Debate Wrap-Up

Read it at the Campaign Standard. Fred Barnes writes that Thompson passed the test, Richelieu says Rudy’s the best so far, and Continetti has an exclusive from the Giuliani camp:

Today the Giuliani campaign plans to launch an attack on Mitt Romney’s comment during the CNBC debate last night that he would check with White House lawyers before launching a preemptive attack on Iran without congressional authorization. “You sit down with your attorneys and tell you [what] you have to do,” Romney said, “but obviously the president of the United States has to do what’s in the best interest of the United States to protect us against a potential threat.” Whereupon moderator Chris Matthews asked whether President Bush needed congressional authorization to invade Iraq in 2003. “You know, we’re going to let the lawyers sort out what he needed to do and what he didn’t need to do,” Romney replied. “But, certainly, what you want to do is to have the agreement of all the people – leadership of our government as well as our friends around the world where those circumstances are available.” This has the potential to be a major gaffe for Romney, for a few reasons. One: It demonstrates that he continues to think like a CEO – someone who would “let the lawyers sort [it] out” before conducting another round of layoffs – rather than a potential commander in chief. Two: Romney once again avoided strongly defending President Bush’s decision to remove Saddam Hussein from power, ceding territory to McCain and Giuliani, who both aggressively defend the Bush policy. And three: It allows the Giuliani camp to make an unfavorable comparison between Romney’s “attorney test” and John Kerry’s “global test.”

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