The second presidential debate: Does the town-hall format favor Obama?

The candidates will be expected to show that they can empathize with regular voters. That could be a challenge for Mitt Romney

President Obama participates in a town hall at the University of Miami on Sept. 20.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

After his listless performance at the first presidential debate, President Obama badly needs a strong showing at the second face-off to prevent Mitt Romney from building on his recent surge in the polls. The first time around, Romney proved himself to be a skilled debater, attacking Obama relentlessly on his economic record and putting a moderate face on his own conservative positions. But the second debate, which will be held in New York on Tuesday night, will feature a town-hall format with questions from an audience of undecided voters — which may not play to Romney's strengths. Does the town-hall format give Obama an advantage?

Yes. Romney is terrible with people: Romney's main challenge will be a familiar one: "Demonstrating that he feels the pain of regular voters and is able to connect with them on a human level," says Scott Conroy at Real Clear Politics. Even though Romney has caught up to Obama in the polls, the multimillionaire still faces a "29-point deficit when respondents were asked which candidate best connects with ordinary Americans." Romney has long been handicapped by "impromptu moments of stilted conversation and awkward jokes," and the town-hall format makes it more likely that he'll stumble.

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