With five words, Candy Crowley placed herself at the center of Tuesdayâs presidential debateâunderscoring her determination to restrain the candidates.
It was no surprise to anyone who has followed the CNN anchorâs blunt-spoken style that she would try to set the record straight. But it landed her in a cauldron of controversy at the face-off at Hofstra University.
The debate âdidnât faze me as much as everyone seemed to think it did,â Crowley told me Wednesday morning.
As for Republicans who ripped her as unfair, an obviously tired Crowley said, âIâm sorry theyâre upset, but tomorrow theyâll be upset about something else, as will the Democrats.â
Despite the town-hall format, Crowleyâthe second female moderator of a presidential debateâhad signaled for days that she would inject herself forcefully into the debate between President Obama and Mitt Romney. And that she did.
When Romney was mounting an attack on the president for the administrationâs shifting explanations of the attack of American diplomats in Libya, he hit a nerve.
âFor fourteen days he refused to call it an act of terror,â Romney said.
Obama objected, telling Romney to check the transcript. At that point, Crowley attempted a rare feat during a presidential debate: fact-checking in real time. âHe did in fact, sir,â Crowley told Romney referring to the presidentâs initial description of the assault on the U.S. Consulate.

Crowley told me she tried to clear up the question of how Obama had originally characterized the attack because âI was trying to move the conversation along. They got stuck on this.â
The Libyan moment was hardly the only time they tangled. After each audience question, she peppered both candidates with queries of her own, pressing them to be more specific. And she raised her voice with both Obama and Romney, refusing to be trampled when they wanted to keep talking and she wanted to move on. Crowley was unfailingly polite but firm, and at times held back while the two candidates circled and interrupted each other.
âThere was a territorial imperative thing going on,â Crowley says. âBut I didnât feel the tension that everyone else seemed to feel.â
Republicans in the spin room and on Twitter and Facebook assailed Crowley as unfair in the face of network polls showing a narrow Obama victory.
Former New Hampshire governor John Sununu told reporters, âBoth the moderator and the president were dead wrong on the Libya question.â He added, âCandy was wrong. Candy had no business doing that ⌠I think Candy Crowley decided she wanted to be an active part of the debate.â
Crowley gave her detractors an opening by allowing Obama to speak more than three minutes longer than his opponent.
Democrats, however, spoke favorably of Crowley. âGovernor Romney was fact-checked by the moderator,â said Obama senior strategist David Axelrod.
Crowley hardly let the president off the hook, asking him about the long-term unemployed: âAre we looking at the new normal?â
As the debate barreled along, Crowley offered such admonitions as âGovernor Romney, can you make it short?â and âI want to move you both along.â Crowley says her main goal in trying to rein in the combatants was to allow more questions from the undecided voters in the audience.
There was a pregame flap about a memorandum of understanding between the campaigns saying âthe moderator will not ask follow-up questions or comment on either the questions asked by the audience or the answers of the candidates.â But Crowley never saw the memo and made clear she did not feel bound by it.
In an earlier interview with The Daily Beast, Crowley said her job was to âmistrustâ politicians, which may explain the skeptical edge to many of her questions.
Reflecting on the debate after just a few hoursâ sleep, Crowley says she gave no thought of being the first woman in 20 years to moderate a presidential debate. âOnce youâre out there, it doesnât really matter.â