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Pressure mounts on Biden, Ryan ahead of VP debate

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"Congressman Ryan, on the other hand, has a choice to make Thursday: either stand by the extreme positions he's been the face of for years — and that Governor Romney has fully embraced — like turning Medicare into a voucher program and cutting taxes for the wealthiest few at the expense of the middle class, or flat-out deny their existence as Governor Romney did in last week's debate," said the official, who like the Romney aide was not authorized to speak publicly about debate strategy.

As during Biden's faceoff four years ago against former Alaska governor Sarah Palin, the Republican vice-presidential nominee in 2008, there's also the matter of the age and stature gap between the two candidates. Biden is 69, has run for president twice and served in the Senate for 36 years. Ryan is 42, has served in the House for 14 years and will make his first appearance on the national debate stage on Thursday in Danville, Ky.

Both sides sought to downplay the importance of that gap ahead of the debate. Democrats noted that Biden succeeded in navigating it four years ago, while Republicans pointed out that Ryan has served on the Hill for seven terms.

"Congressman Ryan and Sen. Biden were colleagues on Capitol Hill for many years," said one Romney aide. "I know Congressman Ryan considers the vice president a friend."

In addition to Obama's debate performance, there's also the matter of two recent remarks by Biden on the trail - his statement on Tuesday that the middle class has been "buried for the last four years," and his comment Thursday that he and Obama would allow the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy to expire — which Republicans have seized in an effort to cast the vice president as an ineffective messenger.

"Joe Biden's kind of become the Joe Pesci of the presidential ticket," said Rep. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., who stumped last week on behalf of the GOP ticket in Colorado. "You never know what's going to come out of his mouth. This comment that he said earlier this week on burying the middle class — I don't think that's exactly the shovel-ready job that Barack Obama was thinking of — but the vice president's right. That's exactly what's happened."


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