LIVE VIDEO: Watch Final and Third Presidential Debate
President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney meet for their third of three debates in Boca Raton, Florida, the biggest swing state prize with 29 electoral votes. The first debate gave Romney a much-needed boost after his widely applauded performance — and Obama’s derided one — in the first debate. The second matchup was considered more of a draw, with Obama edging Romney in several polls of debate-watchers.
#Horsesandbayonets is now trending on Twitter. Is this going to be the viral moment from the final debate?
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I wish I had a map of all the countries name dropped tonight. I believe our largest trading partner has not been mentioned "Canada"—
Joe St. George (@JoeStGeorge) October 23, 2012
@CBS6 Obama is killing this one—
(@JamesLoving) October 23, 2012
@CBS6 Romney TOTALLY dodged the "drones" question. It's because he doesn't know what a "drone" is.—
Metal Mixtress® ★ ☠ (@_Metal_Mixtress) October 23, 2012
40 minutes left and folks we have a lot of the world to cover. A serious Chinese currency discussion is needed—
Joe St. George (@JoeStGeorge) October 23, 2012
CNN voter Focus Group gave both Romney and Obama high marks on Iran/Israel answer. #CNNDebate—
Sam Feist (@SamFeistCNN) October 23, 2012
Amazing to see the difference in Romney's confidence in talking about education and the economy as opposed to foreign policy.—
Joe St. George (@JoeStGeorge) October 23, 2012
This just happened: Bob Schieffer, the moderator: Let’s get back to foreign policy. Romney: I’m proud of my education record (when governor of Massachusetts).
Women in the CNN voter focus group loved Obama's turn to eductation. Men, not so much. #CNNUndecideds #CNNDebate—
Sam Feist (@SamFeistCNN) October 23, 2012
Here is the CNN focus group during the debate. Always wondered what those little dials looked like in action. 
These are the five things that CNN said to watch for in the live debate:
1. How much does Romney know about Libya?
2. Drones put Obama at odds with his liberal base
3. The other stuff
4. The art of the pivot
5. Will there be fireworks?
Will South American issues come up? Hugo Chavez? Lets not forget about that continent—
Joe St. George (@JoeStGeorge) October 23, 2012
Obama with the first effective punch of the night referencing Romney's past statement on Russia—
Joe St. George (@JoeStGeorge) October 23, 2012
Romney name drops Mali early on. He has more pressure tonight because he has to prove hes a foreign policy leader, Obama has been one for four years.
This will be the President's view of the Gov tonight. #LynnDebate #RomneyRyan2012 http://t.co/QxPpOYim—
Mitt's Body Man (@dgjackson) October 22, 2012
Former New Hampshire governor John Sununu was in the CBS 6 studio live via satellite today. He spoke with Bill Fitzgerald about tonight’s final presidential debate.
Tonight’s debate is focused on foreign policy, and Sununu says that Romney will work with allies to ensure peace with aggressive nations.