Obama Is Receptive to Debating McCain for a Really Long Period of Time

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It sounds great — a return to the days of substantive, gentlemanly political debate that we imagine existed when men wore top hats and three-piece suits. And of course Obama wants to have a duel of rhetoric: As last night's display of speech-making proved, Obama trounces McCain behind the podium. But let's not forget McCain is a master at the art of the town hall, where his Everyman appeal and candor connect personally with voters. Are these proposed “tweaks” to McCain’s guidelines simply an extra precaution that if Obama's oratory doesn't hold up, his youth will? The Obama campaign is probably aware that those Lincoln-Douglas debates of political yore lasted for a ridiculous three hours each, with each candidate talking uninterrupted for up to 90 minutes at a time. Now, that would never succeed in the made-for-TV era. But a longer format of any kind (with, to be blunt, the candidates standing and roaming the stage) might expose McCain’s age far more clearly than a shorter, more sane debate ever could. Call us cynical, but is it possible that when the Obama campaign specifically suggests “less structured” and “longer,” they really mean “rhetorically demanding” and “physically exhausting”? —Dan Amira

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