Hillary Clinton is WAY overcompensating for Tim Kaine’s poor debate performance
Hillary Clinton is WAY overcompensating for Tim Kaine’s poor debate performance
By Chris Cillizza October 5 at 2:43 PM
The vice-presidential debate, in three minutes Play Video3:00
Here are key moments from the face-off between Republican vice-presidential candidate Mike Pence and Democratic rival Tim Kaine at Longwood University in Farmville, Va. (Sarah Parnass/The Washington Post)
Hillary Clinton wants to make one thing very, very clear: Tim Kaine was GREAT in Tuesday's vice-presidential debate. So good. The best. He might have, in fact, added his name to the list of the world's greatest debaters — right there alongside Abraham Lincoln, Socrates and Winston Churchill.
This is what's commonly known as overcompensating. Like if people say you are dumb, you try to wedge lots of big words into every sentence you write. That sort of sesquipedalianism is, of course, a tell for overcompensation.
Witness the various reactions to Kaine's performance that Clinton and her aides offered throughout the day Wednesday.
At around 10 a.m., Clinton had emailed Kaine to say he had done well.
Follow
Abby D. Phillip ✔ @abbydphillip
Hillary Clinton emailed Tim Kaine to congratulate him on his performance at #VPDebate, per an aide. They did not speak on the phone.
10:30 AM - 5 Oct 2016
5 5 Retweets 12 12 likes
Three hours later, Clinton had talked to Kaine on the phone to praise his heroic performance.
Follow
Abby D. Phillip ✔ @abbydphillip
Hillary Clinton has now actually spoken to Tim Kaine on the phone, a convo her aide described as a "love fest"
1:35 PM - 5 Oct 2016
22 22 Retweets 71 71 likes
Love. Fest.
5-Minute Fix newsletter
Keeping up with politics is easy now.
Sign up
Uh huh.
Here's the reality: Kaine was not so good Tuesday night. (He wasn't Trump-level bad. But he wasn't great.) He spent the first 20 minutes of the debate amped up beyond belief, tripping over his words as he tried to rush them out before his allotted time expired. The next 20 minutes were relatively solid. But then Kaine decided he would interrupt Mike Pence every time the Indiana governor started to speak. And Kaine kept that up for the duration of the debate.
It wasn't a good look. I named Kaine a loser in my post-debate winners and losers column. Polling done among debate watchers seemed to confirm that Kaine had lost. Even the early spin out of the Clinton campaign was that Pence might have done some good for himself but that he hadn't helped Trump in the least. (I think that's totally right!)
But as Wednesday morning turned into Wednesday afternoon, it became clear that Kaine's performance was coming under increasing criticism. Enter Clinton to insist that Kaine was, is and always will be the greatest debater this world — and this universe — will ever see.
Don't be fatuous, Hillary.
|