Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Week

    The GOP's 'fiercely combative' final debate: 5 talking points

    Wednesday night's Republican debate turned into a grudge match between Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney. And one candidate clearly came out on top

    On Wednesday night, the four remaining Republican presidential candidates congregated in Mesa, Ariz., for their 20th, and likely last, debate. Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, and Ron Paul sat at side-by-side desks, while CNN moderator John King peppered them with questions on everything from foreign policy to congressional earmarks. But with pivotal votes looming — Arizona's and Michigan's primaries on Feb. 28, and make-or-break Super Tuesday on March 6 — much of the debate devolved into "fiercely combative" bickering. Here, five key takeaways:

    1. Romney and Santorum really dislike each other
    There may have been four candidates on stage, "but the main event was Santorum versus Romney," says Paul Begala at The Daily Beast. With Santorum, leading in most polls, enjoying frontrunner status, Romney did his best to reclaim the edge. Throughout the "painfully long and often personally biting" debate, says Maggie Haberman at Politico, "Romney and Santorum made clear their visceral dislike for the other." Each man "chuckled and smiled as the other spoke. They interrupted and talked over one another." And "Romney, especially, came off snippy, and at times a bit nasty."

    SEE MORE: Brokered conventions: A guide to political pundits' dream scenario

    2. In the end, Romney won
    Snippy or not, Romney kept Santorum on the defensive all night, says Jennifer Rubin at The Washington Post. "Romney's staff must have worked overtime" digging up dirt on Santorum, including past subsidies for the airline and steel industries, a propensity for earmarking, and an endorsement for party-switcher Arlen Specter. Romney used it all to make Santorum sound like just "another weasely senator." The attacks flustered Santorum, says Michael Tomasky at The Daily Beast, and left him mumbling lawmaking minutia. Meanwhile, "Romney kept getting off soundbites," which is how you win the audience, and the debate.

    3. Mitt got a big assist from Ron Paul
    The Texan was mostly a non-factor in the debate — except when he paired up with Romney to double-team Santorum, says Politico's Haberman, at one point branding the Pennsylvanian a "fake conservative." This is a "role he's played in past debates, slamming Santorum almost whenever he could and joining Romney in piling on." No wonder Paul's "'bromance' with Romney is now an openly discussed fact of the 2012 campaign." Santorum certainly noticed, telling a reporter afterward that he should ask the two men "what they have going on together."

    SEE MORE: The 'old, white' voters picking the GOP nominee: By the numbers

    4. A suspiciously friendly audience helped Mitt, too
    "Romney was buoyed, as he was in the Florida debates, by a crowd that favored him," says Politico's Haberman. The audience cheered Romney repeatedly, and Santorum "seemed to get ground down" by repeated booing. Romney clearly filled the room with supporters, says Will Wilkinson at The Economist, and his "success at hall-packing made him look like a winner." But offstage, in the real world, he's still "losing to Rick Freaking Santorum."

    5. Newt floated above the fray... and out of the race?
    "Gingrich didn't have a game-changing moment" in the debate, says Ginger Gibson at Politico. He attacked the media, of course, says Joe Gandelman at The Moderate Voice, but "half-heartedly," as if he knew prolonging the schtick would open him to ridicule, "like a comedian telling the same joke to the same room." It's clear Newt has "pretty much given up," says Michelle Cottle at The Daily Beast. "Gingrich the attack dog" was replaced by an "enthusiastic, vigorously nodding wingman," someone who is obviously angling for an advisory position should any of his rivals win in November.

    SEE MORE: The 'most volatile race in history': Why GOP voters can't make up their minds

    View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The Week

    Other stories from this topic:

    Like on Facebook - Follow on Twitter - Sign-up for Daily Newsletter

     

    20 comments

    • Reverend Mr. Black  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Personally, I am kind of enjoying these debates. The candidates are so crazy. I think when Herman Cain, and Bachmann quit that was a big loss, especially for the comedians. Maybe we can get them back along with say, Haley Barbor and Scott Walker as the Republican go to guys.
      • MikeyT 3 mths ago
        Why don't you run for office and the comedians could have a field day.
    • Clay Moore  •  Pensacola, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      When Mitt Romney campaigned for the Governorship of Taxachussetts he represented himself as a "liberal" republican who shared the nanny-state, compassionate values of democrats. In spite of his best efforts to appoint liberal judges, promote abortion and author mandated health care he soon realized that he wouldn't be able to "out-liberal" the democrats for re-election. So he didn't even try to run again.

      Then Mitt, lusting for power, ran as a RINO against maverick, grouch and curmudgeon John McCain in 2008. Mitt lost again.

      Now Romney reinvents himself as a "severe conservative". His sudden conversion to conservatism begs the question: How stupid does he think primary voters are? Romney's con job here depends upon the amnesia of his audience. Here's a politician who pledged alligance to Roe v. Wade, voted for Democrat Paul Tsongas, and competed with Ted Kennedy as a champion of "gay rights."

      If you look close you can see strings attached to the reinvented Republican's back. Romney is the semi-reformed RINO dummy of the wealthy, GOP establishment ventriloquists -- a dummy whose words and robotic jerks come from the pushing and pulling of scummy strategists and pollsters who crawl along a corrupt corridor from Boston to D.C. Are conservative republican voters really going to nominate this neocon fraud?
      • Ed 3 mths ago
        They might nominate him. They seem to be as easily manipulated by the media as Mitt is by the bankster corporations. Unless they are voting another way and this is a big bought and paid for charade that is able to manipulate the true results.
    • American Spirit  •  3 mths ago
      the great thing is governor Bob McDonnell and his transvaginal probe are toxic

      if anyone picks McDonnell as their running matey - they will go down in flames
    • Marty Risner  •  3 mths ago
      Newt Gingrich is a fat pasty old white guy who is detested by the vast majority of American people and ALL rational sane people.
      • george 3 mths ago
        see a shrink dude please
    • j  •  Rancho Cordova, California  •  3 mths ago
      'fiercely combative'......they got nothing. that's why....
    • Ed  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered. The point is to discover them. Galileo.
    • Kevin  •  3 mths ago
      Ron Paul does not endorse Mitt. I understand the reason for wanting to suggest it. Paul is the kingmaker, and a victory over Obama will not be achieved without him.That is why the GOP should be nominating him.They will learn there mistake come November and no amount of suggesting he supports Mitt will change the fact that he does not.Eat #$%$ Yahoo.
    • Eleanor of Aquitaine  •  Lynden, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      Gingrich is at his best when he stays above the fray. Sniping is never presidential. President Obama, please note.
    • rockandrollforever  •  3 mths ago
      The world is watching the battle of the crazies. I can't imagine one of these clowns ever walking my dog, God forbid becoming POTUS.
      • MikeyT 3 mths ago
        Where have you been for the past three years????
      • george 3 mths ago
        far away from the conservative fray of imbeciles and their followers, good thing there's a shower nearby
    • Jacob K  •  3 mths ago
      RON PAUL was the only one who has a shot at beating Obama.
      • george 3 mths ago
        only if they're running for fanatic bigot in chump er cheif
    • S  •  3 mths ago
      Woo Hoo!!! Talking points are back! I was worried that The Week had become unpredictable.
    • Hawk  •  3 mths ago
      The hypocrisy will run deep when they all bow down to the chosen on at the convention.
    • CarlM  •  Chico, California  •  3 mths ago
      I am not surprised the candidates do not like each other. Most Republicans do not like anyone who disagrees with them on anything. No compromise. My way or the highway.
    • Lorraine B  •  Sacramento, California  •  3 mths ago
      I;m so sorryto say but we are looking at Obama being reelected.
    • Jabez  •  Corvallis, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      im GOP and i know one thing for sure i will never vote for romney.i will vote against him every time.romney is killing the gop's chance to beat obama.obama calls romney mini me.
    • Ed  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      "Condemnation without investigation is the height of ignorance." Albert Einstein
      It's easy to marginalize Ron Paul. It's not so easy to marginalize what he has to say. If you do not investigate what he has to say, then you could be marginalizing yourself, your family and your country.
    • Ed  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      The only candidate that continues to say anything of substance is Ron Paul. Yahoo says he's..."mostly a non-factor"? You can continue to marginalize him but how are you going to marginalize us in November?
    • Ed  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      "Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth." Albert Einstein
      It's not about Ron Paul. It's about the truth of things that are occurring and their consequences if we don't see the truth in time to do something about it. That time is now.
    • American Spirit  •  3 mths ago
      all romney supporters - except members of the mormon cult - should check out the antics of Idaho Mormon Frank VanderSloot who is one of Mitts billionaire backers

      no wonder Sanctorum is paranoid - the entire anti christian cult of mormon will ensure that Sanctorum is toast
    • tell the truth  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 mths ago
      There is only one truly viable Republican presidential candidate and that is Newt Gingrich. The most intelligent, the most knowledgeable in domestic and foreign issues and solutions, the most experienced, the most fiscally conservative. Forget about his personal life baggage; that's not relevant to what we expect our president to accomplish. Franklin Roosevelt had extra marital affairs, Dwight Eisenhower had an extra martial affair with his British driver in England, John Kennedy was a womanizer, Ronald Reagan had extra marital affairs and Bill Clinton ... you all know what he did ... and they all did what most consider a good job as President.

      Mitt Romney may have done a good job for his liberal constituency in Massachusetts but that was a small part of the US. Can that experience be ramped up to the divergent constituency of the entire US?? Rick Santorum, likewise did a good job for his Pennsylvania constituency as a US senator, but that's not near enough to meet the needs of the constituency of the entire US either. Ron Paul is just too far off the wall to be meaningful.