President Barrack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney faced each other in the last and final presidential debate before voters head to the polls in November.The debate, however, did not possess the same temperament as the previous two. Surprisingly, the debate was dull at worst and tame at best. At least that's what Fox News' Bill O'Reilly says.
In an interview on the network's morning program, O'Reilly declared "It was boring, so boring. It was the most boring debate I've ever seen...I think the American people were the real losers...we didn't get anything out of that."
When asked if the debate was decisive, he said "no! Romney did not win the debate," so then was Obama the winner was naturally the follow-up, to which O'Reilly answered quite succinctly "no," as on Fox News.
Romney, according to O'Reilly was trying to gain popularity with women voters, "women don't like confrontation," which is why he came across as timid.
The winner of last night's debate might not be as apparent as the first, in which Romney was declared the unanimous victor or the second which was handed to Obama. Various polls reveal President Obama as the winner.
Regardless of the winner, most of the media and audience agree that the final debate was neither as exciting nor informative than the previous two. Forbes.com says the real winner of the debates were the Giants. Frank Hagler of PolicyMic calls it "disappointing."
According to the CNN/ORC poll, 48 percent of the viewers (all of whom are registered voters) said Obama won last night's debate, while 40 percent thought Romney won.
A poll by Public Policy Polling also declares Obama the winner. According to this poll, 51 percent of the watchers thought Obama did a superior job, while 47 percent thought it was Romney.
An online poll by CNBC listed 63 percent of the voters saying Obama won and 33 percent calling Romney the winner. In a CBS poll showed that 23 percent thought Romney did a better job than Obama, while 53 percent thought the opposite.
The debate was moderated by CBS' Bob Schieffer and the topic of debate was foreign policy.
Watch Interview with O'Reilly here: