The way the pundits were jumping up and down hailing a historic night in British politics, you'd think nobody had ever seen Nick Clegg, David Cameron and Gordon Brown on TV before. This, we were told, could be a historic 90 minutes that would transform our nation's political discourse. "The leaders' debate will be a direct confrontation with the voters that could change the election", according to a man wearing glasses in The Times.
ITV's rapid-reaction poll straight after the programme gave victory to Clegg (pictured right) by an impressive margin, with Dave second and Gordo, the antidote to television, trailing in last. Clegg is in the advantageous position of being able to make trouble by merely running around in the enemy's penalty area and sticking his tongue out (although the post-match vote-ometer registered an instant decline when Cleggy rashly hinted at the possibility of cuts in public services), but his refrain of "Vote for us and dump the two old parties who've been useless for decades" does have an unmistakeable allure.- More leaders' debates on 22 and 29 April

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