podesta-emails
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*Main Topics:* McCentury (troop withdrawal isn't 'too important'), McCan't
rally the base, Oldy McOlderson
*Summary of Shift:* Cable news programs covered Obama vetter, Jim Johnson
heavily with little to no mention of McCain's lobbyist ties. Amidst
escalating Mexican drug violence, fears spread that the US could soon become
involved in violent conflict at its southern border, CNN reports. All
television news outlets report the democrats are likely to try to pass the
failed unemployment bill (over which McCain and Bush are split, Wolf Blitzer
says) tomorrow. Reporters say Chinese espionage raised alarm amongst
government officials across the board. Severe weather in Iowa and Nebraska
took up a significant amount of airtime.
Highlights
1. Troop withdrawal 'not too important'
a. McCain surrogates hit the airwaves in defense of *Today Show* turmoil
i. Mitt Romney: oil
companies don't make the big money
ii. Ridge invokes McCain's
family in defense of 'not too important'
b. VoteVets' Friedman: McCain's remarks crush morale
c. Democrats respond
i. Reid reminds Americans
of McCain's explosive temper
ii. Kerry says McCain is
out of touch
d. Reporters respond
i. Embedded Iraq reporter
finds McCain's remarks out of step with troop sentiment
ii. Slater reminds viewers
this statement is symptomatic of larger problem
2. McCain's troubles with the GOP base persist
3. Leno reminds viewers that McCain is comically old
4. Lou Dobbs airs the Obama response to McCain's Jim Johnson attacks and
includes this 2004 Fiorina quote: 'There is no job that is America's
God-given right anymore.' [no clip]
5. Cavuto asks Tancredo if he'll endorse McCain, Tancredo responds,
'Nice talkin' to you.' [no clip]
6. John Kerry on McCain's Today Show Appearance: John McCain Doesn't
Have a Strategy For Victory, Doesn't Have a Strategy For Ending the War, He
Just Has a Plan on Staying in the War. [No Clip]
7. Dan Tarullo, Obama Senior Economic Advisor, on McCain's Economic
Plan: "It Will Blow an Enormous Hole in the Budget" [No Clip]
8. On *Election Center* Rowland suggests NV Jim Gibbons' controversy may
hurt McCain [no clip]
9. Senator Dick Durbin: McCain is an extension of Bush policies on
economy and Iraq, on CNN [no clip]
10. Iraqis want America out of their country, CNN reports [no clip]
11. Al-Qaeda material leaked to CNN reveals that al-Qaeda in Iraq
infiltrated Iraqi bases and American bases in Iraq [no clip]
12. As part of farewell portion of Bush's Europe trip, he admits regrets
that he did not sell the war in Iraq better [no clip]
13. Bill O'Reilly reports that David Bossie plans to release a documentary
critical of Obama [no clip]
Clips
Highlight #1
*Romney Tells Blitzer McCain's Plans Won't Benefit Exxon-Mobil and They
Don't Make Big Money* (CNN 06/11/08 4:22pm)
WOLF BLITZER: A little commotion over Iraq today. Senator McCain was on The
Today Show early this morning. He had this exchange with Matt Lauer. I'm
going to play the whole thing and we'll talk about it.
[Clip]
BLITZER: All right, governor. The democrats, including Senator Obama's
campaign and a lot of the democratic leadership in congress, they're really
irate. They're saying—they're saying McCain is certainly out of touch when
he says—quote—'that's not too important' when U.S. troops, 150,000 or so,
still in Iraq, would be coming home. I wonder if you'd want to go to bat for
senator McCain right now.
MITT ROMNEY: Pretty straightforward. He's pointing out the exact date when
all of our troops come home is a lot less critical than whether we can stop
casualties and whether we can stabilize the government in Iraq and make sure
Al Qaeda doesn't have a safe haven from which they can launch attacks.
*He's already indicated he'd like to have most of our troops home by the end
of his first term. That's the goal that he has in mind. It's a goal he's
pursuing. Clearly the key here is as John McCain predicted that the surge
would work* and Barack Obama said, 'No, it wouldn't. The surge is working.
That's the benefit of experience. Barack Obama's lack of experience is, I'm
afraid, showing here. By the way, any time we're talking about Iraq and the
fact John McCain was right and Barack Obama was wrong, that's helping the
McCain story.
BLITZER: They're also pointing out—Senator Obama and other democrats,
critics of the war, the Iranians seem to be the big winner in all this. They
look at the most recent pictures of the Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri
al-Maliki going once again to Tehran, kissing the Iranian president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad as he's done before.
They say, 'What's going on?' the democrats accusing bush and McCain, for
that matter, of allowing Iran to be the big strategic winner in that region
as a result of the U.S. invasion. You want to respond to that charge?
ROMNEY: Once again you point out the peril of Barack Obama's inexperience.
If we were to withdraw our troops in a precipitous manner we would leave the
Iraqis no choice but to cozy up to Iran because Iran would become the
superpower in the region. By stabilizing Iraq, making sure it's government
and now it's 500,000 strong military, is independent and capable of
protecting their own borders, that Iraq is able to follow its own course.
Of course they'll talk to their neighbors as they're doing now and have
diplomatic outreach and see if they can't keep Iran from interfering with
what's going on in Iraq but there's nothing more dangerous in the region
than our withdrawing and having Iraq have nowhere to turn but to
Ahmadinejad.
BLITZER: The U.S. is negotiating with the Iraqi government right now, the
Bush administration, before the end of the this year, what's called a Status
of Forces Agreement for a permanent or a long-term—let me say just a
long-term, not necessarily a permanent, a long-term U.S. military presence
in Iraq and apparently the Iraqi government, Nouri al-Maliki not very happy
with what the U.S. is seeking. A close aide, if you will, to the prime
minister saying this in the *Washington Post* today, 'The Americans are
making demands that would lead to the colonization of Iraq. If we can't
reach a fair agreement, many people think we should say, 'Good-bye, U.S.
troops. We don't need you here anymore.'
If that's what the position of the Iraqi government, why should the U.S.
force itself on them if they say better—we're better off, get out of here?
ROMNEY: *There's no question we won't be forcing ourselves on them* and the
individual quoted does not speak for the prime minister or for the
government. *We will obviously work out an agreement as to what role we'll
have on an ongoing basis and this is a, if you will, a post-conflict basis
in that country to help secure their stability long term and to make clear
to their neighbors that you don't come into Iraq and try and destabilize
matter.*
What the requirements are and what the final agreement will be is something
that'll be worked out between both parties and I wouldn't add a lot of
energy at this stage to what some people who are part of the negotiation are
trying to leak for their benefit.
BLITZER: Let's make the turn to the economy, which is issue number one right
now for American voters. Obama makes the point that, under the new tax cuts,
that senator McCain is proposing, cut corporate tax rates out there,
Exxon-Mobil and some of the other big oil companies, they'd reap a bonanza
of additional tax breaks right now. Explain why it's appropriate at this
time of rising gas prices for Exxon-Mobil, for example, to get additional
tux cuts.
ROMNEY: *No one is interested in giving additional tax cuts to
Exxon-Mobil.*Everybody's interested in giving additional tax cuts to
people who are
beginning businesses, particularly small business, and one thing we've
learned by watching a nation like Ireland that was an economic basket-case
is that when they lowered corporate tax rates it meant more corporations
moved to their country or corporations grew and added jobs in their country.
They're now the shining star of the European Union.
Lowering tax rates helps create jobs. I know the democrats fundamentally
don't believe that but I think almost every economist will tell you that
taxes slow down an economy and kill jobs. Lowering taxes adds jobs, adds
businesses, adds employment. Right now, again, Barack Obama's inexperience
is showing when he says let's raise taxes right now. That's the last thing
you do in an economic slow down. Even he said maybe we ought to wait a while
until the economy is stronger to raise taxes. I think he's pointing out, he
knows raising taxes hurts growth, hurts jobs and that's the wrong way to go.
BLITZER: He says there should be a windfall profits tax on Exxon-Mobil and
some of the other big oil companies. Would it be appropriate, do you think,
that Senator McCain should have an exemption for Exxon-Mobil and other oil
companies so they won't benefit from a reduction in overall corporate tax
rates?
ROMNEY: I guess there is the politics of blackballing and scape-goating and
trying to go after one company. Look, *in the oil world, the people that are
making the big money are not the oil companies*. There's some of them out
there, I'm sure, making a lot of money. The people making the big money are
Russia, Iran and Venezuela. The people who have the oil. That's where the
big oil is.
BLITZER: Exxon-Mobil had huge record profits.
ROMNEY: I'm not going to defend their profit other than it's the same as
their profit in the past. it's a percentage of their sales. They're a bigger
and bigger company. They have more profit.
If we're going to build our whole tax policy for the hundreds of thousands
of corporations in America based on one company's tax posture, that's a
little silly. We want to create jobs in this country. By the way, in the
energy sector I want to see those guys investing in new refineries, new
drilling.
I'd like to see Barack Obama say, 'You know what? We need more drilling in
this country. We need more natural gas.' He said yesterday he wants to tax
natural gas and coal in this country. Those are our sources of energy; other
than the oil that we have to buy from other people. Let's have economic
policies here that help America as opposed to try to scapegoat one or two
companies.
*Ridge Defends McCain, Invokes Family *(FNC 06/11/08 5:10pm)
MEGYN KELLY: A firestorm is brewing tonight over John McCain's comments
about our troops in Iraq. McCain was asked today if he could estimate when
our troops can come home from Iraq saying in part quote 'that's not too
important, what's important is the casualties' meaning how many casualties
take place. Now democrats are blasting John McCain calling him quote
'confused, and unbelievably out of touch'
[...]
TOM RIDGE: It is totally out of context, totally unfair but in the existing
political climate probably predictable. *There is no other presidential
candidate that has a personal experience in terms of understanding
appreciating and experiencing the burden on military families. John McCain's
grandfather, his father John, and his two sons all get it, and John gets it.
*
Perhaps even more importantly and I happen to agree whole heartedly with
John the democrats want to talk about time tables for withdrawal Johns
interested in a success of the surge and doing whatever we need to bring
stability to that government so that it doesn't become a heaven for
terrorist he said very clearly very distinctly. Again showing a lack of
understanding from the Obama campaign you have to see what the situation is
before you make any determination with regard to any withdraw schedule and
you do rely on your commanders in the field to help you with that assessment
so again predictable understandable out of context but we are going to see a
lot more of this distortion in the days and months ahead in the campaign.
*VoteVets's Brandon Friedman: McCain's Statements Are a Troop Moral Crusher,
Doesn't Get a Free Pass* (MSNBC 06/11/08 8:02pm)
KEITH OLBERMAN: How do veterans, how do veterans families feel when they
hear that the man who wants to be the next commander in chief does not think
it's too important when they come home?
BRANDON FRIEDMAN: *Keith, this is a moral crusher.* If you can imagine, say
a sergeant, who's on his third tour and he's in the 13th month of that tour,
and he hears the potential president saying something like this. It kills
moral. The troops are over there, and you know, I've been there, I've had to
deal with this. But the troops over there hang on every word they hear from
a leader, especially the commander in chief, but also someone who could be
the commander in chief. And *when they hear something like this, it really
kills them on the inside, because their families want them home, they want
to come home, or focus on the real global war on terror elsewhere. But this
is really killer when you hear something like this.*
OLBERMAN: When I hear from servicemen or when I talk to vets, more than
anything else, is their astonishment when generals or veterans like McCain,
or the brass to use the general term there, don't get it. That of all
people, these were the ones they naively thought would understand their risk
and sacrifice. Does it matter more that they are abandoned by a John McCain
who did serve, as opposed to a George Bush who did not?
FRIEDMAN: Absolutely Keith. We've come to not expect a whole lot from George
W. Bush. But when you have a veteran like John McCain, who has gone through
so much in Vietnam, you really expect a lot more out of him, because the way
you see it as a soldier, or an airman, or a marine, or whatever, is that *John
McCain should know better*. You know, he's been in our shoes, he's had it
worse than most of us. But he should know better. For those of us that have
been there, that have lived through this, *we just would expect a lot more
and it really saddens us to see this happen. Because there are thousands and
thousands of veterans who just disagree with him on this.*
OLBERMAN: And the Lieberman reaction, or the reaction to his reaction, where
basically he referenced McCain's status as a veteran, as POW, as war hero as
carte blanche for an excuse for this. McCain is immune to military criticism
simply because he was a POW. That the merits can't even be discussed. Then
that reminds me of every bit of army red tape I've ever heard of. Of every
bit of censorship that the military sometimes invokes in times of war
relative to its own personnel.
FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. We all respect John McCain's service. But he's not the
only person who's suffered in war. We have troops coming home from this war
who are quadriplegics, who've been maimed, who've have to go through so
much. It doesn't give him a carte blanche reason to say something like that.
He doesn't get a free pass. We've been over there too, we've been in war
too, and we know what it's like. *And he doesn't get a free pass, especially
from us, because we hold him to a higher standard. All I can say is we
respect John McCain's service, all we ask in return is that he respect ours.
And for many of the people that I talk to, who are on active duty or have
just come back from active duty but who have served over there, we don't
feel like we are getting that a lot of the time.*
*Reid Responds to McCain's Today Show Comments, Says McCain is
"Explosive"*(MSNBC 06/11/08 3:39pm)
(clip of McCain on 'Today Show')
HARRY REID: This is in keeping with his prior statement that troops should
be there and likely will be there for the next 50 or 100 years. *I am sure
he is not really concerned about when the troops are going to come home.* We
are. And that's a promise that Barack Obama has made to bring the troops
home. He will bring them home soon.
[…]
NORAH O'DONNELL: You said about Sen McCain that his "temperament" is wrong.
[…]
REID: Anyone that's worked with John McCain knows about his temperament. I
don't think we need to go any further than that*. John McCain doesn't have
the proper temperament to be Presiden*t of the United States. He is wrong on
the war, he's wrong on the economy
O'DONNELL: When you say temperament, do you mean that he gets angry?
REID: Everyone that has worked with John McCain knows of his temper. *He
gets upset and is explosive*, to say the least.
*Andrea Mitchell Leads with 'Not Too Important,' Finds It Reminiscent of
'100 Years' *(MSNBC 06/11/08 1:03pm)
ANDREA MITCHELL: […] the McCain and Obama camps are dueling today over what
exactly John McCain meant when he answered a question about a timetable for
troops to come home from Iraq […]. His answer—quote—that it wasn't 'too
important' compared with casualties. It's what's fueling the uproar over
[at] the Obama campaign today. […]
['That's not too important' clip]
MITCHELL:* Of course John McCain had said something similar, not even this
precise back in the New Hampshire primary and got himself into some
difficulty. *It's clear from that entire clip what the context was. He does
talk about withdrawal. He does talk about his claim that the surge is
working and the evidence on the ground that the surge is working […].
[H]ere's what Senator John Kerry said on a conference call with the Obama
camp earlier today.
JOHN KERRY: It is unbelievably out of touch and inconsistent with the needs
and concerns of Americans and particularly the families of the troops who
are over there. To them it's the most important thing in the world when they
come home and it's the most important thing in the world that we have a
commander-in-chief who understands how you can bring them home.
ANDREA MITCHELL: […] Isn't it clear, though, though, the politics aside, but
isn't it clear from what John McCain said that he was speaking more
completely in the context of, yes, the troops will come home, but we got to
get the casualties down?
LEE COWAN: I think you're right. I mean, the issue here isn't really all
that different, as you said, than what McCain has said in the past. He's
long said that what really matters to the country is reducing the number of
casualties that are in Iraq, and its not so much the deployment of those
troops that people are so worried about. It's the number of casualties, the
level of violence. That's what he seemed to be indicating. It was sort of an
awkward choice of phrase, i think would be fair to say at best, that it's
not too important when they come home. You know, I think he said in the past
obviously he wants to get as many people home as he can. Certainly he knows
better than most what coming home means. So, it's one of these things -- and
i think what's interesting, Andrea, *at a time when both campaigns are
trying so hard to focus on the economy, because they really think that's
what's going to resonate with voters the most, something like this comes up
and takes all the energy away from the economy and puts it right back on
Iraq again.*
MITCHELL: And, in fact, the Obama people clearly felt it was too good an
opportunity to miss up, because it was as you most kindly put it, not as
artful as it could have been. He could have not used the term "it's not too
important." This is what helps them say he's out of touch, right?
COWAN: Right. And I think it's just those three words that got him into
trouble today. And I think, you know, this -- this may be what we see for
the next, you know, five months, Andrea. We're talking about a flurry of
e-mails and conference calls and press avails later on about essentially
half a sentence of something that might have been as you said not
particularly artfully said, but it's going to be this sort of tit for tat,
because these are the clear distinctions, *it just emphasizes again just how
different both sides are*, and what the choices are that voters have. When
it comes to Iraq, when it's something like this, when it's something that
the Obama camp thinks is clear-cut, when it's something that the McCain
campaign thinks is clear-cut, they're going to pounce on it. I think we'll
see a lot more of this in the coming months.
MITCHELL: And as we've been talking, Joe Lieberman on a conference call, the
McCain campaign has been saying that Barack Obama has been wrong on Iraq all
along, that this is an attempt by the democrats to distract Americans from
the fact that John McCain was courageous about the surge. This is what Joe
Lieberman is saying, in having advocated the surge long before the Bush
White House took his advice and did put more troops in, and that this is
just partisan politics. And so the contest goes on. As you point out Lee,
they are talking about Iraq, they aren't talking about the economy right
now, despite the attempts by Democrats to keep all the focus on the economy.
*Embedded Iraq Reporter Richard Engel Says McCain Isn't Speaking For The
Troops Correctly* (MSNBC 06/11/08 5:35pm)
CHRIS MATTHEWS: Well reconcile, or put together, what John McCain just said
on the Today Show with Matt Lauer about really having an indefinite
commitment to staying there, with their concern that we have an indefinite
commitment to staying there. Isn't John McCain saying the very
thing their afraid of, that we're never going to leave?
RICHARD ENGEL: *What John McCain said about the troops, uh, it isn't always,
it's not what I'm always hearing from the troops themselves.* He said that
the most important thing for them is when they come back. Obviously it's
very important for the troops and their families to know how long this
commitment is.
*McCain's Statements on Iraq Are Part of Bigger Issue Concerning Ideas For
War With Iran* (MSNBC 06/11/08 5:46pm)
CHRIS MATTHEWS: Let me ask you a question, it seems to be that if we can
elect a general Eisenhower who had won World War II, that we could have some
confidence that he could end this war and end the casualties. But there's
John McCain talking about becoming president, and basically reducing to
almost none the casualties we face over there. How do you do that with a war
still going on?
WAYNE SLATER: Well look, there's no way that any Democrat is going to
seriously challenge John McCain and make people think that he doesn't care
about the troops. There was something about the tone in what he said that
suggested that that won't fly. But American's do care about when the troops
come back. The rest of the statement about the casualties I think most
Americans agree with. It's that business about how long are we going to be
there, Americans do think it's important. *I think the way it works against
McCain is if Democrats are successful between now and November in tying that
idea about staying there 100 years, 8 years, or it's not important, to the
bigger idea, are we going to get mired down in something in Iran. We're
going to hear a lot about Iran between now and November, to the extent that
the people, on the Democratic side, can say McCain has these neo-cons around
him who are likely to move us aggressively and bullishly in Iran. That's
when it hurts.*
MATTHEWS: Well in that point, George Woo was just in that chair, Tucker, the
other night. And he said, if you vote for McCain you're voting for war.
Because there's going to be a war with Iran. Because Iran wants a nuclear
program, if they try to get one, we'll blow them up. We're going to war.
Highlight #2
*Lack of Enthusiasm for Campaign and Lack of Support Among Conservatives
Still a Major Issue for McCain* (MSNBC 06/11/08 6:34pm)
STEPHEN HAYES: There are a lot of Republican, I think if you talk to
Republicans out in the country today,* there's a general lack of enthusiasm
among conservatives for John McCain.* This is not a secret, this is
something the McCain campaign has been dealing with since actually in the
primaries. And I think that question, the anticipated victor, reflects that
concern.
DAVID GREGORY: Is this still grassroots support? Because, you know, if you
look within, not particularly this poll, but in some other polls I've seen,
he's still polling very high. I think about 95% of republicans with him. But
that doesn't necessarily reflect enthusiasm to get out and vote.
HAYES: Yeah, I think that's right. What I think, basically, what you're
talking about, what this question measures, is enthusiasm. And look,
*conservatives
have said, some conservatives have said quite publicly that they're not
enthusiastic about McCain, that they don't even intend to vote for him.* So
I think this is one issue that the McCain campaign is going to have to
really focus in the coming weeks and months if they hope to turn out
conservatives in the way that Rachel pointed out, in the way the Bush
campaign did so successfully in 2004.
Highlight #3
*Leno Lampoons the GOP, Pokes Fun at McCain's Age* (NBC 06/11/08 11:39pm)
JAY LENO: […] and you know John McCain, you know what a competitive guy he
is.
KEVIN EUBANKS: Oh, yeah.
LENO: Well, yeah. Well, he wanted to show he could still ride. He pulled his
old bike out of the cellar to prove he—here, show McCain.
[footage of man on giant, out-dated bicycle]
LENO: Here's McCain. There he is coming down.
[ laughter ]
LENO: Coming down the road.
[Man crashes]
LENO: Oh, oh, oh! oh, that's—[ applause ] and over the weekend, Barack Obama
spoke with John McCain on the phone. I don't want to say McCain is getting
old, but halfway through the conversation, McCain said to Barack, "Can you
put your mommy on?"
So I think—[light laughter] and in his new blog—you know, he's got a blog.
McCain has a blog now. He announced he is a huge Abba fan. Abba! Well, that
will bring in the young voters, huh? [laughter] Come on, who isn't
Abba-crazy these days? "Dancing queen!" Thank you.
EUBANKS: Oh, Jay—Jay, don't do that again. Don't—[laughter] don't do that.
LENO: And John McCain has a new slogan, "A leader we can believe in." That's
a good slogan. Don't confuse that with President Bush's slogan, "We can't
believe he is our leader." That's a totally different—[laughter] that's a
totally different slogan. I don't want to go there.
And you may have heard, former republican presidential candidate, Mike
Huckabee [is] being called a hero. He saved a man's life over the weekend,
really, by performing the Heimlich maneuver. Saved a man from choking and,
in a related story, senator Larry Craig performed the Heimlich maneuver on
three men, none of whom were choking. [laughter]
EUBANKS: Oh, yeah?
LENO: And they were very surprised.
EUBANKS: Oh, really? [laughter]
LENO: You don't want to leave that stall door open. That's what can happen.
--
Jacob Roberts
Media Analyst
PMUSA
(c) 208.420.3470
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