Today, undecided voters await anxiously for the final Presidential Debate as President Barack Obama and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney discuss foreign policy beginning at 6 p.m., Oct. 22. The purpose of the debate is to inform undecided voters which candidate has a clearer plan for the nation.
In the Oct. 3 debate, Governor Romney came out as the aggressor, while President Obama almost seemed absent. However, in the vice presidential debate, Joe Biden came out as the aggressor in the Oct. 11 and Obama was the aggressor in the Oct. 16 Presidential Debate.
Often political commentators and news programs declare the aggressor as the victor which sometimes is true. However, aggressiveness does not always convince the undecided voters one way or the other. They, like the rest of the American public, aren?t looking for partisan based or personal attacks. The undecided voters are looking for solutions to the problems that face the United States.
The undecided electorate could care less which candidate yells louder or smirks more; they want to see a clearly outlined plan. Before the first debate, President Obama was leading in most national polls, yet as of the first debate, Governor Romney has received a much needed surge. In the Oct. 17 unemployment rate has both increased and decreased in Obama?s term, it has finally reached 7.8 percent, which is still far from his promise of 5.4 percent