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Meet the Press

This Sunday the May 4th, on NBC (check your local listings) Meet the Press will air a full one hour interview with Barrack Obama. Obama has done many interviews, but Tim Russert will test his metal Sunday and this will likely be a great opportunity to learn something about this little known candidate.

I for one am still undecided, and that includes all the candidates. I'm looking for a reason to like McCain, but his pander of the base and ties to Bush leave me disinterested. Hillary Clinton has been a great disappointment on many levels, but here to all she needs is for Obama to stumble, or for the Reverend Wright to give another speech and she could be back in the running. But, not likely.

This Sunday Obama goes up against a master of the political cross examination. Tim Russert has a staff of research analysts second to none and rest assured Obama will get as many questions on the serious issues as he has recently gotten on the meaningless ones. I don't care if he wears the flag pin or not, or if his Pastor is a nut job, I care about getting detailed specifics on just exactly what "CHANGE" means in an Obama administration.

"Always, never, and forever... don't apply to we mortals. Accept in one important way -- change. Things always change, the never stay the same, and that's a condition that will last forever." So, I'm not so impressed by the concept or the word. Change is the engine that has always driven us, but what Obama needs to do is to clearly and accurately define what his vision of change means for a struggling American middle class. The fallen American dollar, the new global economy, the cost of fuel, the cost of a college education, the sub prime mortgage crisis, and on and on -- and last but certainly not least -- how to end our involvement in Iraq and redirect our Military to focus on Bin Laden and Al Quada.

It's very likely that Russert will provide him the opportunity to speak to these issues on Sunday. I look forward to hearing Obama's position on these matters, and to what you folks out there have to say about this as well.

~A

Comments »

teh-pwnzer @ 2008-05-02 12:17:09
I for one was planning on watching! Can't wait! I'm so set on voting for McCain, but see Obama as a def. second. Who knows...not 100% sure yet. I would like to hear more directly from him.

teh-pwnzer @ 2008-05-05 06:49:44
I missed it....wasn't home in time. =/

Atrus @ 2008-05-05 12:11:39
Well you didn't miss much. It was a disappointment as Russert played softball for the entire hour and didn't really get into any specifics. Not that it makes a difference as Obama has all but nailed down the nomination. Still looking/hoping for a reason to vote for McCain. I keep telling myself that he needs the Republican base if has a chance, and is simply pandering to that base to get elected. Once elected he'll reach across the isle as he's always done. That might not be good enough either... the Republicans have screwed things up so bad there's little or no chance they will get back in the White House this election.

teh-pwnzer @ 2008-05-06 07:42:57
*sigh*

IRONMAN @ 2008-05-08 20:33:11
Here is a list of seven reasons Hillary should quit now.


1. It's over. Forget the sideshows and the hypotheticals. Once the party has its nominee, and only then, can the process of healing begin. The longer Clinton stays in the race, the more she postpones the point at which the party comes together.

2. The reality principle. "Anything is possible," is what campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe said today. Well, no. Something things are impossible; many others are highly improbable.

3. Her legacy. In many quarters, it's been damaged by the presidential race. The sooner she exits, the more gracefully she exists, the better the chance is for her to shake off this presidential race and resume her Senate career.

4. Bill's legacy. In many quarters, it's been irrevocably (and perhaps unfairly) damaged by this presidential race.

5. Obama. Even if there are plausible, selfish reasons for her to stay in, her duty to her party should trump them. She should devote herself fully to the service of Obama.

6. Her staff. They are tired and many are demoralized, even as they love and lionize their boss. Give them a rest.

7. Florida and Michigan. The sooner she drops out, the sooner those states will find their delegations seated.



Richelieu:


He crushed her in North Carolina and lost Indiana only by a slim margin margin (as predicted here last week). Indiana was indeed the tie-breaker. It was a tie, which broke her. Now it is truly over. I think she's out in a week or less.

America Blog:

We've just been told that General Wesley Clark, a strong Clinton supporter and fellow Arkansan, called Hillary tonight to tell her it's over. [Update: His camp denies it.]


Washington Blade (which previously endorsed Hillary):

Last night's results in the North Carolina and Indiana primaries have left Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton out of options. She ran a tough and spirited campaign that will be talked about for a generation. But it's over. The time has come for Clinton to adopt a gracious and conciliatory tone, end her campaign and endorse Sen. Barack Obama for president.


Sen. Dianne Feinstein (a huge Clinton supporter)

“I think the race is reaching the point now where there are negative dividends from it, in terms of strife within the party,” Feinstein said. “I think we need to prevent that as much as we can.”

Rep. Dale Kildee (a Clinton supporter)

Rep. Dale Kildee (D-Mich.) told The Hill that Clinton should reassess her prospects after losing to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) by 14 points in North Carolina and edging her rival in Indiana in Tuesday’s primaries.

“I urge her to take the day off and think very seriously about doing what’s best for the country and best for the party,” said Kildee.

“I got straight A’s in math,” added Kildee, implying that Obama’s delegate lead would be impossible to overcome in the few primaries left on the Democratic calendar.


And, just for fun...

Chicago-Tribune:

The Clintons are like a cat that gets run over but refuses to die. It crawls off the road and makes it to a backyard, hiding under the deck, in the shadows, eyes like slits, panting for days, stubbornly refusing to give it up.

Andrew Sullivan:

Hillz is now that person at the party who's had 6 too many jello shots, is talking abnormally loudly and is incapable of understanding the fact that she has overstayed her welcome. And she's starting to hiccup.

C'mon Hillz, let's get your coat and we'll walk with you to the door..."

Lawrence O'Donnell:

A senior campaign official and Clinton confidante has told me that there will be a Democratic nominee by June 15. He could not bring himself to say the words "Hillary will drop out by June 15," but that is clearly what he meant. I kept saying, "So, Hillary will drop out by June 15," and he kept saying, "We will have a nominee by June 15."

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