Sounding Board Meets, Eats and Talks Debate
October 9th, 2008 by Steven GardnerOn Tuesday night members of the Kitsap Sun Sounding Board, a collection of locals who agreed to take part in our election coverage, got together for pizza and soda and some time to meet each other. And there was a debate.
We didn’t hold high expectations for major developments out of the meeting, just a chance for us to all know each other a little better. Maybe we’d understand each other too. For all the high-voltage stuff that gets distributed behind anonymity on the Internet, there is an equal amount of depth we get to see when we manage to interact with each other in person. Sure, even in person we can resort to sound bites, but Tuesday night’s event was refreshing.
Before the debate there was lots of conversation going back and forth. I didn’t hear a lot of it, but they apparently got into some depth.
It seemed to be a pretty even mix in the room, maybe more left-leaning than right. That’s a contrast to our earlier experiences with the live blogging.
David Nelson, local news editor, asked those attending what they got that was new, what struck them in the 90-minute exchange between the two senators who would be president, John McCain and Barack Obama.
Heather McClellan said she most noticed McCain’s last statement by McCain, one in which he recognized the sacrifices made by those in military service. “I know what it’s like to put country first,” she said.
Nikky Southerland pointed out the candidates’ differences on health care. McCain said it was a responsibility for government. Obama said it should be a right for individuals.
Jeff Kehring drew out McCain’s call for the Secretary of Treasury having the right to help homeowners renegotiate their mortgages. He also wondered whether Obama would be strong enough to kick against Democrats. “I can see him taking on Republicans,” Kehring said. “I don’t know if he’s strong enough to take on his own party.”
Susanne Hughes again criticized McCain for picking Sarah Palin as his running mate. Hughes was quoted in one of our stories saying she had been willing to consider McCain after her first choice, Hillary Clinton, lost. But Palin was the deal breaker. “She is absolutely in over her head,” Hughes said Tuesday. She cited McCain’s melanoma as reasons Palin is closer to becoming president than Biden.
Fran Lawrence sided with Hughes on the Palin pick. “I want somebody smarter than me and my buddies” as vice president, she said. Lawrence described herself as a social conservative and said McCain’s character has disappointed her. Overall her support for Obama has to do with her three children. She favors Obama’s “temperate and thoughtful” demeanor. “If my sons go to war I want to know there has been a lot of thought that went into it,” she said.
Colleen Smidt pointed out McCain’s answer on Israel as one of his strengths. McCain was decisive, Smidt said. That was a point Jeff Kreifels referred to as well. To them, Obama’s decision to first talk about prevention in a question about what to do should Israel be attacked seemed an avoidance.
Kreifels also referred to Obama’s failure to answer how Obama would have parents punished for not insuring their kids. Jane Rebelowski said it would be like parents who don’t get their kids educated. But it was not something that could be answered in our room, especially because it hadn’t been answered on stage.
My question was about whether a meeting like this would have been easier or tougher four years ago, during the Bush-Kerry contest. Most seemed to agree with me, that this election doesn’t seem to be as emotionally charged as the last one. Kreifels said he thinks it might be moreso, drawing attention to those who instantly pounce on opinions from others. I conceded that in the case of our Web site, that is true. We didn’t have story and blog comments four years ago, and from my memory that’s probably a good thing.
That said, overall I think this election is less extreme than the last one. Then again, I was covering Bainbridge Island in 2004.



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