Mitt
Romney's steady climb in polls since President Barack Obama's poor performance
in last week's first debate has raised the importance of the vice presidential
showdown, which is rarely a critical event in White House campaigns.
This time it comes
at a critical juncture, with Romney enjoying one of his best weeks of the
campaign and Obama suffering the fallout from his passive performance four
weeks before the November 6 election.
"This has
turned into a legitimate high-stakes debate because the ground has shifted so
profoundly on the Democrats," said Cal Jillson, a political scientist at
Southern Methodist University in Texas.
"Biden at
least has to hold his own so panic doesn't set in for Democrats," he said.
"They don't want to lose two in a row."
Biden and Ryan,
the Republican chairman of the House Budget Committee, meet at 9 p.m. EDT in
the nationally televised debate from Centre College in Danville, Kentucky.
Romney and
Republicans have been on a roll since last week's first debate, which came just
as Obama appeared to be taking command of the race. A Reuters/Ipsos online poll
on Wednesday showed Romney taking his first lead over Obama in more than a
month, 45 percent to 44 percent.
It was one of
several national polls showing the debate helped Romney significantly improve
his personal image and his standing on key issues like handling the economy, as
well as bolster his standing in key swing states that will decide the election.
Democrats have
accused Romney of shifting or misrepresenting his positions on issues during
and after the debate. Biden is expected to be more confrontational than Obama
in an encounter that will include both domestic and foreign policy issues.
"He's going
to have to be on his toes," Obama campaign adviser Robert Gibbs said of Biden
on MSBNC.
"My guess is
you're going to see what Mitt Romney tried to do, which is Paul Ryan ... walk
away from the positions that he's held during this campaign and give a much
much different, softer image for the American people," he said.
Democrats accused
Romney of shifting positions again on Tuesday when he told the Des Moines
Register that he was "not familiar with" any specific legislation
targeting abortion that he would pursue. They said he was trying to soften his
opposition to abortion rights to appeal to women.
'A PRO-LIFE
CANDIDATE'
But Romney denied
he was easing his strong anti-abortion rights stance. "I think I've said
time and again that I'm a pro-life candidate and I'll be a pro-life
president," he told reporters at a campaign stop in Ohio.
Ryan told
reporters in Florida that he and Romney were unified on the abortion issue.
"Our position is consistent and hasn't changed," he said.
Biden, the former
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations and Judiciary committees, has much
more experience on the national stage than Ryan, a 42-year-old Wisconsin
congressman.
He was a strong
performer in the Democratic primary debates during his failed 2008 run for the
White House and fared well against Republican Sarah Palin in the 2008 vice
presidential debate.
But he also has a
reputation for gaffes, most recently his remark that the middle class has been
"buried for the last four years" - the span of Obama's presidency -
by a bad economy.
Obama, in an
interview with ABC News on Wednesday, said he was not worried about Biden.
"I think Joe
just needs to be Joe. Congressman Ryan is a smart and effective speaker. But
his ideas are the wrong ones and Joe understands that," he said.
Ryan's previous
debate experience consists of a few congressional debates in his native
Wisconsin. He was happy to raise expectations for Biden's performance.
"Sure it's a
nervous situation. Joe Biden's one of the most experienced debaters we have in
modern politics," Ryan told reporters. "But the Achilles' heel he has
is President Obama's record."
Ryan's budget
plan, which has made him a hit with conservatives, is likely to play a starring
role. Ryan proposes slashing government spending and creating a
"voucher" system for the Medicare healthcare program for seniors,
which Democrats say would leave some seniors paying more of their medical
costs.
"The
challenge for Biden, and Obama didn't do this at all, is to put the other side
on the defensive and make them explain themselves and their policies,"
said Steven Schier, a political scientist at Carleton College in Minnesota.
Biden said he has
been studying Ryan's plan during his debate preparations. Democratic
Representative Chris Van Hollen has played Ryan in mock debates, while Ryan has
been prepped by former U.S. Solicitor General Ted Olson.
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