Guest and reporter at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Greg Bluestein echoed Scarborough’s analysis. “Even Democrats were saying they were surprised Herschel Walker held his own,” Bluestein said. “He handled himself, he didn't, you know, collapse on the debate stage, in a sense.”
“Herschel Walker had to basically show his campaign wasn't on the verge of collapse, and also give reason for some of these Republicans to back him and his allies, along with Democrats feel like, you know, he did that,” Bluestein continued. (In fairness, Bluestein wrote a comprehensive account of the second debate for the Journal-Constitution.)
Scarborough discussed Walker’s absence from the second debate, but it was largely to criticize Warnock’s initial performance. “He didn't seem to really find his footing until Walker wasn't there last night,” Scarborough said.
Other coverage of the first debate was less egregiously soft on Walker, but often still reverted to manufacturing false equivalencies between the two candidates or otherwise giving Walker a pass. The Washington Post headline read that the two “clash[ed]” over “abortion, trustworthiness.” In the article’s copy, the Post reported that “the candidates accus[ed] each other of being untrustworthy.” Like other outlets, the Post wrote that “Walker’s team sounded pleased with his performance on the stage.”
Politico’s headline about the first debate claimed that Walker had “soften[ed his] stance on abortion.”
In fact, Walker is an anti-abortion extremist and any rhetorical backpeddling – or moving to the center, in D.C. parlance – should be treated with extreme skepticism.
Much of the coverage of the first debate was dominated by a moment when Walker blatantly misrepresented himself as an official law enforcement agent, using a prop badge as evidence. The Wall Street Journal called it an “odd moment,” when it was something closer to overtly lying and impersonating an officer.