It’s Debate Day, and both candidates must be relieved to know that they woke up to that thought for very the last time this morning.
President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney will face off tonight from the campus of Lynn University in Boca Raton, Florida in the third and final presidential debate, which is to focus exclusively on foreign policy.
The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows the candidates locked in a dead heat, both with 47% among likely voters. Among the wider pool of all registered voters, however, Obama is up by five points, 49% to 44%.
Still with the draw among likely voters and with the debate victory score at 1-1, this last debate will be a crucial tie-breaker and an important boost for whoever takes it heading into the last two weeks before the election.
For Romney, it will be a chance to redeem himself for his misfire on Libya at last week’s debate, when he wrongfully accused the president of waiting two weeks before calling the attack in Benghazi an act of terror. Obama in fact said that “No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation,” from the Rose Garden the day after the attack. We can expect Romney to reboot and reload his criticism toward Obama’s policies on Iran, Israel, Syria, China, Afghanistan, and Russia.









