podesta-emails

[big campaign] Media Monitoring Report - Sunday 06/08/08

podesta-emails 4,174 words email
P22 P17 V11 P19 D4
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*Main Topics:* McBush, McBoring *Summary of Shift:* Political coverage naturally centered around the general election. Several times pundits specifically identified McCain's 95% voting record with Bush. Lindsey Graham's and John Kerry's debate on ABC received additional air time when Wolf Blitzer played McBush highlights from it on the "In Case You Missed It" segment of his show, *Late Edition*. McCain's unremarkable performance during his speech from last Tuesday continued to receive critics' scorn. Middle East politics were also central to today's political coverage. Highlights: 1) McBush a. John Kerry declares that McCain will present no change from Bush b. Colby King highlights McCain's McBush voting record c. Robert Casey points to the infamous 95% d. On foreign policy McCain offers more of the same e. Rangel: America should not vote for more of Bush's policies 2) Jake Tapper on *Reliable Sources* points to the problems McCain had with his Tuesday night speech [No Clip] 3) MSNBC reports on McCain's 3 fundraisers tomorrow in Washington, DC [No Clip] 4) MSNBC Reports that both candidates take an uncommon break today with no events scheduled. [No Clip] 5) CNN's Wolf Blitzer interviewed Pakistan's New Ambassador to the US, Husain Haqqani [No Clip] 6) Nationwide gas average surpasses $4/gal [no clip] Clips w/ Labels and Transcriptions: *Highlight #1* *Kerry and Graham Go Toe-to-Toe on McCain's Similarity to Bush* (ABC 06/09/08 10:19am) [Holtz-Eakin on Bloomberg television.] DOUGLAS HOLTZ-EAKIN: The only think that [McCain] shares in common with President Bush is the understanding of good tax policy. It seems that's all President Bush understood on the economy. GEORGE STEPHANOPOLOUS: […] Setting aside climate change, which we've heard about, how will Senator McCain be different from President Bush on the economy in a way that makes a difference? *LINDSEY GRAHAM: Well, I think the main thing is that he's gonna be different than Senator Obama because those are your two choices.* I mean this is not the Wharton Business School the London School of Economics. You've got a liberal and Senator Obama who will repeal the Bush tax cuts that expire in 2011. The capital gains rates will go up. Dividend tax reductions will go down. The marginal rates will all go up. John [McCain] will say, 'Keep the tax rates in place.' He will be talking about energy independence. One way to help our economy is stop sending $450 billion overseas. With oil prices this high, look for oil and gas in our backyard, find alternative energies to get away from fossil fuel consumption and, at the end of the day, stop spending. […] *President Bush's biggest failure is not vetoing pork-barrel spending. That is one of the big disappointments of President Bush.* One of the big differences between Senator Obama, President Bush and anybody else in Washington is that John McCain is gawn bring a sense of fiscal discipline and energy to controlling spending you haven't seen in a while. JOHN KERRY: Well, if the wish were the father to the fact, Lindsey Graham would be a happy person right now but that's always offered is a wish. *The fact is that John McCain voted 95% of the time with George Bush last year and 90% of the time with George Bush over the entire presidency. That's not a change. That's not reform. That's not a difference.* On the economy, it's profound for the American worker and people who are struggling today. Barack Obama wants to give every worker a thousand dollar reduction in their taxes so he's going to give a tax cut to the middle class and to people struggling to get into it. For people earning $50,000 or less who are retired, he's going to do no taxes for them and he's going to pay for all of this and be fiscally responsible by not continuing the irresponsible Bush tax cuts that this nation at the high level cannot afford, George. […] I mean, you know*, John McCain said himself that he doesn't know anything about the economy. He said he's going to have to have a vice president who knows something about the economy in order to help him on it and if you look at almost every issue: health care—John McCain doesn't have a policy to be able to try to reform health care and reduce costs. That is a business issue because businesses are drowning under the weight of health care costs and you have to have a comprehensive reform. Barack Obama has one. John McCain doesn't*. I could go down a long list. STEPHANOPOLOUS: […] You said the tax policy and the health care policy were essentially, Senator Graham*, John McCain is calling for an extension or maybe enhancement of the Bush policies. So that is—* *GRAHAM: Yeah. Absolutely. He wants to lower corporate tax rates*. We have the second highest corporate tax rate in the world; second only to Japan. John understands we live in a global economy. And this re— KERRY: Not the effective rate, Lindsey. GRAHAM: —redistributing wealth. KERRY: Not the effective rate. GRAHAM: Excuse me. There are good Americans under the Obama world who deserve a tax cut and there are bad Americans who don't need a tax cut. If you want to keep jobs in America, John Kerry, you need to cut taxes, control regulation and deal with litigation. If you want to get your kids out of debt, somebody needs to go to Washington and start vetoing these bills like the supplemental that had $75 billion of spending unrelated to the war, a cultural learning center. *John McCain has tried to be a champion of earmark reform*, finally people are catching up to him. Senator Obama hasn't shaken Washington very much at all when it comes to spending and he's got one message on taxes, repeal the tax cuts and let the good Americans have some and the bad Americans get nothing. KERRY: Well, you know, that's just not accurate on every level. First of all, *John McCain had an opportunity to be a reformer and to help people with respect to the economy by voting for a windfall profit on gas and oil and help the American worker. He declined to do that. He also had an opportunity, if you want to create jobs in America, to vote for an amendment that would have not rewarded companies that take jobs overseas. John McCain voted against stopping companies and taking away an incentive in our tax code where American taxpayers are actually paying to reward somebody to take a job overseas. John McCain refused to vote against that.* John McCain also refused to vote for a jobs tax credit that for companies that create jobs in the United States. On housing he recently gave a housing speech. He blamed the homeowner for the housing crisis. You know, he has a campaign filled with lobbyists […] but let me just finish this point. Some of whom were actually lobbying for the worst offenders of the predatory practices of the housing crisis. That's not reform. […] GRAHAM: Well, the whole idea about—this is going to be a good, honest debate to have. KERRY: True. GRAHAM: You have one candidate out there who is going to repeal tax cuts that helped millions of Americans. He's going to increase the marginal rates. We're trying to compete in a global economy. *You got another candidate out there who is not going to allow us to explore for energy here in America, John McCain would allow offshore explorations at the state' s consent.* You've got two different views of how to grow the economy in a global world. You got a high tax guy and you got a cut the tax guy and that will be a simple choice and I look forward to the debate. […] STEPHANOPOLOUS: Senator Kerry, what is the example of where senator Obama has stood up to the party orthodoxy, taken on his party in the interest of bipartisan reform? KERRY: He led the fight on ethics reform in the United States Senate and a lot of people fought back against that, believe me. He was not popular in the quarters of the senate. In fact, John McCain who has been in the senate for years never did that. I mean, it was waiting and in comes Barack Obama and he leads that fight and we have the strongest ethics reform that we've ever had in the senate. Barack Obama does not take money in his presidential campaign from political action committees or from lobbyists. *If john mccain is such a reformer, how did all these lobbyists start running his campaign? How do you have lobbyists who lobby for the Burma junta or for the predatory practitioners that brought us the housing crisis? These are the people running his campaign. He still has lobbyists running his campaign so it's just a world of difference between the perception. Much of the money that John McCain is raising today comes from all of these special kinds of interests that have fought against real reform in Washington*. When Lindsey says we have a high tax or low tax, we just pointed out Barack Obama has a tax cut for middle class Americans. He simply wants to make the tax code fair again and work for everything in a nation that can't afford to just give away, give away, give away all the money facing all the crisis […] GRAHAM: Well, Charlie Black helped run Ronald Reagan's campaign. He is not lobbying now. Rick Davis ran John [McCain]'s campaign in 2000. Mark Salter's his alter ego. Phil Gramm is a great friend. John McCain didn't borrow money from a guy going to jail to build his house. So if we're gonna start talking about associations that's fine. We'll do that […]. I can't tell you how many phone calls I got about the ethics vote. I got beat up—NOT! Nobody called me. I can tell you I got my brains beat out on immigration. I can tell you it was tough on campaign finance reform. I can tell you it was tough to go back to South Carolina and support general—excuse me, Senator McCain's efforts to reform interrogation policy. I can tell you that I've been in a lot of bipartisan fights with john McCain where the Republican Party really didn't like what john was doing and when it comes to senator Obama it's all talk. He's never done anything the left didn't want to hear whether Iraq policy or anything else and *John has been his own man for a long time and that's why he's going to win this election because he will put the country ahead of his own interests and that means sending more troops into Iraq when nobody else wanted to hear it because he thought it was the right thing. *That's why we're going to win, George. STEPHANOPOLOUS: Senator Kerry, one of the other points and senator graham hit on it is that on a lot of these bipartisan issues, Senator Obama just did take a walk, especially I've heard him talk about it many times they believe he did on immigration reform. [He] simply refused to stand up and take the tough vote and be part of a bipartisan process. KERRY: On the contrary, look, I give John McCain credit for those instances that get him out of the—you know, out of 95% voting with George Bush and 90% over the entire Bush presidency, but 90% has a profound impact on a lot of Americans. It deprives people of adequate health care, deprives us of the kind of training for jobs for people in transition because of work overseas. It deprives us of an opportunity to have fair trade practices where we're actually negotiating a trade agreement that has labor and environment standards in it so everybody is rising. I mean, *there are countless places where John McCain has just not been there and he's selected a few key things where he's made a difference and I applaud him for that, but being right 5% of the time doesn't excuse you for the 95% of the time where there's a problem* and the fact is that America faces an unbelievable crisis. I mean, you know, even on what Lindsey just talked about on Iraq and policy there*, John McCain has been the biggest cheerleader for an approach to foreign policy that has actually weakened America, made us less safe, created greater turmoil in our relations with more countries *and if you look at what's happened in the middle east, Israel is more fragile and threatened, Hamas is stronger, Hezbollah stronger, Iran is stronger, and *every country in the region believes we ought to be trying to deal with Syria and Iran and John McCain doesn't want to do it.* The line here is very clear. […] GRAHAM: Well, yeah, Senator Obama in my opinion is 100% calculating. The reason he wasn't in the gang of 14 is because John McCain and democrats and republicans avoided the senate blowing up in a historic way. It took a lot of guts to come out of the shadows and say let's don't blow up the senate, let's not destroy the judiciary. Senator Obama took 130 'present' votes in the general assembly in Illinois. There is a record among one candidate who has taken a beating for what he believes and the other candidate just talks. *When it comes to Iraq, John McCain went to Iraq early on and understood we had the wrong strategy, got into an argument and fight with Secretary Rumsfeld, asking for more troops.* If we listened to John early on, things would have been better quicker, but thank god we did listen to Senator McCain and not Senator Obama. By adding more troops, by creating the surge, *things are enormously better politically, militarily and economically in Iraq*. The biggest loser to the surge is al-Qaeda. Muslims have joined with us to take up arms against Bin Laden forces in Iraq. That's a wonderful day for the world and Iran is not going to dominate Iraq because we'll create a stable Iraq that can defend itself. The biggest loser has been Iran and Iraq. <http://www.box.net/shared/7e2dhkwm8g> *Panel Discusses McCain's Lack of Public Appeal and Bush Ties* (ABC 06/08/08 9:19am) CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER: [McCain's joint town hall proposal is] a mistake. Anybody who watched McCain's speech on Tuesday and watched Obama's speech and who wants to see McCain win would be scared to death. I mean it would be a mismatch. Now McCain thinks he's a great performer in town hall and that's his best venue, but *McCain at his best is not as good as Obama at his worst*. Putting him in the arena time and again is gonna be, I think a mistake and secondly it'll be a bit like Nixon and Kennedy where Nixon had the stature as the former Vice President and Kennedy is the new comer. People were worried. Is he up to the presidency or not? If you put them on a stage together and Kennedy only holds his own he becomes presidential. If you put Obama, whose liability is the fact that he's a rookie and he may not be ready—you put him on stage with a guy like McCain, a veteran that everybody knows could be a president…you put him on often enough and Obama then achieves the stature of a guy who's ready. I think it's a tactical error of the first order. EVAN THOMAS: […] McCain is good when he's at his most informal*. He's a terrible speaker. He has that horrible smile; that rictus of a smile—that frozen smile, he's gotta deal with that..* NINA TOTENBERG: Oh, that is awful! THOMAS: But when he's informal and engaged that sort of goes away and he becomes a real human being— GORDON PETERSON: And teasing his audience and all that. THOMAS: Yeah, I don't think this is such a bad idea. [The panel then discusses recent head-to-head poll numbers for the two candidates.] TOTENBERG: […] I thought McCain made a terrible mistake a few weeks ago. He voted against he Lilly Ledbetter bill, which would allow women who've been discriminated against in pay to bring lawsuits back to the time when they were first discriminated against if they find out about it later. Now, you vote against that you oughtta be able to make a pretty good ad about that and to bring it up over and over again—refine that message and point out to women that this may not be the greatest vote. PETERSON: The economy works for Obama but national security works for McCain. COLBY KING: It may work for McCain but look at the other thing that McCain's got to defend. He also has this pro-life record that women have to come to grips with, those who are Clinton supporters have to come to grips with his pro-life record. You also have in McCain a person who has a over a 90% voting record with Bush. There's also some celebrated differences with Bush but he's been with Bush down the line on most votes and that's something he's gonna have to explain. KRAUTHAMMER: Oh, come on. If you're gonna talk about who has crossed the line and defied his own party it is certainly not Obama who has never done that. It certainly is McCain who has crossed the aisle time and again— [cross-talk] <http://www.box.net/shared/k0h1c6uww4> *Casey vs. Kyl on Obama vs. McCain* (CNN 06/08/08 11:03am) ROBERT CASEY: […] I think, at the end of the day, we're gonna come together because I think most people in America—democrat, republican and independent—don't want to elect someone who's been voting with President Bush 95% of the time, which is the case for Senator McCain, at least, in 2007. *Senator Webb: McCain's Foreign Policy is a Third Bush Term* (MSNBC 06/08/08 11:00am) TIM RUSSERT: When you see the race of John McCain Barrack Obama what do you see? JIM WEBB: There is a lot of rhetoric has been thrown back and forth about who is a change agent and these sorts of things but I see first of all a clear juxtaposition of two different styles of where the country needs to go. Whether it is in foreign policy, or the temperament of leadership, or how intellect is being applied to issues. I think people are going to get more than anytime in recent memory the opportunity to see these issues very clearly debated. RUSSERT: Take Iraq, how do you see the difference as laid out, articulated by the two parties? *WEBB: Well I have known John McCain for thirty years, I have a great admiration for him on many levels. I don't agree with him on a lot of different things. But in that particular area I think you are seeing the potential of a third Bush term*. In terms of how he signaling he is going to conduct foreign policy. Um, the Bush administration is characterized by an unwillingness to engage our advisories on a diplomatic level. On the one hand see over and over again, using the military tactically, taking them into all of these different environments but not taking advantage of what they have done on a diplomatic level and what you have seen from Barack Obama is a clear signal that he wants to bring the diplomatic elements to the floor not stepping back from using the military. And that is a totally different direction then what we have seen. *Panel Discuss McCain's Campaign Needs and Strategy; highlight his need to run two campaigns against Bush and Obama* (ABC 06/08/08 10:50am) [Clip of Rick Davis' Campaign Briefing from website] […] CLAIR SHIPMAN: […] This is critical for the McCain's team's supporters and fundraisers. I mean they have to show when they are facing an Obama juggernaut in terms of money how they are going to pull this off. There needs to be a way to victory for them if they are going to keep people excited at all and I think that is why you hear them talking about, look we can do this without a lot of money, we are going to be a lean machine, we can handle it by you know straddling this and that and town halls. […] JAY CARNEY: What a debacle, I mean presentationally one of the worse performances you have ever seen at a moment when things, the stakes were so high. It was a decision that I think was a bad idea to give that speech on Tuesday night when the media were going to be focusing on Obama and Clinton […] the coverage he did get was mostly negative because of the green background because of his halting and disastrous presentation […] GEORGE WILL: Can he really continue to live off the land the way he has done as a candidate with town hall meetings and Jay Leno and all the rest. I don't think so. Obama was in Virginia on Thursday, goes to North Carolina tomorrow he can afford to test market himself in states that John McCain simply is not going to have the money to do […] JONATHAN CAPEHART: The interesting thing from the presentation you just showed where Rick Davis talked about the GOP brand being in a disastrous state, and throughout that presentation it becomes clear *the McCain campaign is divorcing itself from President Bush, divorcing itself from the Republican party and they are running on his name alone don't worry about the party focus on the candidate, focus on McCain.* *SHIPMAN: It really is true; he has to run two campaigns at the same time. I mean, against President Bush and against Barack Obama *[…] GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: But I do think you look back at that speech on Tuesday night they are so conscious of what a burden President Bush is that the central message of that speech was I am no Bush CARNEY: I am not President Bush. It's a very defensive speech. John McCain, you know, he won the nomination in 2008 almost miraculously but he is, in some ways you can say that he would have made the better candidate in 2000, when his message was fresh. This year he needs to say I am not George W Bush and in many ways he is not. The record that he laid out in that speech does show, demonstrates a great deal of independence. A level of independence and willingness to forge bi-partisan consensus that Barack Obama cannot share, does not share historically. But *on the three issues that the electorate cares the most about this cycle; Iraq, the economy, healthcare there is very little to distinguish John McCain and I think that is a huge disadvantage.* STEPHANOPOULOS: The number I kept hearing this week was 53 – 47. That either McCain is going to win 53 – 47 or Obama is going to win 53 – 47. But that strategy for McCain is predicated first, foremost and last really on making Barack Obama unacceptable. WILL: That's right. And one way to do that is by going negative on him. The people who will do that are called the 527 organizations and Saint John of Arizona doesn't like 527 organizations *Why America Should Not Vote for McCain* (CBS 06/08/08 10:40am) CHARLIE RANGEL: America is fed up with what they have had. John McCain is a nice man but we cant have a period of time when we have all time unemployment that we have a guy saying that he doesn't know much about the economy. *You can't have the fellow that supports the tax cuts now that the president put in a permanent rate for the wealthy when he was against it before. We cant' have someone going to the Middle East that doesn't know the Sunnis from the Shiites. I think that he is a nice guy but I think America wants to move forward and we just can't do it with an extension of George Bush's policies* -- 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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