What would be a good example of a hardball question for a primary debate?
I agree that the questions were on the soft side, but it really highlighted the differences in the candidates, and isn't that what primary debates are all about?
I agree they didn't really hardball (The One provides a good example of how they could've hardballed had they chosen to). This "debate," however, was really the first GOP debate to at least sort of focus on some policy issues and did successfully differentiate the candidates. A full year out from the election, that is what a debate should be doing at this point. It would've been nice to see some hardball on fact checking some of their statements as follow-up. I think that was a product of the time restrictions to some degree... allowing a 90 second answer with that many candidates makes follow-up questioning difficult. Cut the field in half and then I think this format would have allowed for and resulted in follow-up questions to deal with the loose relationship with the truth on display. Overall though, Fox Business did a better job than I expected.
Trump & Carson didn't hurt themselves, but also didn't stand out. I can at least sort of understand how Trump is a candidate and getting some support... Carson is an enigma to me--I don't understand support for him. Personally, I think he has something going on from a physical and/or mental health standpoint. I don't understand his desire to embellish his life story when I believe even the likely real version of his story is more compelling and likely to resonate with GOP voters. Any voter appreciates the grew up poor-->now a renowned neurosurgeon story. That's a good bootstrapper if there ever was one. His command of, well, virtually all of the important presidential issues is atrocious.
Cruz was weak and I felt was trying to dodge meaningful discussion the most of all of them. That is nothing new... he did the same thing in Texas when he ran for Senate. Nobody has attacked him for this yet, but his whole "I'm an ideological outsider" shtick has made him exceptionally ineffective as a senator. He can point to very few achievements, even excusing the fact that the GOP was the minority party and he was only elected in 2013.
Rubio looked like the winner, though I agree that this is more an indictment of the other candidates. If he can hone an explanation and math behind his tax plan (even if it doesn't pass a fact check), he'll move way up the standings. If he can get his plan to look viable as a fact/math check, then he vaults to the top. Simplified tax code is a winning issue.
Kasich appeared to be attempting to channel a conservative version of Bernie Sanders. It didn't work, which is a shame since he might be the only grown-up in the room. Angry conservative white guy just comes off sounding like an asshole. Needs to back up his statements with more than "it worked in Ohio blah blah blah." He needs to identify WHY something worked in Ohio and how that translates to a nationwide solution. He needs meaningful metrics that can stand up to fact checks.
Fiorina was meh. She was on the right track with relating back to personal stories that resonate with voters, but then steered away and struggled with economic questions (which theoretically should be her area of strength).
Paul's brain is one helluva echo chamber. He is starting to look/act more & more like his crazy ass dad.
Bush was improved, but he did not make the inroads he needed to. I don't remember if it was on here or somewhere else that I read it, but Romney must be kicking himself over letting Jeb scare him out of the race.