Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts

Friday, April 04, 2008

Heads-up: Weekend Reading NAFTA/CAFTA and the 08 Campaign

While we wait for this story to break, we are on the brink of getting to the bottom of the question: Does Hillary support NAFTA and CAFTA? She continues to say that she was opposed to the NAFTA agreement? We now have a story developing on three fronts take a look at the background information I provided below to get ready or next week.

1. Does Hillary opposed NAFTA and against CAFTA the proposed bilateral trade deal with Colombia?
  • Rep Miller an Obama supporter was part the campaign conference call expressing his concerns with NAFTA. He stated that he was not aware of Hillary's objections to NAFTA when the congress was debating the effects of the proposed agreement.


2. Obama says that he opposes NAFTA and CAFTA but reports say his campaign had reassured Canadian diplomats through back-channels that the candidate's calls for renegotiating the North American free-trade agreement were political rhetoric, not serious plans or was it Clinton who reached out to Canada?

  • Substitute her name ...

    Hillary last month:

    “If you come to Ohio and you go give speeches that are very critical of NAFTA… and then we find out that your chief economic adviser has gone to a foreign government and basically done the old wink-wink – ‘Don’t pay any attention, this is just political rhetoric’ — I think that raises serious questions… "I would ask you to look at this story and substitute my name for Sen.Obama ’s name and see what you would do with this story ... Just ask yourself [what you would do] if some of my advisers had been having private meetings with foreign governments."

    Last Friday Canada pledged to make public the results of an investigation into Canadian leaks that damaged the presidential campaign of U.S. Senator Barack Obama.

3. “If you come to Ohio and you go give speeches that are very critical of NAFTA… and then we find out that your chief economic adviser has gone to a foreign government and basically done the old wink-wink – ‘Don’t pay any attention, this is just political rhetoric’ — I think that raises serious questions…
  • Not quitting the day job

    This, in the wake of how hard Clinton's aides pressed on Austan Goolsbee's meeting (in, he said, his professorial capacity) with the Canadians, is a bit tough to explain:

    Hillary Clinton's chief campaign strategist met with Colombia's ambassador to the U.S. on Monday to discuss a bilateral free trade agreement, a pact the presidential candidate opposes.

    Attendance by the adviser, Mark Penn, was confirmed by two Colombian officials. He wasn't there in his campaign role but in his separate job as chief executive of Burson-Marsteller Worldwide, an international communications and lobbying firm




"An Error in Judgement"
  • From NBC's John Boxley
    As mentioned earlier today, the Wall Street Journal reported that Clinton chief strategist Mark Penn -- in his role as chief executive of Buston-Marsteller -- met with Colombia's ambassador to discuss a free trade deal, which Clinton actually opposes.

    Penn just released this statement: "The meeting was an error in judgment that will not be repeated and I am sorry for it. The senator's well known opposition to this trade deal is clear and was not discussed."

  • Ben Smith reports: Change to Win, the labor federation that includes SEIU, just sent out a statement demanding Penn's head:

    The statement, from executive director Greg Tarpinian:

    It's time for Senator Hillary Clinton to send her vaunted 'chief strategist' Mark Penn packing -- back to his job consulting for union busting corporations and anti-labor governments for good.

    "We have questioned Penn's role in the Clinton campaign in the past for his representation of union busting employers like Cintas. At that time, Penn said there was a wall between him and his firm's representation of union busters. The latest revelation that Penn -- whose firm represents the Colombian government in its effort to secure passage of a so-called free trade agreement -- is actively involved in securing its passage in the middle of Senator Clinton's presidential campaign is outrageous. It also suggests that he has been playing a double role - advising the Senator on what to say to curry Democratic voters and advising the Colombian government on what to say to curry a majority of votes in Congress.

    "The vast majority of Americans do not believe that we should be granting preferential trade status to a government that coddles death squads that target union organizers. Colombia remains the most dangerous country in the world for union members, where more than 2,200 workers have been murdered since the 1980s by Colombian death squads for trying to form unions while the government has done nothing to effectively stop the murders. It is time for Penn to go."

Update: Why is Latian American Far Right's Colombian President Alvaro Uribe is worried?

Uribe's Attack On Obama
  • That Uribe singled-out Obama is revealing: the Illinois senator’s rival for the Democratic nomination for president in the United States, Senator Hillary Clinton of New York, also says Associated Press she opposes the US-Colombia “free trade” pact. That clearly doesn’t worry Uribe: the Clinton organization has a long history of backing – politically and economically – the Colombian far right, its narco-politicians and paramilitary death squads, of whom Uribe is supreme leader. In 2000, then-US president Bill Clinton went on Colombian national TV to announce “Plan Colombia,” the multi-billion dollar US military intervention that keeps Uribe and his repressive regime in power to this day.


”I will oppose the Colombia Free Trade Agreement if President Bush insists on sending it to Congress because the violence against unions in Colombia would make a mockery of the very labor protections that we have insisted be included in these kinds of agreements.”
  • More extensively quoted in The Philadephia Bulletin, Obama added:

    ”So you can trust me when I say that whatever trade deals we negotiate when I’m president will be good for American workers, and that they’ll have strong labor and environmental protections that we’ll enforce.”



Thursday, April 03, 2008

Why the Democratic race could end in North Carolina
















RALEIGH, N.C. — The end could be near.

Or the endgame, at least, of a surprisingly drawn-out Democratic presidential contest. Four months and 42 states after the opening Iowa caucuses, the primary in North Carolina on May 6 now looms as a pivotal final showdown between Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Obama starts with a double-digit lead in polls here, a state where 2,400 free tickets to his rally at the War Memorial Auditorium in Greensboro last week were gone within three hours of the announcement he would appear. But Clinton has appeal in the Tar Heel State, too, and is competing hard. The day after Obama's rally, she drew 1,000 supporters to the gym at Terry Sanford High School in Fayetteville for a town hall meeting.

"I really believe May 6 has the potential to be everything," says Joe Trippi, a strategist for the presidential bids of former North Carolina senator John Edwards this year and Howard Dean in 2004. "Every day you see increased pressure on Hillary Clinton about why she's staying in, and if she could win in North Carolina it would shut down that kind of talk and open up the possibility she could get there" to the nomination.

"But if he wins in North Carolina," Trippi says of Obama, "I think you're going to see things close up very quickly. You'll see a lot of superdelegates line up behind him."




Delegates breaking their silence and possible alliance with HRC

Since Gov. Bill Richardson endorsement there has been a stream of support towards Sen. Obama: Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey and this week, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal.

Now committed and uncommitted superdelegates are braking their silence:
  • Former President of the United States, Jimmy Carter has hinted that he might cast his vote for Senator Barack Obama. “We are very interested in the primaries. Don’t forget that Obama won in my state of Georgia. My town which is home to 625 people is for Obama, my children and their spouses are pro- Obama. My grandchildren are also pro- Obama. As a Super Delegate, I would not disclose who I am rooting for but I leave you to make that guess,"
  • New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, a Clinton superdelegate, just said on CNBC's Squawk Box that he reserves the right to change his vote from Hillary Clinton if she doesn't have the popular vote. He stopped short of saying that he definitely would change his vote if she lost the popular vote and he did strongly emphasize that Sen. Clinton would win the popular vote in the end.
  • Washington State Sen. Maria Cantwell, another Clinton super, has said similar things regarding the popular vote.
Update:
  • Pennsylvania Rep. John Murtha said today if Hillary in trailing Obama in total caucus and primary votes she can't be the nominee.
According to Bloomberg News which has a great breakdown on Superdelegate and who they are supporting, Obama leading in U.S. House freshmen 16 to 6 and 40% are from "red states", he also has support of 99 lawmakers and governors, compared to Clinton's 96. In January Clinton enjoyed more then double the support within the same group, 91 to 43.

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Chris Mathews' Hardball: College Tour With Sen. Barack Obama

Part 1 of 5: Bowling, Iraq, Jobs and Energy



Part 2 of 5: Students Questions–Finical College Aid,
Campaign's Effect On Spiritual Life
Teachers Merit Pay, High Stakes Testing and Stem Cell Research




Part 3 of 5:
National Security




Part 4 of 5: Barack's Biracial Perspective




Part 5 of 5: Student's Questions– Gay Marriage,
Improving Public Schools and the Delegate Count

Saturday, March 08, 2008

GOP Congressman: Al-Qaida Will Be "Dancing In The Streets" If Obama Wins

King suggests terrorists will celebrate Obama victory By O.Kay Henderson

Western Iowa Congressman Steve King says al Qaeda and other Islamic terrorists around the globe will be "dancing in the streets" if Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is elected president.

"I don't want to disparage anyone because of their race, their ethnicity, their name,
whatever the religion of their father might have been. I'll just say this, that when
you think about the optics of a Barack Obama potentially getting elected president of the United States, I mean, what does this look like to the rest of the world? What does this look like to the world of Islam?" King said Friday during an interview in KICD studios in Spencer. "And I will tell you that if he is elected president, then the radical islamists, the al Qaida and the radical Islamists and their supporters Will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11th."

King, a Republican from Kiron, endorsed GOP candidate Fred Thompson before the Iowa Caucuses. He now supports the party's presumptive nominee, John McCain. A spokesman for Obama's campaign During the interview in Spencer, King attacked Obama's promise to pull American troops out of Iraq and questioned the impact Obama's heritage might have on the rest of the world. Obama's father was Kenyan and Obama's middle name is Hussein.

Continue Reading

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Susan Rice on Hillary’s Missing Foreign Policy Experience, Diplomacy, and NAFTAgate



Hat Tip: Think On these Things

The Truth About NAFTA and Obama

CBS News: Campaign Interference




UPDATE: Looks like Hillary has some explaining to do.

NAFTA-Gate Leaker Said Hillary's People Were Reassuring Canada

Since 75 per cent of Canadian exports go to the U.S., Mr. Obama and Ms. Clinton's musings about reopening the North American free-trade pact had caused some concern.

Mr. Brodie downplayed those concerns.

"Quite a few people heard it," said one source in the room.

"He said someone from (Hillary) Clinton's campaign is telling the embassy to take it with a grain of salt. . . That someone called us and told us not to worry."

Government officials did not deny the conversation took place.

They said that Mr. Brodie sought to allay concerns about the impact of Mr. Obama and Ms. Clinton's assertion that they would re-negotiate NAFTA if elected. But they did say that Mr. Brodie had no recollection of discussing any specific candidate — either Ms. Clinton or Mr. Obama.

CTV News President Robert Hurst said he would not discuss his journalists' sources.

But others said the content of Mr. Brodie's remarks was passed on to CTV's Washington bureau and their White House correspondent set out the next day to pursue the story on Ms. Clinton's apparent hypocrisy on the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Although CTV correspondent Tom Clark mentioned Ms. Clinton in passing, the focus of his story was on assurances from the Obama camp.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Just For The Record

Deval Patrick Interview about Clinton’s Plagiarism Charges against Barack Obama





Update:

CLEVELAND — Hillary Rodham Clinton says reporters, not her campaign, uncovered evidence of Democratic rival Barack Obama sharing speech lines with Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick.

Update 2 :

Schumer: Plagiarism "not serious"
Chuck Schumer, supposedly a Hillary person, tells NY1 the Obama/Patrick word-borrowing flap is "not a serious issue."

And: “It’s going to be forgotten in about two weeks.”

Monday, February 18, 2008

NEWS: NYC Primary Recount Results Feb 26

Frankie Edozien, NY Post

...."Some gross mistakes have been made. Very often, there are clerical errors. In this case, it was strictly with regards to Obama." Perkins told The Post the issue is more than the "one or two delegates" that could be added to Obama's tally, noting that if the results were accurately represented, there would not have been a "false momentum" for Hillary Rodham Clinton.

"It reflects the popularity and the weakness to her in her home state. It contributes to a false momentum," he said.

A spokeswoman for the Board of Elections, Valerie Vasquez, stressed that the reported numbers are "unofficial." Official results will be announced on Feb. 26....

Continue reading

Good Morning

Barack Obama Responds to Hillary Clinton's Attack On Oratory and Hope— (9 min.)

Monday, February 11, 2008

Don't Worry Bill We Won't Forget Obama Is Black




Update: Its not just Bill making the point Barack is Black:

(Hillary) Clinton Insists Campaign Strong
She said she never expected to do well in any of those contests, even though she had been favored to win Maine. Clinton repeated her criticism that the caucus system is undemocratic and caters mostly to party activists.

As for Louisiana, "You had a very strong and very proud African- American electorate, which I totally respect and understand," Clinton said.

Continue Reading

Imus Interviews Tom Oliphant

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Nebraska Preliminary caucus results favor Obama

Barack Obama won 76 percent support today from caucusgoers in Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District.

The Omaha-based district includes Douglas County and almost all of Sarpy County.

In unofficial results announced by the Douglas County Democratic Party, Obama won 12,252 votes in the 2nd District to 3,709 for Hillary Clinton.

Statewide results will be announced later tonight by the Nebraska Democratic Party.



Nebraska Democrats overflow caucus sites

by Anna Jo Bratton/Associated Press

OMAHA — Thousands of people statewide overflowed school gyms, sat in traffic and stood in groups on Saturday to be counted as part of Nebraska’s first Democratic presidential caucus.....

.....
Law enforcement shut down Highway 370 and the intersection leading into the site — a school
cafeteria — because the area was packed with cars.....


Continue Reading

Who Will Gen. Colin Powell Vote For?



Friday, February 08, 2008

The Match-Up: McCain vs Obama/Clinton


MSNBC Interview with Mark Blumenthal, Pollster.Com

Time Poll Here

Update: MSNBC anchor quoted Peggy Noonan's editorial today “Mrs. Clinton is losing this thing. It's not one big primary, it's a rolling loss, a daily one, an inch-by-inch deflation” as a question when introducing a segment on the new Time poll.

Take the time to read Peggy's editorial "Can Mrs. Clinton Lose?" Here

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Provisional Ballots to Decide New Mexico Winner

Heather Clark, Huffington Post

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Democrats prepared Wednesday to examine nearly 17,000 provisional ballots that will determine a winner in New Mexico's tightly contested presidential caucus.

With 183 of 184 of precincts reporting, Hillary Rodham Clinton held a lead of 1,092 votes _ 67,921 votes compared to 66,829 for Barack Obama, according to preliminary results.

New Mexico is the only one of 22 states that held Democratic primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday yet to report a winner.

The examination of the provisional ballots, expected to begin Thursday, will be closed to the news media but will be attended by representatives from both the Obama and Clinton campaigns, party officials said.

Provisional ballots are given to voters who show up to the wrong site, whose names are not on registered voter lists provided by the state or who requested an absentee ballot but signed an affidavit saying they did not return it.

Contine reading

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Chucks Todd: Super Delegates Battle-Starts Saturday Pt.2

Obama Holds Slight Delegate Lead












Delegate Count at 1:02 AM EST W/out New Mexico and California

Obama: 659

Clinton: 623

Projected Count With New Mexico and California
Obama: 841

Clinton: 837


Obama:
AK, AL, CT, CO, DE, GA, ID, IL, KS, MN, MO, ND, UT
Clinton: AR, AZ, CA, MA, NY, NJ, OK, TN

Sen. Barack Obama:

-Won 43% of the WHITE vote in Georgia. 50% of the WHITE MALE vote in Georgia
-Won 40% of the Latinos in Arizona
-Won a majority of the White vote in New Mexico