The best question came at the beginning, from Jennifer Loven of the Associated Press:
Question: Thank you, Mr. President. Earlier today in Indiana, you said something striking. You said that this nation could end up in a crisis without action that we would be unable to reverse. Can you talk about what you know or what you're hearing that would lead you to say that our recession might be permanent when others in our history have not? And do you think that you risk losing some credibility or even talking down the economy by using dire language like that?It was straight down hill after that. Chip Reid of CBS sounded like he wanted a job in the administration, his question -- if you can call it that -- was so fawning and so played into Obama's theme of the night, that the Republicans were to blame:
Question: Thank you, Mr. President. You have often said that bipartisanship is extraordinarily important, overall and in this stimulus package, but now, when we ask your advisers about the lack of bipartisanship so far -- zero votes in the House, three in the Senate -- they say, "Well, it's not the number of votes that matters; it's the number of jobs that will be created." Is that a sign that you are moving away -- your White House is moving away from this emphasis on bipartisanship? And what went wrong? Did you underestimate how hard it would be to change the way Washington works?Chuck Todd of NBC made an attempt at a question, but rather than taking on the stimulus bills, blamed consumers for the economic turmoil:
Question: Thank you, Mr. President. In your opening remarks, you talked about that, if your plan works the way you want it to work, it's going to increase consumer spending. But isn't consumer spending, or overspending, how we got into this mess? And if people get money back into their pockets, do you not want them saving it or paying down debt first before they start spending money into the economy?I was happy when Obama called on Jake Tapper of ABC, who often asks tough questions. Jake whiffed tonight, with a softball on how we can tell if Obama's plan for the economy is working:
Major Garrett of Fox News tried to catch Obama by repeating a comment of Joe Biden about the likelihood of failure, but no one takes Biden seriously, so Obama swatted away the question with a "there he goes again" type response.Question: Thank you, Mr. President. My question follows Julianna's in -- in content. The American people have seen hundreds of billions of dollars spent already, and still the economy continues to freefall. Beyond avoiding the national catastrophe that you've warned about, once all the legs of your stool are in place...
Obama: Right.
Question: ... how can the American people gauge whether or not your programs are working? Can they -- should they be looking at the metric of the stock market, home foreclosures, unemployment? What metric should they use when and how will they know if it's working or whether or not we need to go to a Plan B?
Question: Mr. President, at a speech Friday that many of us covered, Vice President Biden said the following thing about a conversation the two of you had in the Oval Office about a subject he didn't disclose. "If we do everything right, if we do it with absolute certainty, if we stand up there and we really make the tough decisions, there's still a 30 percent chance we're going to get it wrong." Since the vice president brought it up, can you tell the American people, sir, what you were talking about? And if not, can you at least reassure them it wasn't the stimulus bill or the bank rescue plan and if, in general, you agree with that ratio of success, 30 percent failure, 70 percent success?Michael Fletcher, The reporter for the Washington Post asked what Obama thought of A-Rod's admission to taking steroids.
Question: Yes, thank you, sir. What is your reaction to Alex Rodriguez's admission that he used steroids as a member of the Texas Rangers?Wow, the Washington Post sure has come a long way since its reporters met moles in parking garages to unmask political intrigue at the highest levels of government. Are you kidding me. You get called on at a presidential press conference and you ask about A-Rod.
Mara Liason, a columnist for Fortune magazine who proved that she is not a reporter, characterized the stimulus plans as the "easy" part -- what could be easier than cutting taxes and spending money:
Question: Thank you, Mr. President. If it's this hard to get more than a handful of Republican votes on what is relatively easy -- spending tons of money and cutting people's taxes -- when you look down the road at health care, and entitlement reform, and energy reform, those are really tough choices. You're going to be asking some people to get less and some people to pay more. What do you think you're going to have to do to get more bipartisanship? Are you going to need a new legislative model, bringing in Republicans from the very beginning, getting more involved in the details yourself from the beginning, or using bipartisan commissions? What has this experience with the stimulus led you to think about when you think about these future challenges?Huh? How about selling out the future, burdening our children with massive debt, destroying the dollar, and causing long term financial damage to the country.
All in all, it was an embarrassing night -- for the press. We're on our own.
How about the Huffington Post's question? Prosecuting the Bush Administration? Was anybody else a little amused/surprised that the Huffington Post was there? I know I wasn't surpirsed by their question.
ReplyDeleteBTW I loved Obama's answer to Garrett's question: "I don't know what he was talking about"
Did you notice that Obama kept checking a list, every time, before he called on a reporter. Whaddaya think? Did the man of transparency have a "reporters to call on" list?
ReplyDeleteParticularly when they had to read their questions from cards?
When was the last time you knew of a reporter who had to read their question off of a card?
It was so apparent to me that all the questions were rehearsed and "O" called on those he pre-destined to call on before he ever got up there. What a down right joke. And his fear tactics. A leader's job is to instill hope in the hearts of the people. Obama only gave us fear. And with the fear kept using phrases like, "I inherited this economy." Again, leadership doesn't cast the blame, it takes the ball and runs with it. Come on President, stand up and lead...that's what you promised us and so far there is no delivering
ReplyDeletehttp://howisthatobamavoteworkingoutforyou.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteNot working out too well, it seems. Nice blog, I've added it.
ReplyDeleteQuote from press conference: "MR. OBAMA: No, no, no, no. I think that what I've said is what other economists have said across the political spectrum, which is that if you delay acting on an economy of this severity, then you potentially create a negative spiral that becomes much more difficult for us to get out of. "
ReplyDeleteOther economists? Say what? Here's a couple of economists that say it a little different:
"...it will keep the economy and financial markets underwater." - Investment guru Marc Faber
“In its current form, it does too little to raise national spending and employment.” - Martin Feldstein (Harvard Economist)
I've posted the article here: http://normanhooben.blogspot.com/2009/02/faber-and-feldstein-agree.html
Good post. I think the entire press was in the tank or it was scripted. Not one question on what the stimulus plan contained.
ReplyDeletehttp://mark24609.blogspot.com/2009/02/theft-of-america-by-barack-obama.html
Mark
My favorite question posed by a reporter was that which asked for Obama's opinion about A-Rod's steroids debacle. Yep, that was definitely at the top of my panting list of "must-knows" from Dear Leader. Next time, though, in the middle of an "economic crisis" press conference, the question should be who BO wants to win on American Idol...
ReplyDelete