podesta-emails

podesta_email_21317.txt

podesta-emails 4,096 words email
P17 P22 V11 V9 V16
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*Main topics: *McLobbyists, McBush, McCain downplays historical significance of Obama's nomination, McBoring *Summary of Shift:* Now that the democratic primary process appears concluded news programs kept the focus on the upcoming battle for the White House between Obama and McCain. Fox News Channel expressed their utter disdain for Keith Olbermann, claiming he is an activist rather than a journalist as news spreads that he will take the top spot at NBC. United Airlines made significant cuts, citing fuel costs. Zimbabwe police detained the opposition contender for president weeks before the election, citing his plans to attend an 'unauthorized meeting.' Bush traveled to Israel for a meeting with Ehud Olmert. Highlights: 1) McCain tells Chris Wallace the people who run his campaign are not lobbyists 2) McCain doesn't see it fit to mention that Obama is the first person of color to receive nomination from major party 3) McCain attempts to distance himself from Bush a. CNN points out that McCain has voted with Bush 'a lot' b. Bush loyalist wants McCain to ratchet down the prez 'dissing' c. Despite Bush ties, Americans trust McCain, Russert asserts d. Ford Jr. points out McCain's 95% record of voting with Bush 4) Comparison between McCain and Obama's speeches a. McCain attempts to hijack the 'change' message b. McCain's attacks on Obama are low blows, pundit claims c. Fox News: if this race were for America's Top President, Obama would win d. Jindal: Obama's got style, McCain's got substance 5) McCain surrogates point out Obama's weaknesses and their candidates' strengths a. Pfotenhauer: McCan's record trumps Obama's b. Charlie Crist: McCain represents the right kind of change Clips: Highlight #1 *Sen. McCain: 'They Are Not Lobbyists'* (FNC 06/03/08 CHRIS WALLACE: […] almost as soon as you finished, Major Garret spoke to the chief strategist for the Obama campaign, David Axelrod. Major mentioned your speech and he said, 'Well, look—forget this talk about Bush-McCain three, the fact of the matter is that McCain will continue the President's policies on taxes, on Iraq.' *I mean, as a matter of fact, you do support the president's policies in both those areas don't you?* JOHN MCCAIN: Well, I believe we shouldn't subject the American people to a huge tax increase, which would be the case in not making the tax cuts permanent but as far as Iraq is concerned obviously Senator Obama doesn't understand it, but maybe his spokesperson doesn't either. I fought strongly against the failed policy that unfortunately and tragically was employed for nearly four years and I advocated the strategy that would succeed. It's succeeding. Senator Obama wanted to have a withdrawal, which would have then, I believe led to increased chaos and increased Iranian influence and genocide, which would have caused us to have to return. *So there's—there are very clear differences there, but more importantly the strategy that I fought for that we're now employing is succeeding in Iraq and the benefits are enormous not just in Iraq but in the region as well.* I think the American people will make a clear judgment on that and, for Senator Obama to vote to cut off funding to those troops in the field is—I'm sorry for filibustering you, my friend. WALLACE: Well, you're a senator. Let me ask you one last question. David Axelrod said you talk in a speech today about changing the way Washington does business, but your campaign is run by two of the biggest lobbyists in Washington. How do you respond to that? *MCCAIN: I—look, th-th-those—they are not lobbyists*, but the fact is Americans care about my vision and plan of action for the future that I can unite the country, that I can take on the challenges that are facing them now, which are enormous and that's what elections are gonna be about and I'll look forward to a great debate, a great debate across this country between myself and Senator Obama. He has a very, very liberal, down-the-line democrat voting record. I have a record of working with all Americans to bring this nation back to its future greatness and I believe we will. WALLACE: Senator McCain, I know you're a big fight fan. I guess it's time to say, 'Let's get ready to rumble.' Thank you so much, sir. MCCAIN: I look forward to it, it will be respectful and I congratulate Senator Obama and I appreciate Senator Highlight #2 *McCain is Unapologetic about Critical Omission* (ABC 06/04/08 7:16am) RON CLAYBORN: Senator, Barack Obama is now the presumptive democratic nominee. What changes now? JOHN MCCAIN: Well, I think this marks a period where we—the American people will start deciding. I do think you have to give credit to Senator Obama for running a very effective and—a campaign that has attracted a lot of people to his support and I think he deserves credit for that. […] CLAYBORN: Something like 30% of Clinton supporters say they're inclined to vote for you. Why would democrats who supported a liberal democrat—why should they vote for a conservative republican? MCCAIN: They respect the fact that I've reached across the aisle to democrats. […] CLAYBORN: Sometimes, Senator I get the impression that you regard Senator Obama almost as if he's a AAA pitcher asking to get into the seventh game of the world series. That he's not ready. MCCAIN: No, no. He is the nominee of the party. I respect him, but I respectfully disagree and it's about who's gonna—most qualified to lead this country. CLAYBORN: You did not refer to what—for many Americans, certainly African-Americans—is a historic moment in the history of this country; an African-American will be the nominee of a major party. MCCAIN: Yes and I congratulated Senator Obama—not because of any reason except that he is run [sic] a very effective campaign and he's done a very admirable job and as I said he's motivated lots of Americans to be involved in the political process. Highlight #3 *CNN: 'McCain has Voted with George Bush … a Lot of Times'* (CNN 06/03/08 7:04am) JOE JOHNS: So McCain wants to position himself as the real agent of change in this election. *He also distanced himself from President Bush saying that he, McCain is the type of person who essentially has been a Maverick in the U.S. Senate for years with a lot of independent ideas.* He wants to explain to the American people that in his view he's the agent of change, not Barack Obama. Back to you … KYRA PHILLIPS: […] The tone of these speeches last night. The tone of Barack Obama's – it was very gracious, it was talking about moving forward, it was very patriotic. It talked a lot about love and compassion and hope for the future. And then *the talk about John McCain, his mannerisms, it wasn't as confident . He was taking a lot of stabs.* The complete opposite of what Barack Obama was trying to do. What's your sense of how those speeches played out? JOHNS: […] McCain wanted to make a point. He wanted to contrast himself with Barack Obama. And say there are a lot of clear differences here. One of the things he really talked about and got a lot of attention for, I think, was the notion that Barack Obama has been going around the country again and again and again in speeches comparing McCain to George Bush. And McCain basically said that is a very unfair comparison. He's trying to make it look like - 'Hey I'm different from George Bush in a variety of different ways.' However, the facts speak for themselves, McCain has voted with George Bush in the United States a lot of times. *Former Cheney Adviser Wants McCain to Avoid 'Dissing This President'* (CNN 06/04/08 7:25am) MARY MADELINE: We've long been running—the party has long been understanding that Senator Obama's gonna be the opposition. He gave a great speech last night. I think Senator McCain did a much better job framing up the fall; framing up what his key rationale is going to be, which is change is certain—progress is not. You can have the kind of change that Senator Obama's proposing, which is backwards and potentially cataclysmic or you can have catalytic and forward-looking change and John McCain has a record to run on; he has a record of reform. […] Senator Obama as always gave a spectacular oration. JOHN ROBERTS: Were you happy with his speech last night? Leslie Sanchez, one of our panelists, republican strategist said that that speech was like a bingo game at an AARP conference. MADELIN: [laughs] Well, you know—being able to give a good speech is not as important to conservatives as what's in the speech. How you say it is less important than what you're saying and he said some very good things, which is: big government is not the answer. […] *On the other hand there were some things that I think [McCain] needs to ratchet back and I don't say this just as an admirer and respecter of the Bush presidency, but—we get it.* He's his own man and you just gotta walk a fine line on being your own man and distinguishing yourself from this candidacy—this presidency without dissing this president. […] ROBERTS: Barack Obama, Mary has seemed to have done well enough in trying to define John McCain that John McCain saw fit to mention this idea of a third Bush term last night. Does Senator Obama have Senator McCain on the defensive? *MADELIN: Uh, you know, Senator McCain got—needs to get in front of it, but as I just said, distinguishing himself, which he would need to do, in any event, just like George Herbert Walker Bush needed to distinguish himself from Ronald Reagan is a different task than dissing this president. So you've got two guys out there sort of quasi-dissing, dissing President Bush and you know what? Even democrats are in Bush-bashing fatigue.* […] *Despite Bush Ties American's Still Trust McCain* (MSNBC 06/04/08 08:20am) JOE SCARBOROUGH: Obama's speech last night was tough but it was fair. […] McCain's was mean. […] He said what *[Obama] said about me is false, he keeps repeating it because it's the only way you can get a lie to be believed.* […] [Clip of McCain] MCCAIN: Pundits and party elders have declared that Senator Obama will be my opponent, and he will be a formidable one. But I'm ready for the challenge and am determined to run this race in away that does credit to our campaign and the proud decent and patriotic people that I ask to lead. SCARBOUROUGH: Do you sense that this campaign might turn pretty harsh on the republican side fairly soon. TIM RUSSERT: Well the first thing that was obvious was the stark contrast in the Obama presentation versus the McCain presentation. […] John McCain's strength is town hall and engaging people as opposed to giving a speech. […] *McCain tried to do two things last night. One was to seize the McCain of 2000, the maverick, I am independent. He broke with Bush last night on the management of the war, on energy, on a whole variety of issues*. And then third, and this is where he differs from Clinton, Clinton said I'm experienced Obama's not, McCain is saying, yes I have experience but I also have judgment and he doesn't have judgment. And that is where the war in Iraq comes in. Obama is going to counter saying, *my judgment was no war, yours was war.* […] SCARBOROUGH: But you go inside the polls and *American's trust John McCain by double digits on Iraq more than Barack Obama. […]* RUSSERT: Because they know it's not simple, they know it's difficult and complicated. And *they view John McCain as having more experience, more depth on this issue*. What Obama has to do is cast it very much along the lines of I'm tired of the war, I'm tired of gas prices, tired of the economy, tired of George Bush, time for a change. […] He has to make certain the American people see him as someone who can sit in that oval office and make the tough decisions. […] McCain is going to do everything he can to prevent that. […] *McCain Can't Seem to Escape his Ties to Bush *(MSNBC 06/04/08 08:41am) HAROLD FORD JR.: As much as the war is important and as much as John McCain has invited him to Iraq, He is inviting John McCain to visit cities in Pennsylvania, in Michigan, Ohio, in Minnesota. To help him understand gas prices, food prices, how schools are failing and hospitals are not working. […] If you are John McCain you are far more worried than Barack Obama. […] The MVP in this race thus far has been a fella named George W. Bush and his policies. As much as John McCain may try to run from the third term of George Bush, understand he has voted with him 95% of the time. […] Highlight #4 *An Election for Change *(MSNBC 06/04/08 9:47am) MEGYN KELLY: There is one thing that Barack Obama and John McCain seem to agree on. This election is shaping up to be all about change. But of course the two differ on who they think would be best to bring about that change. [Clip of McCain] JOHN MCCAIN: The choice is between the right change and the wrong change. Change what must be changed. Changed, Changes change. KELLY: Yea, *McCain actually said the word change 33 times in his speech *before a crowd of about a thousand supporters in New Orleans. […] Obama didn't seem to think his opponents use of the word change very fitting. [Clip of Obama] BARACK OBAMA: *There are many words to describe John McCain's attempt to pass of his embrace of Bush policies as bipartisan and new but change is not one of them. * [Iraq vs. Iran visual] [Economy visual] […] SUSAN PAGE: […] If the vote is about whether Americans want to stay in Iraq that's a contest that Barack Obama probably wins. *Hard task for John McCain, #1 people are wary of the War, #2 it really ties him to George bush, […] he's trying to distance himself from the republican party he's about to lead and the president in the white house right now.* […] KELLY: Obama has been making the third bush term comparison for quit some time now. PAGE: […] *I think we've never had a case in modern history where the candidate of the party in power, the party that holds the Whitehouse, has been able to break that tie, with the guy who's in the Whitehouse.* […] *Obama Uses More Favorable Respectful Tone Than McCain *(CNN 06/04/08 06:38am) KYRA PHILLIPS: […] just a few minutes ago we were listening to Obama's speech and all of us reacted to the one line he said, talking about John McCain, *"I respect his many accomplishments even if he chooses to deny mine", and all of us reacted*. John? JOHN AVLON: Well I think, as Teddy Roosevelt once said, decency is the most practical form of politics. I think Barack Obama has seen that. *You'll see whenever he does a policy contrast with McCain he praises his service first, and I think that graciousness has served him well*. He deserves a lot more credit than he's getting for staying out of the gutter in politics throughout this whole primary process to his great credit. LESLIE SANCHEZ: I think to some extent that is going to be overplayed in that statement. I think he is going to be someone who is subject to a lot of criticism more now on his policies. And I think Hillary Clinton really laid the groundwork in terms of inexperience. And when we are talking about generational differences between the two, he has to be gracious to the more senior statesman. I think it would behoove Senator McCain to sound the same way back to him. PHILLIPS: Well has John McCain been too disrespectful to Barack Obama? LIZ CHADDERDON: I don't know about disrespectful but I did see a stark contrast in their speeches last night. Where *John McCain in some ways made it personal*. It was very much, Barack Obama he's not really the change candidate. Barack Obama actually never sort of called John McCain out on specific things. He has a record of accomplishment and I respect that record of accomplishment but he's not the right person to lead America. I just felt the tone was completely different and I think Obama's tone is what America is really looking for. […] *JULIAN EPSTEIN: McCain's little dig was petulant. It was personal, it was low road. […] Obama has understood that he needs to stay on the high road. This has served him very well.* […] Independent voters will like that, a lot of American's will like that. *Politico's Mike Allen Calls McCain's Attack 'Bitingly Sarcastic'* (FNC 06/04/08 6:19am) BRIAN KILMEADE: We saw John McCain in New Orleans make a speech. We saw Barack Obama make a speech. They both referred to each other, it's clear McCain says Hillary voter's, I'd like you on my side. MIKE ALLEN: And Brian this is showtime, pay per view. He mentioned Senator Obama 20 times and was bitingly sarcastic when he referred to him as "this young man who bought into a lot of bad ideas" […] KILMEADE: Well the big picture is clear, the Reagan Democrats, the Democrats who went to Reagan, well McCain wants those Democrats, the Hillary Democrats, to go to him […] And there's a lot of Hillary Supporters who are angry enough to do that. *Rove and Kilmeade Agree: Obama is Superior Orator* (FNC 06/04/08 7:38am) BRIAN KILMEADE: Hey, Karl here's the issue. When I saw Barack Obama and most Americans did and we saw, a lot saw Senator John McCain. Barack Obama is one of the best in the country at speaking. Next to John McCain, who's content was there but the delivery certainly not the same. KARL ROVE: Yeah look, at a lot of high energy in the arena and Obama giving a good speech, he really is terrific in those kind of set piece speeches. McCain is not. McCain's good in Town Hall meetings, on his feet, spontaneous, good in debates, but Barack Obama can deliver a speech […] *Fox's Brian Kilmeade: McCain's Delivery Can't Approach Obama's* (FNC 06/04/08 8:11am) BRIAN KILMEADE: But here's what Barack Obama has going for him, side by side, John McCain's speech and Barack Obama's. Barack Obama's was just phenomenal, was well delivered, had a lot of emotion, it hit the right marks. It was how to give a speech. And John McCain has the same tone, his content maybe more but his delivery can't approach it. STEVE DOOCY: Well, I'll tell you Brian. If we're gonna elect an American Idol president he would win […] *Bobby Jindal: Obama is a Great Speaker but McCain is the Real Article *(CNN 06/04/08 08:24am) KYRA PHILLIPS: John McCain, what is next for him, how does he proceed from here? […] Everyone talking about Barack Obama making history. He sounded like Dr. Martin Luther King, he rallied up the crowds. And John McCain on the other hand, critics saying, wow what a deflated speech. BOBBY JINDAL: […] Well certainly lets give Senator Obama his due, he certainly speaks better than any elected official or politician I've ever heard. I think this is going to be a good election for America. You've got two candidates that represent change with very different policies, very different perspectives; there is a real choice for the voters. Senator Obama talks very very well about change, Senator McCain, the difference is he's actually spent his career delivering change. He's fought against earmarks, wasteful spending, he's fought to defend our country. Even when he had to stand-alone. […] Senator Obama clearly is a great speaker, we are entering into the phase of the election when voters ask where's the beef? What's the substance? Lets get beyond the speeches, let's look at the details. PHILLIPS: Everybody talking about how historic this is. […] It seems that the voters are speaking and saying that its time to change. Do you support that? JINDALL: I think a lot is made about identity politics. The reality is, when we elect the president of the United States it's certainly great that we have all these different candidates with these great biographies. […] But I think voters at the end of the day vote for the candidate they think has the best experience, the best qualifications, the best ideas, who they feel will do the best job of leading our country forward. […] [Clip of Obama] BARACK OBAMA: John McCain has spent a lot of time talking about trips to Iraq. Maybe if he spent some time taking trips to the cities and towns that have been hardest hit by this economy, he'd understand the kind of change people are looking for. […] Highlight #5 *Pfotenhauer Sounds off on Obama's Weaknesses *(FNC 06/04/08 10:14am) JOHN GIBSON: Tell me about how he defines the differences between himself and Barack Obama. NANCY PHOETENHAUR: Well I think it comes down to who's all talk and who's got the action to back it up. *I mean Senator McCain has proven through his record he's compiled that he truly is an agent of change. Whether you look at energy and the environment, spending and the surge, tobacco and torture, campaign finance reform, immigration, we all know that he is the one that has proven that he will put the national interest ahead of the interests of any party, any president, even his own political interest.* Contrast that with Obama. Senator Obama when he was in Illinois, if anything kind of developed a profile of ducking on critical issues rather than dealing with them, voted present more than 100 times, and since he's come to the US Senate rather than reach across the aisle and forge solutions that are based on bipartisan support for America, he's compiled one of the most liberal voting records there is. GIBSON: Will it be the McCain effort to paint Obama as an elitist, across the board? PHOETENHAUR: Well I think he does a rather good job at that himself. A lot of it comes across in his tone and manner as much as anything else. But also the presumption that he knows best. You know, one of the arenas that this has been to his detriment is in the foreign policy arena, where his lack of knowledge has been on display, his lack of judgment has been on display. And it's raised real questions about whether he is qualified to be Commander in Chief, not just among Republicans but among Democrats and independents […] I think its been pretty clear [Obama's] been a media favorite, if you will. And so he just hasn't been knocked around as much. *Crist Enumerates Right and Wrong Change* (FNC 06/04/08 7:49am) STEVE DOOCY: What does that mean, "the choice between the right change and the wrong change"? CHARLIE CRIST: Well I think it's been pretty clear that Senator McCain wants to lower taxes, the tax burden on the American people, he wants to take care of climate change, he wants to do things that continue to reform the way things happen in Washington. He's been a reformer his entire career. And I think clearly he's the kind of individual who represents change that the people will want rather than change that they don't know […] -- Jacob Roberts Media Analyst PMUSA (c) 208.420.3470 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the "big campaign" group. To post to this group, send to [email protected] To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected] E-mail [email protected] with questions or concerns This is a list of individuals. It is not affiliated with any group or organization. -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
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