The February 26 Democratic Debate

Democratic Debate Report Card
Mark Duncan / AP
New York Senator Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton

Article Tools

A performance that would have been adequate were she not struggling to stay in the game. Her conviction that the media is biased against her seemed to throw her off throughout, and she was too distracted by her frustration with Obama and the press to truly shine. Occasionally got caught up in jargon and Washington-speak but still delivered some detailed and decisive moments. Overall, veered between strong and effective, shrill and affronted.

Substance: Was unable to demonstrate substantive superiority on the issues — something she did regularly in the earliest debates. Still, unfurled some solid, comprehensive answers — for instance on health care — when given an opportunity.
Grade: B

Style: Gracefully handled the inexplicable decision of the moderators to begin the debate with two questions challenging her on matters of political process. Then bristled when confronted on NAFTA. Awkwardly referenced last weekend's Saturday Night Live sketch which mocked the apparent overt media favoritism toward Obama — cute on the stump, but it was inappropriate in this forum. Was too hot on trade and health care, evincing further irritation. Still, undaunted 'til the last minute.
Grade: C+

Offense: Launched flabby, vague attacks that neither pinned down nor ruffled Obama.
Grade: C+

Defense: Did not present a clean response when challenged on health care or trade. Acted defensive, and at times off-kilter, when challenged by the moderators and Obama.
Grade: C

By Mark Halperin

More Stories

Grading the Dems' Texas Debate

Overall Clinton did better than Obama. But, says Mark Halperin, his lead made it imperative that she have a game-changing performance, and she failed in that respect

Dems Debate: Clinton and Obama's No-Friction Debate

The tone was upbeat, the sparks few in the last Democratic encounter before Super Tuesday. Mark Halperin reviews both performances

Jan. 30 GOP Debate: McCain Keeps Momentum

As a testament to his suddenly strong position in the battle for the GOP nomination, says Mark Halperin, the Senator showed off all of his worst traits -- and still easily beat back Mitt Romney's desperate efforts to knock him off his perch

The Jan. 24 GOP Debate

Mitt has a moment -- just when he needed one. But for the rest of the field, it was a snooze-fest of missed opportunities

Dems Debate: Hand-to-Hand Combat

Analysis: Any dreams of a Clinton-Obama ticket were probably ended after their testiest encounter yet. Mark Halperin gives Obama the edge

The Republicans Go At Each Other

John McCain acted the confident frontrunner, Mike Huckabee was the regular guy, and Fred Thompson played attack dog. Mark Halperin scores the South Carolina debate