Archive for November, 2007

Post Debate: Ron Paul Spins

Internet superstar Ron Paul didn’t get a lot of face time during the last debate but he had plenty to say in the post-debate spin room. He talks about cutting spending, cutting taxes, ending US military intervention abroad and the vibrant online community that has rallied around his campaign.

Barack’s Battleground

As the Iowa caucus fast approaches, Barack Obama takes a look back at his year stumping throughout the state and asks Iowans for their votes on January 3, 2008.

Sound Bite: “What happens in Iowa will shape this race like no other event.”

Ms. Commander-in-Chief

A New Hampshire Iraq War vet says Hillary Clinton would be a good commander-in-chief because she’s prepared to “take charge of situations that require not just a military answer but also a more diplomatic answer.”

Guys v. gals

Michelle Obama talks to women via speakerphones and one says:

“Women, as much as anyone, know that we are facing some of the most difficult times we have faced as a country and we really need true leadership.”

And so the other half of mankind is clueless? As a man, I object.

Debate Reaction: Edwards on Romney

In last night’s Republican debate, Mitt Romney said:

Every time I listen to someone like John Edwards get on TV and say there are two Americas, I just want to, I just want to throw something at the TV. Because there’re not two Americas, there’s one America.”

Today, the Edwards campaign threw something back.

Debate: The Red State Update Take

Jackie Broyles and Dunlap bring their unique analysis to last night’s Republican debate.

Sound Bite: “Never give a gay general a microphone.”

Giuliani Ad: “Promise”

Rudy says he will lower taxes while Edwards, Obama and Clinton will raises taxes “even more than they promise.”

Sound Bite: “I know that reducing taxes produces more revenues. Democrats don’t know that. They don’t believe it.”

Thompson Ad: “Revolution” Extended Version

Folksy Fred Thompson unveiled his 30-second “attack ad” during last night’s Republican debate. Here’s an extended version (2 minutes) that paints Huckabee, Romney and Giuliani as faux conversatives and calls folksy Fred the “true conservative.”

Debate: Huck’s Yuks

During the campaign, Mike Huckabee has established a persona as a humorous fellow. Decide for yourself:

MARS
Mike suggests there might be a seat for Hillary on the first spaceship to Mars.

JESUS
When asked “What would Jesus do?” about the death penalty, Huckabee said “Jesus was too smart to ever run for public office.”

Debate: Gay General’s Clinton Connection

Last night’s Republican debate featured a question about gays in the military from Keith Kerr, a retired brigadier general who says he is gay. Shockingly, none of the candidates seemed to be in favor of changing the current “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. But for some reason Anderson Cooper decided to beat this dead horse, so he called on Kerr — who was in the audience — and Kerr restated the same question. Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!. He got the same answer.

And that predictable exchange would have been lost in the debate shuffle except that it turns out the gay general has a Clinton connection. CNN explains:

Following the debate, CNN learned that Kerr was listed as a member of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Americans For Hillary Clinton Steering Committee.

CNN Senior Vice President and Executive Producer of the debate, David Bohrman, says, “We regret this, and apologize to the Republican candidates. We never would have used the General’s question had we known that he was connected to any presidential candidate.”

Prior to the debate, CNN had verified his military background and that he had not contributed any money to any presidential candidate.

Following the debate, Kerr told CNN that he’s done no work for the Clinton campaign. He says he is a member of the Log Cabin Republicans and was representing no one other than himself.”

MORE:

The Clinton campaign has posted a clip of General Kerr’s interview this morning on CNN. Kerr says that although he allowed his name to be listed by the Clinton committee, he has no role in the campaign and no one from the Clinton campaign has been in touch with him.

Debate: McCain-Romney on Torture

In response to a voter question, Mitt Romney says he doesn’t want to characterize waterboarding as torture. John McCain demurs.

Republican CNN/YouTube Debate

The entire Republican CNN/YouTube Debate — broken into individual clips for each Q&A — is here.

Watch Mitt and Rudy go at it over immigration.

All debate clips here.

Rudy’s sense of humor

Here’s Rudy Giuliani’s video submitted to the YouTube debate, including jokes about snow and Hillary Clinton:

Here’s Fred Thompson’s attack video:

The Romney sound bit of choice from the debate: he promises to strengthen the economy and the family:

Liveblogging The YouTube debate

So the sissy Republicans who tried to avoid their YouTube debate are finally facing The People.

Anderson Cooper acknowledges the concerns about the kinds of questions asked last time but only manages to insult the entire field of questioners by featuring the stupid moments. Thanks, Andy. Next we have a song about the candidates that is an utter waste of time. We have more than 10 minutes of preambles, taking up the chance to add two questions. And I’ll waste a line of pixels noting that none of these guys believes in blow-dried hair. It’s a greasy-haired bunch.

We have the same formatting problem from the last debate: the videos are a small screen on a screen. And worse, they’re sometimes out of sync. And dark and unwatchable.

We start with a tribute to Lou Dobbs: immigration.

Finally, question No. 1: A New Yorker asks Rudy Giuliani about New York being a sanctuary city. Rudy says that New York was not a sanctuary city but on my TV, CNN’s transmission glitches and we missed a few crucial words from his answer. Rudy defends himself; Mitt Romney goes after him; Rudy attacks back, saying that Mitt had illegal immigrants working in his mansion. Mitt calls foreigners “people with funny accents.” Fred Thompson jumps into what is looking like a schoolyard squabble.

John McCain talks about “our” failures in Katrina, Iraq, and immigration and complains about the spirit of the debate. Mike Tancredo, the Dobbs candidate, says its wonderful because people are “trying to out-Tancredo Tancredo.” Then Duncan Hunter gets his chance to brag about building border fences. You’d think that immigration is the No. 1 issue in America as we have yet another question on the topic. And Mike Huckabee has to defend himself on the topic.

Finally, we get off immigration but land on someone pushing Ron Pual on conspiracy theorists and the Trilateral Commission. Jee-sus. This is our national election? These are what CNN thinks are what we think are the most important topics in this election? What a cartoon.

Next: the economy and national debt and John McCain, acting like the only adult here, says that we have forgotten how to control spending. Now there’s another question about spending, asking a few of the candidates what the top three programs they’d cut are. Fred Thompson doesn’t quite answer it, saying there are a hundred.

Now instead of a damned snowman we get a damned Uncle Sam asking about getting rid of the income tax. Once again, CNN is treating the people as a nation on the fringe.

McCain goes after Ron Paul’s isolationism and says the message of the troops is “let us win.” Paul says McCain doesn’t understand the difference between “nonintervention and isolationism.”

Grover Norquist asks for his pledge not to raise taxes. Guess what their answers are. But Thompson and McCain say they won’t pledge to Norquist but will pledge only to the American people.

Next: poison toys from China. What’s to say? Who’s in favor of them?

Each candidate gets to put up a video and Fred Thompson’s attacks others. “I want to give my buddies here a little airtime.”

Now the apparently obligatory gun-lover questions. One challenges Rudy Giuliani for suggesting that gun-owners should have to pass a written exam. Giuliani suggests the need for “reasonable regulations” and gets booed. Another asks what guns they own.

Next a question on black-on-black crime and Mitt Romney responds by praising the kid who asks it for having a father. A bit condescending, no?

A woman asks that if abortion is found to be illegal what crimes a woman who receives an abortion should be charged with and what about the doctor? Ron Paul punts: it’s up to the state and he says as a former OB doctor he never saw a medically necessary abortion. Fred Thompson says overturning Roe v. Wade “should be our No. 1 focus.” AJ from New Jersey asks whether the candidates would sign a ban on abortion. Giuliani says he would not sign it and would leave it to the states to decide. He also says he would not criminalize abortion. Romney says that if the Congress signed such a bill, “terrific.”

Next, a simple question: “The death penalty. What would Jesus do?” Mike Huckabee says he’s the only candidate who executed. “I believe there is a place for a death penalty.” Huckabee’s pushed on the question and says “Jesus was too smart to ever run for public office.”

A guy named Joseph asks three times whether the candidates believe every word in “this book” — the Bible. Giuliani says that he doesn’t believe it all literally. The Rev. Huckabee says there is allegory.

A Muslim woman asks about about repairing America’s image in the Muslim world. Giuliani pushes the war on terror and McCain pushes the war in Iraq.

When asked about torture, Romney refuses to define it. McCain slaps Romney and says he can’t believe that he wouldn’t know about or define waterboarding as torture. “Life isn’t 24 and Jack Bauer,” says McCain. “My friends, this is what America is all about. This is a defining issue… We will never allow torture.”

The Iraq debate finally comes up but it’s turned cartoonish, too, by allowing Ron Paul to set the tone.

Now gays in the military.

Now sending American spacemen to Mars. And finally, a punchline: Huckabee suggests sending Hillary. She does rather remind one of the mom on Lost in Space.

Health care? Social Security? Iraq? Education? Energy? The environment? Not included or treated seriously. The news judgment of the debate is appalling.

Two Americas - Well, sort of

Clutching their mocha lattes (skim milk, extra foam), the starving striking writers cheer union stalwart John Edwards in NYC’s Washington Square Park.

Sound Bite: “I myself have cancelled appearances on Ellen and The View in solidarity with you.”




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