped saying that 47 percent of the American people see themselves as government-needy victims.
"These people are my mom and dad," Biden said.
In a ready response, Ryan did more than repeat the line from Romney that he actually cares about 100 percent of Americans. He turned Biden on Biden by telling the gaffe-prone vice president: "I think the vice president very well knows that sometimes the words don't come out of your mouth the right way."
Biden came across to some as strong and to others as cocky and condescending. In the split-screen view, Biden was often rolling his eyes and smiling or laughing, as if Ryan's responses were beyond belief.
The youthful-looking Republican clearly held his own on the grand stage. The lawmaker from Wisconsin was more at ease on his familiar domestic turf and a little more rehearsed on foreign policy. Staying calm where Biden was incredulous, Ryan still poked.
"I know you're under a lot of duress to make up for lost ground," Ryan chided his opponent at one point, "but I think people would be better served if we don't keep interrupting each other."
That was a reference to Obama's listless showing in last week's debate, which gave a lift to Romney's campaign and set the context for this sole vice presidential debate. Ryan essentially played the role that Obama had tried, making his case without getting too tangled up with his partner.
History shows debates between the running mates have little influence on voters, but this one stood out because it now drives the narrative for at least five days, when Romney and Obama take the stage again.
The debate also signals for voters what's ahead, particularly from Obama, who will try to make up for his bad day with his own more aggressive approach.
Sharply run by ABC News moderator Martha Raddatz, the debate seemingly gave people what they wanted to see. Even with all the practice by both candidates, there was spirit and spontaneity. And legitimate differences on matters of life and death.
Biden set the tone by taking a question on the deadly attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya and turning it into a defense of Obama's entire national security agenda. He reminded viewers that Obama was willing to chase the Sept. 11 terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden to the end of the earth, and he quoted Romney as essentially saying he wouldn't have done the same.
And it was up to Biden to take the shot Obama did not.
Obama had failed at his central mission of drawing distinctions with Romney in a crisp way that connected with people. The merits of competing tax plans or health care visions do not matter much if a debater meanders into the policy weeds or, even worse, fails to deliver a passionate fight. The president ended up doing both.
His aides look back at the first debate and see missed opportunities. Biden went the other direction, seizing any chance to jump on a Ryan inconsistency.
The danger for the aggressor is that both campaigns know the remaining undecided voters at home want answers for them, not partisan bickering.
Nationally, Romney got a clear national bump from his debate performance. But in the election-deciding battleground states that matter, most polls suggest the first presidential debate has not had a significant impact. Obama still holds an edge in Ohio, considered by both sides to be the keystone to the whole election.
Just as the Obama-Romney debate in Denver a week ago influenced what happened Thursday at Centre College in Danville, Ky., now the cycle spins ahead.
Romney and Obama will meet in New York on Tuesday in the midst of an election that is remarkably tight and, more than ever, a fight.
Based on reporting by The Associated Press.
Follow us on twitter.com/foxnewslatino
Like us at facebook.com/foxnewslatino
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-vs-ryan-in-spirited-debate-that-laid-out-stark-choices