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

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Debates such as the series between John Kerry and George W. Bush in 2004 have been more typical. Kerry attacked the incumbent's conduct of the Iraq War, reminding voters "Saddam Hussein didn't attack us. Osama bin Laden attacked us."

"Kerry won three times in the debates and still lost the election," said Devine, who also advised Kerry.

In 1992, Democrat Bill Clinton's polling advantage declined slightly during the debate period, even though it was opponent George H.W. Bush who made one of the most often-cited gaffes of the campaign during their second encounter, looking down at his watch as the candidates fielded questions from voters in a town- hall-meeting format.

Michael Dukakis was almost 6 percentage points behind George H.W. Bush before the start of the debates in 1988, when his cold, unemotional answer to a hypothetical question about the rape and murder of his wife reinforced criticism of the Democrat as an aloof technocrat.

By the time candidates meet for debates, there aren't many undecided voters open to persuasion. Viewers mostly root for their favorite candidate and typically tell pollsters their choice won.

By contrast, voter preferences have shifted decisively during the national political conventions, with the winning candidate taking the lead from his opponent during the period in four of the past 15 presidential elections, according to Wlezien and Erikson.

Voter preferences aren't yet as entrenched during the conventions and each candidate has an opportunity to make a sustained case for himself over several nights that typically dominate media coverage more than the debates, Wlezien said.

The dwindling numbers of voters who haven't made up their minds by October are unlikely to follow events such as debates, Stimson said.

"People who are undecided tend not to watch the debates anyhow," Stimson said. "Their motivation is so slight they don't do anything that requires a little bit of involvement or interest."

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