Tag Archives: senator

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

CBO Says Climate Bill Will Cut Deficit, Emissions Set To Rise

photo via flickr There’s a lot of jostling right now in the Senate for lead position on energy reform. Just which Senator will catch the eye of President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Reid and get their bill picked is anyone’s guess. Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) received welcome news today when the Congressional Budget Office scored their bill and said that it would cut the deficit by $19 billion over the next decade. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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CBO Says Climate Bill Will Cut Deficit, Emissions Set To Rise

Former Time Reporter Carlson: I Would Vote for Kagan ‘Twice’

During the July 2 edition of Bloomberg Television’s Political Capital, Bloomberg News columnist Margaret Carlson exalted Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan. Carlson stated she would vote for Kagan “twice” because “It has been so long since I saw someone in public life joyful about being there.” The gushing didn’t stop there for Carlson who continued to adorn Kagan for her impeccable “intellectual ability” and “temperament,” despite admitting that there was little substance known about Kagan. This however was not important to Carlson who then proceeded to fawn over Kagan’s joke that “brought the house down.” Carlson ended by blaming Republicans as one of the reasons Kagan wouldn’t receive an almost unanimous decision to the court, similar to Justice Scalia. However, National Review Editor Kate O’Bierne pointed out that the fundamental reason some Republicans were going to vote against Kagan was because of a “deep respect for the Constitution” and Kagan would, “fall into the liberal mistake of wanting laws to reach certain results and go there whether or not the Constitution permits it.”

Krugman: ‘Heartless, Clueless and Confused’ GOP Block Unemployment Benefits

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman is angry the Senate hasn’t once again extended unemployment benefits, and he’s blaming “heartless, clueless and confused” Republicans. “There was a time when everyone took it for granted that unemployment insurance, which normally terminates after 26 weeks, would be extended in times of persistent joblessness. It was, most people agreed, the decent thing to do,” the Nobel laureate wrote Monday. “Yet the Senate went home for the holiday weekend without extending benefits. How was that possible?” asked Krugman. Unfortunately, his answer will be quite disturbing to most on the right: [W]e’re facing a coalition of the heartless, the clueless and the confused. Nothing can be done about the first group, and probably not much about the second. But maybe it’s possible to clear up some of the confusion.  By the heartless, I mean Republicans who have made the cynical calculation that blocking anything President Obama tries to do – including, or perhaps especially, anything that might alleviate the nation’s economic pain – improves their chances in the midterm elections. Don’t pretend to be shocked: you know they’re out there, and make up a large share of the G.O.P. caucus. By the clueless I mean people like Sharron Angle, the Republican candidate for senator from Nevada, who has repeatedly insisted that the unemployed are deliberately choosing to stay jobless, so that they can keep collecting benefits. But there are also, one hopes, at least a few political players who are honestly misinformed about what unemployment benefits do – who believe, for example, that Senator Jon Kyl, Republican of Arizona, was making sense when he declared that extending benefits would make unemployment worse, because “continuing to pay people unemployment compensation is a disincentive for them to seek new work.” In reality, Krugman is the clueless and confused person in this discussion, as well as disingenuous. Utilizing his classic bias by omission strategy, he led readers to believe that the unemployed haven’t gotten any benefits extensions up to this point, and that Republicans have been blocking them for years, But nothing can be further from the truth. As the Wall Street Journal reported in November: The latest extension of unemployment benefits couldn’t come at a better time, it seems; President Barack Obama signed legislation into law Friday providing an additional 14 to 20 weeks of benefits for those who have already exhausted theirs or will do so by year-end. The extension comes on the same day the Labor Department announced the U.S. unemployment rate hit 10.2% in October, crossing into double-digits for the first time in 26 years as the nation’s jobless swelled to 15.7 million. The bill, passed earlier this week by both the Senate and the House of Representatives, extends federal jobless benefits by 14 weeks for Americans in all 50 states who face exhaustion before year-end, and by 20 weeks for those living in states where the unemployment rate is 8.5% or higher. And here’s the inconvenient truth Krugman and his ilk want to hide as they point fingers at “heartless, clueless and confused” Republicans:   The additional 20 weeks in hard-hit states means the maximum a person in one of those states could receive is now up to 99 weeks, or nearly two years – the most in history. That’s right: some unemployed Americans have been receiving benefits for almost two years, and that is longest in our nation’s history. Kind of tramples Krugman’s “heartless” position, doesn’t it? Taking this a step further, the Welfare Reform Act of 1996 stipulated that most adult welfare recipients have to find work within two years of the start of their benefits. This means that in theory, even our nation’s poor are required to find jobs at some point in the future.   Shouldn’t that apply to folks across all income strata? In the end, Republicans as a whole aren’t typically against extending unemployment benefits when economic conditions warrant such action. However, two years seems like a fine deadline to give people to find a job. After all, despite the contention by the Left that this is the worst recession since the Depression, unemployment still hasn’t risen to levels we saw in the early ’80s. With this in mind, why should unemployment benefits last longer now than they did then? Sadly, the clueless and confused Krugman didn’t answer that question. Color me unsurprised. 

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Krugman: ‘Heartless, Clueless and Confused’ GOP Block Unemployment Benefits

Networks Mostly Skip Tense Kagan Exchange Over Abortion Memo, Downplay Hearings

Wednesday’s evening news shows and Thursday’s morning programs continued to minimize or leave out important moments of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan’s confirmation hearings. ABC’s Good Morning America, for instance, has offered only 67 seconds of coverage over three days. Today and The Early Show each provided a single 10 second news brief on Thursday. It’s not as though the second day of testimony lacked interesting developments. The New York Times on July 1 reported the intense questioning by Senator Orrin Hatch on an abortion memo written by then-Clinton White House Counsel Kagan. Hatch demanded, “Did you write that memo?…But did you write it? Is it your memo?” Kagan’s memo worried that a American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) report on abortion could be a “disaster” for the Clinton administration. None of the morning shows on Thursday mentioned the exchange between Hatch and Kagan. On Wednesday, only CBS’s Evening News raised the subject. Reporter Jan Crawford observed, “But when Senators tried to pin her down on other specific issues, she sidestepped. On whether she helped craft strategies supporting partial-birth abortion-” She then broke off and featured a clip of Hatch grilling. Crawford herself allowed that “over three days, there were plenty of tense and testy moments.” Apparently these examples were not interesting enough for ABC. In addition to only allowing 67 seconds on GMA, World News skipped the hearings completely. NBC’s Nightly News provided a more generalized account of the second day on hearings. Ignoring the abortion issue, correspondent Pete Williams explained that Kagan appeared “to back away from the position she expressed last year on gay marriage.” On another issue, Williams added, “But she very clearly rejected something she once wrote as a student. In a college paper, she had said judges have ‘authority to make social changes,’ power that ‘becomes irresistible.'” Nightly News, as well as the morning shows, also ignored ignored a clip of Kagan telling senators, “I’ve been a Democrat all my life. I’ve worked for two Democratic Presidents, and those are, you know, that’s what my political views are.” Only the Evening News noted the remark.  For more on Kagan’s abortion memo, see a CNSNews.com article on the topic: Three years after ACOG released its statement on partial-birth abortion — that included verbatim the words that had been the handwritten notes in Kagan’s White House files — the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Stenberg v. Carhart, which declared Nebraska’s ban on partial-birth abortion unconstitutional. Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the Court’s decision in the case, quoting verbatim the passage from the ACOG statement on intact dilatation and extraction abortion that had originally appeared in the handwritten notes in Elena Kagan’s files released by the Clinton Presidential Library. Breyer wrote: “The District Court also noted that a select panel of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists concluded that D&X ‘may be the best or most appropriate procedure in a particular circumstance to save the life or preserve the health of a woman.’” “The picture that’s emerging,” says National Right to Life Legislative Director Douglas Johnson, reflecting on Kagan’s Clinton White House files, is that “it appears that Kagan was perhaps the key strategist in blocking enactment of the partial-birth abortion ban act.” Johnson also said he believes that Kagan had “her hands on this from the beginning to the end.” A transcript of the Evening News segment, which aired at on June 30, follows: SCOTT PELLEY: On Capitol Hill today, Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan parried her way through her last day of confirmation hearings. Back in the 1990s when Kagan was an assistant law professor, she complained that such Senate hearings are, quote, “a vapid and hollow charade” because the nominees refuse to say anything of substance. Oh, how things change when you’re sitting in the witness chair. Here’s our chief legal correspondent Jan Crawford. JAN CRAWFORD: Over three days, there were plenty of tense and testy moments. SENATOR JON KYL (R-AZ): I absolutely disagree with you about that. SENATOR ARLEN SPECTER (D-PA): Apparently I’m not going to get an answer there, either. CRAWFORD: She defended her record on military recruiting at Harvard. SENATOR JON CORNYN (R-TX): It strikes me that the sole result and impact was to stigmatize the United States military on the campus. ELENA KAGAN: It certainly was not to stigmatize the military. And every time I talked about this policy and many times besides I talked about the honor I had for the military. CRAWFORD: But when Senators tried to pin her down on other specific issues, she sidestepped. On whether she helped craft strategies supporting partial-birth abortion. SENATOR ORRIN HATCH (R-UT): Did you write that memo? KAGAN: Senator, with respect, I don’t think that that’s what happened. HATCH: But did you write it? Is it your memo? KAGAN: The document is certainly in my handwriting. CRAWFORD: On gay marriage. SENATOR CHARLES GRASSLEY (R-IA): Do you believe that marriage is a question reserved for the states to decide? KAGAN: There is, of course, a case coming down the road, and I want to be extremely careful about this question. CRAWFORD: But on some things, Kagan was blunt. KAGAN: I’ve been a Democrat all my life. I’ve worked for two Democratic Presidents, and those are, you know, that’s what my political views are. SENATOR LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-SC): And would you consider your political views progressive? KAGAN: My political views are generally progressive, generally- CRAWFORD: She also showed real savvy, deftly deflecting Democrats’ criticisms of the Roberts court. KAGAN: I’m not agreeing to your characterizations of the current court. I think that that would be inappropriate for me to do- SENATOR SHELDON WHITEHOUSE (D-RI): I understand that. KAGAN: -and I’m sure that everybody up there is acting in good faith. CRAWFORD: And mixed with the serious exchanges was humor, something nominees typically are cautioned to avoid in case a joke backfires. SENATOR TOM COBURN (R-OK): I’m 12 or 13 years older than you. KAGAN: Maybe not after this hearing. COBURN: No, I’m sure I’m older. GRAHAM: Where are you at on Christmas Day? KAGAN: You know, like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant. (AUDIENCE LAUGHTER) CRAWFORD: But without a misstep, Kagan seemed headed for easy confirmation. SENATOR DIANNE FEINSTEIN (D-CA): If you were confirmed – and I believe you’re going to be- CRAWFORD: One reason Republicans are unlikely to put up a fight is that she’s replacing a liberal. She won’t change the balance of the court. GRAHAM: So I wish you well and I know your family is proud of you and I think you’ve acquitted yourself very well. CRAWFORD: So is this a charade, Scott? Well, even Kagan herself admitted there’s no real upside to answering specific questions. It’s a successful strategy not to, and it looks like it’s going to work in her case as well.

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Networks Mostly Skip Tense Kagan Exchange Over Abortion Memo, Downplay Hearings

Supreme Court Nominee Elena Kagan Dodges ‘Twilight’ Debate

Senator asks solicitor general about ‘famous case of Edward vs. Jacob’ during confirmation hearing. By Gil Kaufman U.S. Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan at her Senate Hearing on Thursday Photo: Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images She faced tough questions on abortion, banning military recruiters from campus and a host of other constitutional issues during her two days in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee. And, like most recent Supreme Court nominees, Solicitor General Elena Kagan declined to offer her opinions on issues that might come up before the court should she be confirmed for a spot on the nation’s top bench. She swatted away tough questions from a number of Republican inquisitors with a smile and good humor. But when it came to the most crucial issue of our time, the question that has vexed so many (OK, not a single one) previous Supreme Court nominees — is she Team Jacob or Team Edward? — Kagan refused to bend. Kagan professed she was not really aware of the “Twilight” phenomenon when asked a question about which team she was on by Minnesota Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar. “Solicitor General Kagan, you had an incredibly grueling day yesterday and did incredibly well,” Klobuchar said. “But I guess it means you missed the midnight debut of the third ‘Twilight’ movie last night. We did not miss it in our household, and it culminated in three 15-year-old girls sleeping over at three a.m.” “I didn’t see that,” Kagan laughed. “I just had a feeling. I keep wanting to ask you about the famous case of Edward vs. Jacob or the vampire vs. the werewolf,” Klobuchar said on Wednesday. With a smile, Kagan said, “I wish you wouldn’t.” And so, as with Lady Gaga , we may never know which side Kagan lands on in the vampires vs. werewolves debate, but at least we know she got asked the tough questions. What team do you think Solicitor General Kagan is on? Should it make a difference in her confirmation to the Supreme Court? Let us know by leaving a comment below. Related Photos ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse’

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Supreme Court Nominee Elena Kagan Dodges ‘Twilight’ Debate

Network Morning Shows Laud the Comedy of ‘Lively,’ SNL-worthy Kagan

All three morning shows on Wednesday made sure to tout the “lively” sense of humor of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan, this as ABC continued to ignore the hearings. Over two days, Good Morning America has devoted a scant 67 seconds to Barack Obama’s nominee. After a news brief featuring Kagan cracking jokes at her hearings, former Democratic operative George Stephanopoulos gushed, “… If this Supreme Court thing doesn’t work out, she’s got another career in stand-up .” [Audio available here .]  Guest host Elizabeth Vargas hyperbolically asserted that Saturday Night Live couldn’t “be as funny as Elena Kagan was!” Today’s Kelly O’Donnell prefaced clips of Kagan’s humor by fawning, “But the real surprise has been that both Democrats and Republicans found something to smile about.” She added, “And there were actually a number of other of those kinds of personable, humorous exchanges and maybe some of that came out because it was such a grind, more than 10 hours.” Over on CBS’s Early Show, reporter Jan Crawford warned that “aggressive” Republicans were on the “attack.” She observed, “But Kagan was blunt and didn’t hide her background.” Crawford, too, highlighted Kagan’s comedy: “And while the day was dominated by tough questions, there were moments of levity.” The journalist enthused, “On one point, both sides agreed.” She then played a clip of Senator Arlen Specter touting the nominee’s “admirable sense of humor.” Crawford did note that Kagan wasn’t entirely forthcoming. Referencing the fact that the potential judge has previously called such hearings a charade, the reporter concluded, “…So she really did that dance that we’ve seen from nominees year after year after year up here.” Due to the almost non-existent nature of ABC’s coverage, the program skipped any mention of Kagan’s testimony on Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell. The Early Show reported her statement of opposition to it. Today’s O’Donnell featured this exchange: KELLY O’DONNELL: In the most intense exchange, the committee’s top Republican, Jeff Sessions, pounded Kagan for restricting where on campus where the military could recruit when she was dean at Harvard Law. SEN. JEFF SESSIONS: You were punishing the military. O’DONNELL: Kagan insisted recruiters had access to students. She said the military ban on gays serving openly conflicted with Harvard’s anti-discrimination policy. KAGAN: I have repeatedly said that I believe that the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy is unwise and unjust. I believed it then and I believe it now. SESSIONS: I know you were an outspoken leader against the military policy. For a recap of Tuesday’s morning show coverage of Kagan, see an earlier NewsBusters post. A transcript of ABC’s brief segment, which aired at 7:14am, follows: JUJU CHANG: Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan faces what is likely her final round of questioning from senators today. Her first day of confirmation testimony was long and, at times, tense. But, Kagan proves she has a lively sense of humor. SENATOR LINDSEY GRAHAM: Where are you at on Christmas day? ELENA KAGAN: You know, like all Jews, I was probably in a Chinese restaurant. SENATOR ARLEN SPECTER: You’ve already said you’re in favor of televising the court. KAGAN: It means I would have to get my hair done more often, Senator Specter. SENATOR ORRIN HATCH: We have to have a back and forth every once in a while. Or this place would be boring as hell, I’ll tell you. KAGAN: And it gets the spotlight off me. CHANG [Laughs]: That’s the news at 7:15. Excellent ad-libs. But the real question, George and Elizabeth, is who is going to play her in the SNL skit? ELIZABETH VARGAS: Oh, it’s ripe for it, isn’t it? Although, I don’t think they could be as funny as Elena Kagan was! GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Yeah, if this Supreme Court thing doesn’t work out, she’s got another career in stand-up. VARGAS: Absolutely.

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Network Morning Shows Laud the Comedy of ‘Lively,’ SNL-worthy Kagan

As Much on Byrd’s Fiddle Playing as Klan Days; ‘Like Constitution and Bible, Permanent Fixture of the Senate’

The networks Monday night skipped lightly over the late Senator Robert Byrd’s segregationist and racist record, devoting as much time to the Democrat’s fiddle-playing prowess as his years in the Ku Klux Klan, which CBS’s Chip Reid excused as “an effort to help his political career.” Leading into file video of Byrd playing his fiddle, ABC anchor Diane Sawyer declared “Byrd was a powerhouse and old-fashioned crowd-pleaser on the stump, whipping out his fiddle.” Though Byrd is the only Senator to have voted against both Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas, Cokie Roberts asserted that “as the country changed, Robert Byrd changed with it. He readily endorsed Barack Obama for President.” After touting how by “writing several volumes of Senate history” Byrd had followed in Caesar’s “footsteps,” she concluded: “Like the Constitution and the bible, Robert Byrd will be a permanent fixture of the Senate.” On CBS, Reid also stressed the fiddle-playing: “Byrd grew up in poverty in the coal fields of West Virginia where he learned to play the fiddle. For decades, he used it to entertain audiences on the campaign trail.” Reid later recalled: His life was not without mistakes. He joined the Ku Klux Klan as a young man, an effort to help his political career — a decision that haunted him all his life. He also participated in the historic filibuster against the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He later apologized for both actions and became a strong advocate of civil rights. Since he’s a Democrat, all is forgiven. The full coverage on the Monday, June 28 World News on ABC: DIANE SAWYER: An historic passing to note. On the same day Alaska became a state, Robert Byrd of West Virginia was sworn in as a U.S. Senator. Byrd died early today at the age of 92, the longest-serving member of Congress in history. His Senate desk draped in black bunting. Byrd was a powerhouse and old-fashioned crowd pleaser on the stump, whipping out his fiddle. Our Cokie Roberts remembers an icon now. COKIE ROBERTS: Though most politicians tout their humble beginnings, Robert Byrd was the real deal. An orphan raised dirt poor who never went to college, but went to Congress. In early days, he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan and filibustered against civil rights. He later apologized for his Klan membership. ROBERT BYRD: It was a mistake and one that I have greatly regretted over the years. ROBERTS: And as the country changed, Robert Byrd changed with it. He readily endorsed Barack Obama for President. And though he had supported the Vietnam war he became a forceful voice against the Iraq war. BYRD: Why is war being dealt with not as a last resort but as a first resort? ROBERTS: He never forgot the voters of West Virginia who saw more than $3 billion in federal funds come their way. It was, however, the United States Senate that mattered most to Byrd. He lauded the institution and often lectured it. BYRD: Caesar showed himself at this time to be also a historian. ROBERTS: Byrd followed in the Roman’s footsteps, writing several volumes of Senate history, reminding his colleagues and the country that the institution is more important than politics or Presidents. That’s why he always carried the Constitution, which names Byrd’s beloved Congress as the first branch of government. BYRD: I say we ought to read the Constitution more. ROBERTS: And, like the Constitution and the bible, Robert Byrd will be a permanent fixture of the Senate.

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As Much on Byrd’s Fiddle Playing as Klan Days; ‘Like Constitution and Bible, Permanent Fixture of the Senate’

Senator Robert C. Byrd Dead at 92 [And Now He’s Dead]

West Virginia Senator Robert C. Byrd died today at age 92, after being hospitalized for heat exhaustion and severe dehydration last week. Byrd was the longest serving member of Congress in US history. [ Washington Post ] More

Networks Lauding ‘Brilliant’ Obama on Petraeus Move Are Skipping Over Ugly Anti-Surge Clips

While the television networks were doing an Obama Superiority Dance, proclaiming the president’s firing Gen. Stanley McChrystal and replacing him with Gen. David Petraeus was “brilliant,” something was missing in the coverage. That was a sense that if Petraeus is universally honored as the savior of Iraq, why do the networks all forget it was Obama and Biden who suggested Petraeus and his surge was a bad idea a few years ago? On NBC, Chuck Todd was promoting it as a “commander-in-chief moment.” Mr. Todd, please read a piece of this Meet the Press interview from September 7, 2008, with appreciation for fill-in host Tom Brokaw actually pushing new V.P. nominee Joe Biden about whether the surge and its architect deserved any credit for improvements in Iraq. Biden didn’t want to cry uncle: BROKAW: Here you were, just one year ago, on Meet the Press. This was your take on the surge at that time, so let’s listen to that, Senator. “I mean, the truth of the matter is this administration’s policy and the surge are a failure,” you said, “and that the surge, which was supposed to stop sectarian violence and – long enough to give political reconciliation, there has been no political reconciliation.” Then you went on to say earlier in the year, “General Petraeus believes that it is a good idea, the surge. He may be the only one who believes that. Virtually no one else believes it’s a good idea .” Well, at the time, John McCain did, and all the indications are the surge has worked up to a point. It’s not a victory, as Senator Lindsey Graham said the other night… BIDEN: Or as John McCain said. BROKAW: Or John McCain said, but the conditions are in place, and Anbar province, where you have been, where there had been so much difficulty, the Iraqis now have taken over that province. We have brigades that have Sunnis and Shia serving side by side… BIDEN: Not many. BROKAW: …fighting the terrorists. But it’s a process, and it’s beginning, and the surge made that possible, did it not? BIDEN: No. The surge helped make that–what made is possible in Anbar province is they did what I’d suggested two and a half years ago: gave local control. They turned over and they said to the Sunnis in Anbar province, “We promise you, don’t worry, you’re not going to have any Shia in here. There’s going to be no national forces in here. We’re going to train your forces to help you fight al-Qaeda.” And that you–what you had was the Awakening. The Awakening was not an awakening by us, it was an awakening of the Sunnis in Anbar province willing to fight. BROKAW: Cooperating with the Shia. BIDEN: Willing to fight. Cooperating with–no, they weren’t cooperating with Shiite. They didn’t cooperate with the Shiites. BROKAW: Once the Awakening got under way. BIDEN: No, no, no. No, they didn’t cooperate with the Shiites. It’s still–it’s a big problem, Tom. You got–we’re paying 300 bucks a month to each of those guys. Now the problem has been and the, and the promise was made by Maliki that they would be integrated into the overall military. That’s a process that is beginning in fits and starts now, but it’s far from over. Far from–look, the bottom line here is that it’s–let’s–the surge is over. Here’s the real point. Whether or not the surge worked is almost irrelevant now. We’re in a new deal. This is where the laugh track should have started. “Whether or not the surge worked is almost irrelevant now.” Except that you said Gen. Petraeus was a crazy lone wolf in arguing for it, and now Biden was looking silly. But he actually dug a bigger hole, crediting Obama and not Petraeus for successes in Iraq: BIDEN: What is the administration doing? They’re doing what Barack Obama has suggested over 14 months ago, turn responsibility over and draw down our troops. We’re about to get a deal from the president of the United States and Maliki, the head of the Iraqi government, that’s going to land on my desk as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee saying we’re going to set a timeline to draw down our forces. The only guy in America out of step is John McCain. John McCain’s saying no timeline. They’ve signed on to Barack Obama’s proposal. BROKAW: But the surge helped make that timeline possible, did it not? BIDEN: Well, it did help make it possible. It did help. But it’s not the reason. It can’t be that hard for Todd and NBC researchers to dig up their own footage and look at it again. Were Obama and Biden “brilliant” back then? Or do good reporters never remember what happened before last week?

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Networks Lauding ‘Brilliant’ Obama on Petraeus Move Are Skipping Over Ugly Anti-Surge Clips