Tag Archives: politico

Media That Accused Fox of Shilling for Bush Yawn at Zuckerman’s Ties to Obama

Days after Mort Zuckerman, the Editor-in-Chief of U.S. News and World Report,  claimed to be close to President Obama’s advisors, the national media have yet to express any interest. Of the few outlets that mentioned it, the White House’s denial was taken as gospel truth, and no more investigation was apparently warranted. What a difference when the sitting president is a Democrat. Under the Bush Administration, the media were obsessed with linking the White House to Fox News in an effort to accuse Republicans of spreading propaganda. Yet now that U.S. News is linked to Obama, suddenly such allegations are quickly dimissed. For a taste of the double standard, observe two different reports from Politico. First is a post on Tuesday concerning Zuckerman: Real Estate and media mogul Mort Zuckerman raised eyebrows all over yesterday with the claim on Fox that he “helped write one of [Obama’s] speeches,” and his subsequent refusal to go into it right now. Among those with reason to be puzzled, a White House source tells me, were Obama’s speechwriters, Jon Favreau and Ben Rhodes. Neither “has ever met or spoken to Mort Zuckerman” and the two have “been closely involved in every speech the President has given since 2005,” said the official. Zuckerman has met President Obama a few times and no doubt encountered other Administration officials, and he could well have suggested a theme to the president or another aide. But the question of what he “helped write”  remains a bit of a mystery. Those three small paragraphs comprise Ben Smith’s entire report. President Obama is denying the story, so that’s just that. Was that kind of trust extended to Republicans under President Bush? Not so much. Here’s Politico giving space to one Matt Stoller in 2007: First, we argued that Fox News is not a news channel, but a propaganda outlet that regularly distorts, spins, and falsifies information. Second, Fox News is heavily influenced or even controlled by the Republican Party itself. As such, we believe that Fox News on the whole functions as a surrogate operation for the GOP. Treating Fox as a legitimate news channel extends the Republican Party’s ability to swift-boat and discredit our candidates. In other words, Fox News is a direct pipeline of misinformation from the GOP leadership into the traditional press. So, we have a self-proclaimed fan of Obama working as Editor-in-Chief of a major newspaper, but Politico isn’t much worried about bias seeping onto his pages. But when Fox News is perceived as being in the tank for Republicans, it’s apparently okay to launch accusations against them. In 2002, the Washington Post’s Bob Woodward revealed that Fox News head Roger Ailes had written a letter to President Bush immediately after the attacks on September 11. Woodward portrayed it as improper contact between the White House and the press, but Ailes insisted it was nothing more than an emotional letter from a scared citizen following a terrorist attack. The media jumped all over the controversy with fervor. On November 21 of that year, PBS News Hour filed a report on the scandal, with host Terrence Smith asking bluntly “is that an appropriate role for a journalist,” which set up a nice tee for Woodward to reply “he’s not supposed to do it.” News Hour then provided input from Tucker Carlson: Roger Ailes is the editorial chief of fox news [sic], and this gives the appearance of partisanship. This is sucking up to power. Then CNN’s Arthel Neville: Does that shed new light on, “we report, you decide,” Jack? And of course an expert from Harvard: Mr. Ailes has had a very close relation with a number of Republican presidents. I doubt this is a letter — despite what he said in the Washington Post — I doubt this is a letter that he would have sent to [Democratic President] Bill Clinton. The current reaction to Zuckerman’s claim of advising public officials? Mostly crickets. Salon covered the incident if only to promptly insist “it is safe to say that this is not true” and Zuckerman’s rebuttal was “kind of sad.” A search for Mort Zuckerman on Google News reaps scant results, mostly from blogs, and certainly nothing like the accusations launched against Fox News. Curiously missing is someone to accuse Zuckerman of “sucking up” to Democrats. No one took to the airwaves of PBS to suggest he wouldn’t have offered speechwriting help to a Republican. And no one sat on the air at CNN asking if U.S. News & World Report could be trusted as unbiased news. Any news source that is perceived as being friendly to Republicans is presumed to be a propaganda wing for the GOP. Yet when a well-respected editor openly flaunts his support of a Democrat, the media’s reaction is a collective shrug. Americans will probably never get the truth about exactly how close Zuckerman is to the White House – and that’s the way the media want it.

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Media That Accused Fox of Shilling for Bush Yawn at Zuckerman’s Ties to Obama

Oops: Lib Columnist Bemoans Non-existent ‘All-white’ Senate

On Thursday, National Newspaper Publishers Association columnist Julianne Malveaux wrote that Marco Rubio, along with two Asian-American Senators, one Hispanic Senator, and two black Senate candidates are all in fact white men. Malveaux, also the president of Bennett College, decried the travails of Kendrick Meek, the black Democrat vying for his party’s nomination for US Senate in Florida. “If Meek can’t pull this one off,” Malveaux wrote, “the United States Senate will become, again, a segregated body.” She also used the terms “lily-white” and “all-white” to describe the racial makeup of a Meek-less Senate. Readers must be forgiven for their confusion, given that another candidate for Senate in Florida, Marco Rubio, is not white, but Hispanic. In fact, excluding Roland Burriss, Illinois’s lame duck Senator, the Senate has three non-white members: Daniel Inouye and Daniel Akaka of Hawaii are both of Asian descent, and Robert Menendez is of Hispanic descent. There are also black Senate candidates beyond Meek: Alvin Greene in South Carolina, and the less-known but infinitely more qualified Georgia Labor Commissioner Michael Thurmond. How to explain Malveaux’s bizarre contention? Your guess is as good as ours.

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Oops: Lib Columnist Bemoans Non-existent ‘All-white’ Senate

MSNBC Panel Members Aghast at Proposition that Obama Administration is Hostile to Business

Appearing on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” publisher Mort Zuckerman called the Obama administration out for being “without a doubt the most hostile administration to business and to the role of business that we’ve had in decades.” Panel members Mika Brzezinski and John Heilmann seemed shocked at the severity of the criticism, however. “Where is the hostility?” John Heilmann, columnist for New York Magazine, asked with incredulity. When Zuckerman responded that the administration deals with businessmen as shady characters trying to rip off the middle class, Heilmann simply called it rhetoric. “I don’t know if that’s a good use of words,” show host Mika Brzezinski remarked about Zuckerman’s claim of hostility. Heilmann claimed that the administration could definitely have been tougher on Wall Street. Its policy ended up “in a modest, moderate place,” he stated. “It ended up in the center, nowhere near as far to the left or the populist right as it could have,” remarked Heilmann on Obama’s dealings with Wall Street. Zuckerman is no Republican cheerleader, either, as his campaign donations would make it seem. The transcript of the segment, which aired on July 9 at 8:22 a.m. EDT, is as follows: JOHN HARRIS, Editor-in-Chief, Politico: The White House is concerned about the perception that it’s anti-business. I had an interview yesterday with Rahm Emanuel, who really underscores just how seriously they’re taking this. He responded with real heat to the perception that Obama is anti-business. He didn’t say this directly, but the clear message was “Would you guys just stop your whining? And don’t listen so much to the rhetoric about BP, or about Wall Street. Look at our policies.” He’s saying business should love us. The money and the stimulus package, most of that went to private sector companies to spend, so that was good. He said we didn’t take the more liberal positions on health care, went with an incrementalist plan. That’s good for business. Even the financial regulation, he says, gives business the sort of regulatory, clear expectations,.takes away uncertainty, the markets hate uncertainty, gives them the stability they need. He says business should love us. Of course, business does not love Obama. And incidentally, some of the things Rahm is saying, his own Democratic Party activists wouldn’t love. Because he’s talking about how Obama is free trade, and tough on teachers unions. (…) MORT ZUCKERMAN, Editor-in-Chief, U.S. News & World Report: I mean, I don’t know how [Rahm Emanuel] can make those allegations about the business world. It’s without question the most hostile administration to business and to the role of business that we’ve had in decades, and he’s saying it’s not hostile to business. It’s totally hostile to business. MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Hostile? JOHN HEILMANN: Where is the hostility? (Crosstalk) ZUCKERMAN: Where is the hostility? What are you talking about? Every time they make a reference – he just came out with a program for the expansion of exports. And you read, it says “we are not supporting those people, those unscrupulous, dishonest businessmen who are trying to rip off the middle class. No, no, no, we are going to help the other business people.” What is he talking about? JOHN HEILMANN: That’s rhetoric! That’s rhetoric! ZUCKERMAN: You let me tell you, rhetoric is damn important when you want to make a long-term investment. You want to have a sense of confidence. This has been the most anti-business administration. And the whole business community feels it. BRZEZINSKI: Did you feel that at the job summit, when you went there? ZUCKERMAN: You’re darn right I did. BRZEZINSKI: Wow. Okay. I don’t know if that’s a good use of words. HEILMANN: I’ve thought about this. I wrote a piece about this a while ago, about Wall Street and Obama. If you think about the existing political climate in the country, what the country would like to see done to Wall Street, what the Obama administration could have done politically, if it had wanted to, in terms of the populism out there in the country, it ended up in a modest, moderate place. It ended up in the center, nowhere near as far to the left or the populist right as it could have. PAT BUCHANAN: Oh it sounds like they got the worst of both worlds. If the business community thinks they’re hostile, and they didn’t get the populist community, who did they get? Ken Shepherd contributed to this report.

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MSNBC Panel Members Aghast at Proposition that Obama Administration is Hostile to Business

Five Out of Five Lib Journalists Agree: Obama’s Big Government Push Helps Dems in ’10!

On the syndicated Chris Matthews show over the weekend, Chris Matthews praised Barack Obama’s “legislative success” in getting all sorts of overbearing, big government laws passed and asked his panel to rate if those wins in Congress will lead to victory for the Democratic Party in the fall. Just before closing his show Matthews posed the following big question to HDNet’s Dan Rather, the BBC’s Katty Kay, CNN’s Gloria Borger and the Politico’s John Harris: “Will the President’s legislative success with the stimulus, with health care, with Wall Street reform and maybe even an energy bill be a net positive or negative for his party this fall?” The following are their individual responses as aired on the June 27 Chris Matthews Show: CHRIS MATTHEWS: Welcome back. This week another big feather in Barack Obama’s cap – Wall Street reform. Which brings us to our big question. Will the President’s legislative success with the stimulus, with health care, with Wall Street reform and maybe even an energy bill be a net positive or negative for his party this fall? Dan Rather? DAN RATHER, HDNET: Slight positive. MATTHEWS: Katty? KATTY KAY, BBC: Net positive. MATTHEWS: Gloria? GLORIA BORGER, CNN: I’m with Dan, slight positive. JOHN HARRIS, POLITICO: Positive. Takes away the Jimmy Carter ineffectual argument. MATTHEWS: Wow! Slight positive. Maybe just solid positive.

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Five Out of Five Lib Journalists Agree: Obama’s Big Government Push Helps Dems in ’10!

Washington Post, Fox News Cite MRC Vice President Dan Gainor in Weigel Resignation

The inside-the-beltway media world was turned on its head with leaked e-mails that revealed Washington Post blogger Dave Weigel had some disparaging things to say about prominent conservative figures, including Rush Limbaugh, Matt Drudge and Byron York. This ultimately resulted in Weigel’s resignation. However, some of Weigel’s antics have been previously raised by his critics , including Media Research Center Vice President Dan Gainor, who offered remarks to Washington Post ombudsman Andrew Alexander. Alexander included them in a June 25 post on his blog : With bloggers such as Weigel, “I think The Post needs to decide what it wants to be online,” said Dan Gainor, a vice president at the conservative Media Research Center. “Does it want to be opinion? Or, does it want to be news? The problem here was that it was never clear.” “If it’s going to be opinion, it ought to have somebody on the conservative side — something Dave Weigel never was,” he said. If The Post wants to assign a “good neutral reporter” to cover conservatives, “we’d be thrilled,” said Gainor. But quickly added, Weigel “wasn’t one. He looked at the conservative movement as if he was visiting a zoo. We’re more than that.” Gainor raises valid points. Klein’s blog posts clearly pass through a liberal prism. For that reason, liberals have a comfort level with what he writes, and conservatives know where he’s coming from, even if they disagree. In contrast, Weigel’s blog seemed to confuse many conservatives who contacted me. Was he supposed to be a neutral reporter, some wondered? Also picking up Gainor’s reaction to the Weigel incident was Fox News Channel’s June 25 “Special Report.” During the “Political Grapevine” segment, “Special Report” host Bret Baier offered viewers Gainor’s reaction. “A Washington Post blogger assigned to cover the conservative beat has resigned after e-mails he wrote surfaced that included disparaging comments about the very conservatives he was supposed to cover,” Baier said. “David Weigel’s e-mails to  JournoList, a listserv for liberal journalists were leaked Thursday. In them he wrote it would be a better world if Matt Drudge of the Drudge Report would quote, “Set himself on fire.” Weigel also wished for the death of Rush Limbaugh and accused pundits and Republicans of racism. Weigel did apologize on his blog before calling it quits.” “Ben Smith at the Politico blames the paper for hiring what he calls, quote, ‘A liberal blogger under the false impression that he’s a conservative.’ Dan Gainor of the Media Research Center goes further calling the incident ‘a disaster for the Post,’ writing, quote, ‘the Post brought in someone who tried to tear down conservatives and look at the right as if he were visiting a zoo.'”

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Washington Post, Fox News Cite MRC Vice President Dan Gainor in Weigel Resignation

MSNBC’s Matthews Compares Conservative Candidates to Suicide Bombers

“Being a suicide bomber is the new political role model,” Chris Matthews told his Friday “Hardball” audience. “Just kill everything, destroy everything, blow it up, nothing gets done. You’re dead, but who cares?” he added, referring to conservative Republicans running against Democrats in the 2010 midterms. The comment came at the end of a segment featuring Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.) and Politico’s Jim VandeHei. Matthews had complained to the latter that the congressional minority Republicans were intent not merely on tinkering around the edges of the majority Democrats’ policy proposals but on “destroy[ing] the United States government every time it gets up in the morning” all to the applause of “its cheering section back home say[ing] good work, keep trying to destroy the government.” [MP3 audio available here; WMV video available here ] VandeHei didn’t agree with Matthews’s “destroy the government” rhetoric about the GOP, although he agreed that the GOP was intent on “destroying” policies that President Obama supports. For his part, the Politico writer argued that the political system as it stands now is just geared towards extreme partisanship because in part moderates had been “purged” from the GOP but also because “right now we have an entire system, we have a media system, we have a culture, we have technology that really rewards the incendiary, [that] rewards conflict.” Given Matthews’s hyperbolic invective about “The Rise of the New Right,”   VandeHei might unwittingly be on to something, at least when it comes to the incendiary media.

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MSNBC’s Matthews Compares Conservative Candidates to Suicide Bombers

Breaking: WaPo’s David Weigel Resigns After More Conservative-bashing Emails Disclosed

Washington Post blogger Dave Weigel resigned today after a host of offensive e-mails surfaced revealing his disdain for much of the right – the beat he was charged with covering. Fishbowl DC, which published a number of those emails yesterday, confirmed the resignation with the Post just after noon. Yesterday I reported on leaked emails from Weigel to a listserve of liberal journalists bashing conservatives and conservatism – you know, the people Weigel is supposed to be covering. As bad as those email were, a plethora of messages from Weigel published in the Daily Caller take the conservative-bashing to a whole new level. The new emails also demonstrated that yesterday’s quasi-apology from Weigel was really not as sincere as he claimed. He said that he made some of his most offensive remarks at the end of a bad day. But these new emails show that there was really nothing unique about them, and that offensive remarks about conservatives really were nothing new or uncommon. Many of the misguided statements were clearly made in jest – “I hope he fails,” Weigel said of Rush Limbaugh after the radio host was hospitalized with chest pains, a reference to Limbaugh’s hope that Obama’s agenda would fail. But other bouts of name calling – ragging on the “outbursts of racism” from “amoral blowhard” Newt Gingrich, for instance – were obviously not jokes. The Daily Caller revealed some quite stunning statements from the JournoList in its piece today: “Honestly, it’s been tough to find fresh angles sometimes–how many times can I report that these [tea party] activists are joyfully signing up with the agenda of discredited right-winger X and discredited right-wing group Y?” Weigel lamented in one February email. In other posts, Weigel describes conservatives as using the media to “violently, angrily divide America.” According to Weigel, their motives include “racism” and protecting “white privilege,” and for some of the top conservatives in D.C., a nihilistic thirst for power. “There’s also the fact that neither the pundits, nor possibly the Republicans, will be punished for their crazy outbursts of racism. Newt Gingrich is an amoral blowhard who resigned in disgrace, and Pat Buchanan is an anti-Semite who was drummed out of the movement by William F. Buckley. Both are now polluting my inbox and TV with their bellowing and minority-bashing. They’re never going to go away or be deprived of their soapboxes,” Weigel wrote. Of Matt Drudge, Weigel remarked,  “It’s really a disgrace that an amoral shut-in like Drudge maintains the influence he does on the news cycle while gay-baiting, lying, and flubbing facts to this degree.”… Republicans? “Ratf–king [Obama] on every bill.” Palin? Tried to “ratf–k” a moderate Republican in a contentious primary in New York. Limbaugh? Used “ratf–king tactics” in urging Republican activists to vote for Hillary Clinton in open primaries after Obama had all but beat her for the Democratic nomination. Weigel continued to defend these outbursts, as he did when contacted by the Daily Caller. “My reporting, I think, stands for itself,” he said. “I’ve always been of the belief that you could have opinions and could report anyway… people aren’t usually asked to stand or fall on everything they’ve said in private.” First, there’s the issue of whether anything said on a 400-member email list can really be considered “private.” “There’s no such thing as off-the-record with 400 people,” Nation columnist Eric Alterman told Politico . But the real issues are, first, whether such mean-spirited jabs demonstrate a disdain for many conservatives that precludes Weigel from covering them fairly (he did label gay marriage opponents “bigots,” after all), and second, whether the Post feels it is appropriate to have someone hostile to the right covering conservatism, while a through-and-through liberal in Ezra Klein covers the left. The Post signaled that it did not consider Weigel’s comments to be a serious problem. It seems that attitude has changed. Managing Editor Raju Narisetti told Politico that “Dave’s apology to readers reflects he understands, in calmer hindsight, the need to exercise good judgment at all times and of not throwing stones, especially when operating from inside an echo-filled glass house that is modern-day digital journalism.” He added that it was “time to move on.”

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Breaking: WaPo’s David Weigel Resigns After More Conservative-bashing Emails Disclosed

CNN Mocks Obama Golfing During Oil Spill: ‘Just Plug the Darn Hole Mr. President’

CNN on Tuesday actually noticed the absurdity of folks bashing BP CEO Tony Hayward for yachting on the same day President Obama was golfing. National correspondent Jeanne Moos surprisingly began her “American Morning” piece, “It’s the yachting versus golf smack down, round one.” After showing average Americans complaining about Hayward’s R&R, Moos quipped, “But before you could spell BP CEO, President Obama’s golfing came under attack.” Children were shown expressing their displeasure with the Golfer in Chief, “In the two hours it takes to golf or to go yachting another one to 10,000 gallons of oil can leak out.” This led Moos to marvelously conclude, “Just plug the darn hole Mr. President” (video follows with transcript and commentary, h/t Hot Air’s Ed Morrissey ):  JEANNE MOOS, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): It’s the yachting versus golf smack down, round one. BP’s CEO gets pummeled for taking a day off to watch his yacht race. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: How dare he just take off. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The height of stupidity. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How do you spell fool? MOOS: But before you could spell BP CEO, President Obama’s golfing came under attack. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Almost five hours on the golf course with Biden. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: And it should have been eight times between — MOOS: Actually, seven times. CBS White House correspondent, Mark Knoller, says already President Obama has played 39 rounds of golf compared to the 24 George Bush played his entire presidency, including some that got into a Michael Moore film. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Stop these terrorist killers. Thank you. Now watch this drive. MOOS: Some equate President Obama’s golf to Tony Hayward’s yachting, two different men, two different jobs, one management style, the president’s defenders note a big difference. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That’s the thing. He didn’t create that mess that is there. What do they want the man to do? Put a wet suit on and go down there and fix the pipe. MOOS: Meanwhile, Politico pondered the really important question, why is Tony Hayward’s yacht named Bob? Wondering if it had anything to do with the Bill Murray movie, “What About Bob?” Sailors so scared he has to be lashed to the mast. Now, Tony Hayward is being lashed. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I really think it was a disgrace. MOOS: On the other hand, surprisingly (ph), it was the first day off he’s had in two months. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I really don’t care. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Too bad. Look what he did. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I’ll be damned if his life is a day off (ph). UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I think he’s probably do for a little down time. MOOS: But down time on the water can be a downer. Remember when presidential candidate, John Kerry, went wind surfing and it ended up in an attack ad. BP CEO is being mocked in an animation by a Taiwanese tabloid website. He sits on the beach, sending out a drink to a guy — drowning an oil from the mounts of bays (ph). UNIDENTIFIED KID: My mom doesn’t take a break like every two months. You don’t really need to take a break every two months to go and see a yacht race. UNIDENTIFIED KID: In the two hours, it takes to golf or to go yachting another one to 10,000 gallons of oil can leak out. UNIDENTIFIED KID: President Obama, I’m not sure he should actually be golfing right now. MOOS: Just plug the darn hole Mr. President. Jeanne Moos, CNN, New York. Readers should notice at 1:37 a screen shot of a NewsBusters piece on this subject published Sunday. Thanks for the plug, Jeanne – and NICE report. 

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CNN Mocks Obama Golfing During Oil Spill: ‘Just Plug the Darn Hole Mr. President’

On Hardball: Obama Too Cautious About Exerting His Power

Newsweek’s Howard Fineman, on Monday’s Hardball, pushed Barack Obama to “overdo” and “overstep” in his efforts to get BP to plug the leak and stop the oil spill in the Gulf, something Fineman claimed Obama hadn’t done yet because “he’s usefully and rightfully dangerous about power. I think he thought…George W. Bush overstepped in terms of executive power…he’s an observer by nature.” This observation from Fineman seems particularly odd, as it comes at the same time the President has pushed for a $50 billion in additional domestic spending. Fineman made the comment after the Politico’s Roger Simon insisted there’s only so much Obama can do, as he insisted: “He’s not Iron Man. He cannot dive a mile underwater and stop this by himself.” However host Chris Matthews asserted Obama could do more and he asked if the President will be “tough” and “really threaten BP” and openly wondered: “Does he know he’s a powerful man?” After Fineman responded that Obama needs to “overstep” a concerned Matthews questioned: “Even at the risk of being called a socialist again?” The following exchanges were aired on the June 14 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: I guess the first question is can this president honestly claim he has command and control when it looks like BP is the boss? ROGER SIMON, POLITICO: No, he can’t. And he said in the interview that “We analyzed the problem and we had no greater ability to stop the leak than BP did, so we’re gonna let BP do it.” And he can’t control BP. MATTHEWS: Well looking down the road is BP going to be the big shot, and he’s going to be, as I call him, the Vatican observer watching them do what they do? And that’s all he can do. SIMON: All he can do is threaten them. All he can do is send the attorney general down there. All he can do is threaten to, to depress their stock price to such an extent they’ll go belly up. But that’s all he can do. He’s not Iron Man. He cannot dive a mile underwater and stop this by himself. … MATTHEWS: Howard, the question I have is what can he do? I’m looking back to history. I’m a political person, not an oil person, as we all are. Harry Truman, the coal miners wouldn’t mine coal after World War II. He, he conscripted them all. He drafted them. When Big Steel raised its prices and sort of, Kennedy felt was screwing them, basically, he said “Okay I’m sending the IRS to your house. I’m gonna see if you got any, any action with your secretaries at work.” He was unbelievable! He went after them and said, “Bob McNamara don’t buy any more steel from U.S. Steel.” I mean he was unbelievable. Will this president be that tough? Will he threaten, really threaten BP with all the actions of an Executive? HOWARD FINEMAN, NEWSWEEK: Well if he, if he does he’ll only be dragged kicking and screaming into it because that’s just Barack Obama’s nature. He’s judicious. MATTHEWS: Does he know he’s a powerful man? FINEMAN: He’s, he’s an observer. I think he’s usefully and rightfully dangerous about power. I think he thought George Bush, George W. Bush overstepped in terms of executive power. And it’s also, he’s an observer by nature. But before I continue I just want to say that Roger, whom I’ve known for decades, is the best in the business and we’re so happy to have him back. And, and he’s seen this before. He’s seen presidents who use power or don’t use power. If you don’t use it, you lose it. Barack Obama should overdo. He should overstep. MATTHEWS: Even at the risk of being called a socialist again? FINEMAN: Even at the risk of having a lawsuit filed against him. The Army should be in there. The Navy should be in there. They should- MATTHEWS: Okay you agree with Roger, you agree- FINEMAN: You know, and by the way BP is not in danger of going broke tomorrow. SIMON: Right. FINEMAN: But yet Obama is putting this whole escrow idea out there, so that BP can possibly do its dividend on June 21st.

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On Hardball: Obama Too Cautious About Exerting His Power