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Posts Tagged ‘fight’

Obama Strikes Back — Ready to Debate Bush/McCain “Anytime, Any Place”

Friday, May 16th, 2008

President Bush seemingly waded into the ‘08 fray during a speech before the the Israeli parliament yesterday, causing a firestorm of back-and-forth between the three ‘08 contenders. The offending comment - “Some seem to believe we should negotiate with terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along…We have heard this foolish delusion before. As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator declared: ‘Lord, if only I could have talked to Hitler, all of this might have been avoided.’ We have an obligation to call this what it is — the false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by history.”

While Bush didn’t name names (and the White House says the President was not specifically referring to Obama), of course it has been Barack Obama who has said on the campaign trail that he will meet with friends and foes - including Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The Obama campaign quickly responded to Mr. Bush’s statement, saying it was “sad” that the president used his speech commemorating the 60th anniversary of Israel’s independence to “launch a false political attack.”

Later when John McCain “embraced” Bush’s statement, an Obama spokesman replied “It is the height of hypocrisy for John McCain to deliver a lofty speech about civility and bipartisanship in the morning and then embrace George Bush’s disgraceful political attack in the afternoon. Instead of delivering meaningful change, John McCain wants to continue George Bush’s irresponsible and failed Iran policy by refusing to engage in tough, direct diplomacy like Presidents from Kennedy to Reagan have done.”

Today, Obama responded with anger and forcefulness, while criticizing Bush’s “failed” policies abroad and hammering McCain for supporting them. “They’re trying to fool you. They’re trying to scare you. And they’re not telling the truth. And the reason is they can’t win a foreign policy debate on the merits, but it’s not gonna work. It’s not gonna work this time and it’s not gonna work this year,” Obama told voters in Watertown, South Dakota. “If George Bush and John McCain want a debate about protecting the United States of America, that’s a debate I’m happy to have, anytime, any place, and that is a debate that I will win, because George Bush and John McCain have a lot to answer for,” he said.

As evidence, Obama cited what he sees as foreign policy failures implemented by the Bush Administration. “Our Iran policy is a complete failure right now and that’s the policy John McCain is running on. He has nothing to offer except the naïve and irresponsible belief that tough talk from Washington will somehow cause Iran to give up its nuclear program in support for terrorism. I’m running for president to change course, not to continue George Bush’s course,” he said to applause.

Later at a press avail, Obama was asked if he took the White House’s word that President Bush was not referring to him. “For them to suggest that somehow they weren’t aimed – who’s this “some” that they were talking about? Is this some amorphous “some”? Or is this just a straw man that they were setting up? And if so, what was the purpose of the remarks? That’s being disingenuous,” he responded.

Of Obama’s South Dakota remarks, a McCain spokesman noted, “It was remarkable to see Barack Obama’s hysterical diatribe in response to a speech in which his name wasn’t even mentioned.”

Hillary Takes the “Fight” to John Edwards?

Monday, December 31st, 2007

IOWA FALLS, IA — Senator Clinton told the crowd at the local elementary school here in Iowa Falls that fighting the special interests is great, but that the fight is worthless without results.

“We have to have a president who’s willing to take on those interests, and who’s able to really go toe-to-toe with them but to do it in a smart way,” she said. “A fight for the sake of a fight is not productive. A fight to actually change things and get results is.”

The line, which doesn’t usually appear in her speeches, can be read as a jab at John Edwards — who appears to have the momentum in Iowa.  His populist speeches are chock-full of aggressive language about taking on special interests that seems to resonate on the stump. By one reporter’s count, Edwards said the word “fight” 39 times at a town hall meeting at the Giggling Goat restaurant in Boone.

But Clinton has been arguing to Iowa caucus goers argues that she’s the only candidate with a proven track record of achieving results in those fights. Earlier in the day, she said told the crowd in Cedar Falls that her campaign was about “laying the ground work” to get people prepared to stand up to special interests. “That’s what I’ve been doing for years,” she said. “I don’t just talk about the special interests and reining them in, that’s what I’ve been trying to do.”

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