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Debates: Memorable moments, but do they make a difference?

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A 2008 Gallup review of polling data surrounding presidential debates concluded the events are "rarely game- changers" yet may have made a difference in 1960 and 2000, both among the closest presidential contests in U.S. history.

James Stimson, author of "Tides of Consent: How Public Opinion Shapes American Politics," said it's not even clear that the debates were decisive in 1960, though Kennedy's cool, crisp on-air performance is often cited as pivotal to a campaign that marked the advent of the television age in politics.

"It's such a charming story," said Stimson, a political science professor at the University of North Carolina. "You get the impression Kennedy was on the verge of losing when he debated Nixon. Instead, Kennedy was ahead going in."

Kennedy's average in the polls was 50.5 percent one week before the first debate. It was 50.6 percent one week after the last one, according to Wlezien and Erikson. They analyzed polling based on each candidate's share of the two-party vote, excluding independent and third-party candidates.

In 2000, an election decided by a few thousand votes in Florida, the debates "may have changed the outcome," said Tad Devine, who was an adviser to Gore, the Democratic candidate.

In the days after the first debate, press coverage focused on Gore's audible sighs and interruptions. Marked shifts in his demeanor during each of the next two debates and a faulty makeup job that gave him an unnatural hue in one of them renewed questions in the media about the authenticity of his public persona.

"It changed the dynamic of the campaign," Devine said.

When Reagan debated Carter in 1980 a week before the election, he was already in the lead. On average, polls taken one week before the debate showed the Republican with 51.7 percent of the vote, excluding support for independent candidate John Anderson and undecided voters, according to Wlezien and Erikson's compilation.

Even so, the Republican challenger disarmed Carter's attempts to portray him as an extremist, with an avuncular, head-shaking "There you go again." Undecided voters in focus groups that pollster Peter Hart convened for The Wall Street Journal said the debate relieved them of doubts about Reagan.


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