PARTICIPANTS:
SENATOR HILLARY
CLINTON (D-NY)
SENATOR BARACK OBAMA (D-IL)
MODERATORS:
BRIAN WILLIAMS, NBC
NEWS ANCHOR
TIM RUSSERT, NBC NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF
MR. WILLIAMS: A lot has been said since we last gathered in this
forum, certainly since -- in the few days since you two last debated.
Senator Clinton, in your comments especially, the difference has been
striking. And let's begin by taking a look.
SEN. CLINTON: (From videotape.) You know, no matter what
happens in this contest -- and I am honored, I am honored to be here
with Barack Obama. I am absolutely honored. (Cheers, applause.)
(From videotape.) So shame on you, Barack Obama. It is time you
ran a campaign consistent with your messages in public. That's what I
expect from you. Meet me in Ohio. Let's have a debate about your
tactics and your -- (cheers, applause).
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator Clinton, we're here in Ohio. Senator
Obama is here. This is the debate. You would agree the difference in
tone over just those 48 hours was striking.
SEN. CLINTON: Well, this is a contested campaign. And as I have
said many times, I have a great deal of respect for Senator Obama, but
we have differences. And in the last several days, some of those
differences in tactics and the choices that Senator Obama's campaign
has made regarding flyers and mailers and other information that has
been put out about my health care plan and my position on NAFTA have
been very disturbing to me.
And therefore, I think it's important that you stand up for yourself
and you point out these differences so that voters can have the
information they need to make a decision.
You know, for example, it's been unfortunate that Senator Obama
has consistently said that I would force people to have health care
whether they could afford it or not. You know, health care reform and
achieving universal health care is a passion of mine. It is something
I believe in with all my heart. And every day that I'm campaigning,
and certainly here throughout Ohio, I've met so many families --
happened again this morning in Lorain -- who are just devastated
because they don't get the health care they deserve to have.
And unfortunately it's a debate we should have that is accurate and is
based in facts about my plan and Senator Obama's plan, because my plan
will cover everyone and it will be affordable. And on many occasions,
independent experts have concluded exactly that.
And Senator Obama's plan does not cover everyone. It would
leave, give or take, 15 million people out. So we should have a good
debate that uses accurate information, not false, misleading, and
discredited information, especially on something as important as
whether or not we will achieve quality, affordable health care for
everyone. That's my goal. That's what I'm fighting for, and I'm
going to stand up for that.
MR. WILLIAMS: On the topic of accurate information, and to that
end, one of the things that has happened over the past 36 hours -- a
photo went out the website The Drudge Report, showing Senator Obama in
the native garb of a nation he was visiting, as you have done in a
host country on a trip overseas.
Matt Drudge on his website said it came from a source inside the
Clinton campaign. Can you say unequivocally here tonight it did not?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, so far as I know, it did not. And I
certainly know nothing about it and have made clear that that's not
the kind of behavior that I condone or expect from the people working
in my campaign. But we have no evidence where it came from.
So I think that it's clear what I would do if it were someone in
my campaign, as I have in the past: asking people to leave my
campaign if they do things that I disagree with.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator Obama, your response.
SEN. OBAMA: Well, first of all, I take Senator Clinton at her
word that she knew nothing about the photo. So I think that's
something that we can set aside.
I do want to focus on the issue of health care because Senator
Clinton has suggested that the flyer that we put out, the mailing that
we put out, was inaccurate. Now, keep in mind that I have
consistently said that Senator Clinton's got a good health care plan.
I think I have a good health care plan. I think mine is better, but I
have said that 95 percent of our health care plan is similar.
I have endured over the course of this campaign repeatedly
negative mailing from Senator Clinton in Iowa, in Nevada and other
places suggesting that I want to leave 15 million people out.
According to Senator Clinton, that is accurate. I dispute it, and I
think it is inaccurate. On the other hand, I don't fault Senator
Clinton for wanting to point out what she thinks is an advantage to
her plan.
The reason she thinks that there are more people covered under
her plan than mine is because of a mandate. That is not a mandate for
the government to provide coverage to everybody; it is a mandate that
every individual purchase health care.
And the mailing that we put out accurately indicates that the main
difference between Senator Clinton's plan and mine is the fact that
she would force in some fashion individuals to purchase health care.
If it was not affordable, she would still presumably force them to
have it, unless there is a hardship exemption as they've done in
Massachusetts, which leaves 20 percent of the uninsured out. And if
that's the case, then, in fact, her claim that she covers everybody is
not accurate.
Now, Senator Clinton has not indicated how she would enforce this
mandate. She hasn't indicated what level of subsidy she would provide
to assure that it was, in fact, affordable. And so it is entirely
legitimate for us to point out these differences.
But I think it's very important to understand the context of
this, and that is that Senator Clinton has -- her campaign, at least
-- has constantly sent out negative attacks on us, e-mail, robocalls,
flyers, television ads, radio calls.
And, you know, we haven't whined about it because I understand that's
the nature of these campaigns, but to suggest somehow that our mailing
is somehow different from the kinds of approaches that Senator Clinton
has taken throughout this campaign I think is simply not accurate.
MR. WILLIAMS: And Senator Clinton, on this subject --
SEN. CLINTON: But I have to -- I have to respond to that because
this is not just any issue, and certainly we've had a vigorous back
and forth on both sides of our campaign. But this is an issue that
goes to the heart of whether or not this country will finally do what
is right, and that is to provide quality affordable health care to
every single person.
Senator Obama has a mandate in his plan. It's a mandate on
parents to provide health insurance for their children. That's about
150 million people who would be required to do that. The difference
between Senator Obama and myself is that I know, from the work I've
done on health care for many years, that if everyone's not in the
system we will continue to let the insurance companies do what's
called cherry picking -- pick those who get insurance and leave others
out.
We will continue to have a hidden tax, so that when someone goes to
the emergency room without insurance -- 15 million or however many --
that amount of money that will be used to take care of that person
will be then spread among all the rest of us.
And most importantly, you know, the kind of attack on my health
care plan, which the University of Pennsylvania and others have said
is misleading -- that attack goes right to the heart of whether or not
we will be able to achieve universal health care. That's a core
Democratic Party value. It's something that ever since Harry Truman
we have stood for.
And what I find regrettable is that in Senator Obama's mailing
that he has sent out across Ohio, it is almost as though the health
insurance companies and the Republicans wrote it, because in my plan
there is enough money, according to the independent experts who've
evaluated it, to provide the kind of subsidies so that everyone would
be able to afford it. It is not the same as a single state trying to
do this, because the federal government has many more resources at its
disposal.
SEN. OBAMA (?): (Inaudible.)
SEN. CLINTON: So I think it's imperative that we stand as
Democrats for universal health care. I've staked out a claim for
that. Senator Edwards did. Others have. But Senator Obama has not.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator Obama, a quick response.
SEN. OBAMA: Well, look, I believe in universal health care, as
does Senator Clinton. And this is -- this is, I think, the point of
the debate, is that Senator Clinton repeatedly claims that I don't
stand for universal health care. And, you know, for Senator Clinton
to say that, I think, is simply not accurate.
Every expert has said that anybody who wants health care under my
plan will be able to obtain it. President Clinton's own secretary of
Labor has said that my plan does more to reduce costs and as a
consequence makes sure that the people who need health care right now
all across Ohio, all across Texas, Rhode Island, Vermont, all across
America, will be able to obtain it. And we do more to reduce costs
than any other plan that's been out there.
Now, I have no objection to Senator Clinton thinking that her
approach is superior, but the fact of the matter is, is that if, as
we've heard tonight, we still don't know how Senator Clinton intends
to enforce a mandate, and if we don't know the level of subsidies that
she's going to provide, then you can have a situation, which we are
seeing right now in the state of Massachusetts, where people are being
fined for not having purchased health care but choose to accept the
fine because they still can't afford it, even with the subsidies.
And they are then worse off. They then have no health care and are
paying a fine above and beyond that.
MR. WILLIAMS: Thank you.
SEN. OBAMA: That is a genuine difference between myself and
Senator Clinton.
And the last point I would make is, the insurance companies
actually are happy to have a mandate. The insurance companies don't
mind making sure that everybody has to purchase their product. That's
not something they're objecting to. The question is, are we going to
make sure that it is affordable for everybody? And that's my goal
when I'm president of the United States.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator, as you two --
SEN. CLINTON: You know, Brian -- Brian, wait a minute. I've got
-- this is too important.
You know, Senator Obama has a mandate. He would enforce the
mandate by requiring parents to buy insurance for their children.
SEN. OBAMA: This is true.
SEN. CLINTON: That is the case.
If you have a mandate, it has to be enforceable. So there's no
difference here.
SEN. OBAMA: No, there is a difference.
SEN. CLINTON: It's just that I know that parents who get sick
have terrible consequences for their children. So you can insure the
children, and then you've got the bread-winner who can't afford health
insurance or doesn't have it for him or herself.
And in fact, it would be as though Franklin Roosevelt said let's make
Social Security voluntary -- that's -- you know, that's -- let's let
everybody get in it if they can afford it -- or if President Johnson
said let's make Medicare voluntary.
SEN. OBAMA: Well, let me --
SEN. CLINTON: What we have said is that at the point of
employment, at the point of contact with various government agencies,
we would have people signed up. It's like when you get a 401(k), it's
your employer. The employer automatically enrolls you. You would be
enrolled.
And under my plan, it is affordable because, number one, we have
enough money in our plan. A comparison of the plans like the ones
we're proposing found that actually I would cover nearly everybody at
a much lower cost than Senator Obama's plan because we would not only
provide these health care tax credits, but I would limit the amount of
money that anyone ever has to pay for a premium to a low percentage of
your income. So it will be affordable.
Now, if you want to say that we shouldn't try to get everyone
into health insurance, that's a big difference, because I believe if
we don't have universal health care, we will never provide prevention.
I have the most aggressive measures to reduce costs and improve
quality. And time and time again, people who have compared our two
approaches have concluded that.
SEN. OBAMA: Brian, I'm sorry.
SEN. CLINTON: So let's -- let's have a debate about the facts.
SEN. OBAMA: I'm going to get filibuttered -- I'm getting
filibustered a little bit here.
MR. WILLIAMS: The last answer on this topic.
SEN. OBAMA: I mean, it is just not accurate to say that Senator
Clinton does more to control costs than mine. That is not the case.
There are many experts who have concluded that she does not.
I do provide a mandate for children, because, number one, we have
created a number of programs in which we can have greater assurance
that those children will be covered at an affordable price. On the --
on the point of many adults, we don't want to put in a situation in
which, on the front end, we are mandating them, we are forcing them to
purchase insurance, and if the subsidies are inadequate, the burden is
on them, and they will be penalized. And that is what Senator
Clinton's plan does.
Now, I am -- I am happy to have a discussion with Senator Clinton
about how we can both achieve the goal of universal health care. What
I do not accept -- and which is what Senator Clinton has consistently
done and in fact the same experts she cites basically say there's no
real difference between our plans, that are -- that they are not
substantial.
But it has to do with how we are going to achieve universal health
care. That is an area where I believe that if we make it affordable,
people will purchase it. In fact, Medicare Part B is not mandated, it
is voluntary. And yet people over 65 choose to purchase it, Hillary,
and the reason they choose to purchase it is because it's a good deal.
And if people in Cleveland or anywhere in Ohio end up seeing a plan
that is affordable for them, I promise you they are snatching it up
because they are desperate to get health care. And that's what I
intend to provide as president of the United States.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator, I'm going to change the subject.
SEN. CLINTON: About 20 percent of -- about 20 percent of the
people who are uninsured have the means to buy insurance. They're
often young people --
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator --
SEN. CLINTON: -- who think they're immortal --
SEN. OBAMA: Which is why I cover them.
SEN. CLINTON: -- except when the illness or the accident
strikes. And what Senator Obama has said, that then, once you get to
the hospital, you'll be forced to buy insurance, I don't think that's
a good idea. We ought to plan for it --
SEN. OBAMA: With respect --
SEN. CLINTON: -- and we ought to make sure we cover everyone.
That is the only way to get to universal health care coverage.
SEN. OBAMA: With respect --
SEN. CLINTON: That is what I've worked for for 15 years --
SEN. OBAMA: With respect --
SEN. CLINTON: -- and I believe that we can achieve it. But if
we don't even have a plan to get there, and we start out by leaving
people, you'll never ever control costs, improve quality, and cover
everyone.
SEN. OBAMA: With respect to the young people, my plan
specifically says that up until the age of 25 you will be able to be
covered under your parents' insurance plan, so that cohort that
Senator Clinton is talking about will, in fact, have coverage.
MR. WILLIAMS: Well, a 16-minute discussion on health care is
certainly a start. (Laughter.) I'd like to change up --
SEN. CLINTON: Well, there's hardly anything be more important?
I think it would be good to talk about health care and how we're we
going get to universal health care.
MR. WILLIAMS: I -- well, here's another important topic, and
that's NAFTA, especially where we're sitting here tonight. And this
is a tough one depending on who you ask. The Houston Chronicle has
called it a big win for Texas, but Ohio Democratic Senator Brown, your
colleague in the Senate, has called it a job-killing trade agreement.
Senator Clinton, you've campaigned in south Texas. You've campaigned
here in Ohio. Who's right?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, can I just point out that in the last
several debates, I seem to get the first question all the time. And I
don't mind. I -- you know, I'll be happy to field them, but I do find
it curious, and if anybody saw "Saturday Night Live," you know, maybe
we should ask Barack if he's comfortable and needs another pillow.
(Laughter, boos.) I just find it kind of curious that I keep getting
the first question on all of these issues. But I'm happy to answer
it.
You know, I have been a critic of NAFTA from the very beginning.
I didn't have a public position on it, because I was part of the
administration, but when I started running for the Senate, I have been
a critic. I've said it was flawed. I said that it worked in some
parts of our country, and I've seen the results in Texas. I was in
Laredo in the last couple of days. It's the largest inland port in
America now. So clearly, some parts of our country have been
benefited.
But what I have seen, where I represent up-state New York, I've
seen the factories closed and moved. I've talked to so many people
whose children have left because they don't have a good shot. I've
had to negotiate to try to keep factories open, sometimes
successfully, sometimes not, because the companies got tax benefits to
actually move to another country.
So what I have said is that we need to have a plan to fix NAFTA.
I would immediately have a trade timeout, and I would take that time
to try to fix NAFTA by making it clear that we'll have core labor and
environmental standards in the agreement.
We will do everything we can to make it enforceable, which it is not
now. We will stop the kind of constant sniping at our protections for
our workers that can come from foreign companies because they have the
authority to try to sue to overturn what we do to keep our workers
safe.
This is rightly a big issue in Ohio. And I have laid out my
criticism, but in addition my plan, for actually fixing NAFTA. Again,
I have received a lot of incoming criticism from Senator Obama. And
the Cleveland Plain Dealer examined Senator Obama's attacks on me
regarding NAFTA and said they were erroneous. So I would hope that,
again, we can get to a debate about what the real issues are and where
we stand because we do need to fix NAFTA. It is not working. It was,
unfortunately, heavily disadvantaging many of our industries,
particularly manufacturing. I have a record of standing up for that,
of chairing the Manufacturing Caucus in the Senate, and I will take a
tough position on these trade agreements.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator, thank you.
Before we turn the questioning over to Tim Russert, Senator
Obama.
SEN. OBAMA: Well, I think that it is inaccurate for Senator
Clinton to say that she's always opposed NAFTA. In her campaign for
Senate, she said that NAFTA, on balance, had been good for New York
and good for America. I disagree with that. I think that it did not
have the labor standards and environmental standards that were
required in order to not just be good for Wall Street but also be good
for Main Street. And if you travel through Youngstown and you travel
through communities in my home state of Illinois, you will see entire
cities that have been devastated as a consequence of trade agreements
that were not adequately structured to make sure that U.S. workers had
a fair deal.
Now, I think that Senator Clinton has shifted positions on this
and believes that we should have strong environmental standards and
labor standards, and I think that's a good thing. But you know, when
I first moved to Chicago in the early '80s and I saw steelworkers who
had been laid off of their plants -- black, white, and Hispanic -- and
I worked on the streets of Chicago to try to help them find jobs, I
saw then that the net costs of many of these trade agreements, if
they're not properly structured, can be devastating.
And as president of the United States, I intend to make certain
that every agreement that we sign has the labor standards, the
environmental standards and the safety standards that are going to
protect not just workers, but also consumers. We can't have toys with
lead paint in them that our children are playing with. We can't have
medicines that are actually making people more sick instead of better
because they're produced overseas. We have to stop providing tax
breaks for companies that are shipping jobs overseas and give those
tax breaks to companies that are investing here in the United States
of America.
And if we do those things, then I believe that we can actually
get Ohio back on the path of growth and jobs and prosperity. If we
don't, then we're going to continue to see the kind of deterioration
that we've seen economically here in this state.
MR. RUSSERT: I want to ask you both about NAFTA because the
record, I think, is clear. And I want to -- Senator Clinton. Senator
Obama said that you did say in 2004 that on balance NAFTA has been
good for New York and America. You did say that. When President
Clinton signed this bill -- and this was after he negotiated two new
side agreements, for labor and environment -- President Clinton said
it would be a force for economic growth and social progress. You said
in '96 it was proving its worth as free and fair trade. You said that
-- in 2000 -- it was a good idea that took political courage. So your
record is pretty clear.
Based on that, and which you're now expressing your discomfort
with it, in the debate that Al Gore had with Ross Perot, Al Gore said
the following: "If you don't like NAFTA and what it's done, we can
get out of it in six months.
The president can say to Canada and Mexico, we are out. This has not
been a good agreement." Will U.S. president say we are out of NAFTA
in six months?
SEN. CLINTON: I have said that I will renegotiate NAFTA, so
obviously, you'd have to say to Canada and Mexico that that's exactly
what we're going to do. But you know, in fairness --
MR. RUSSERT: Just because -- maybe Clinton --
SEN. CLINTON: Yes, I am serious.
MR. RUSSERT: You will get out. You will notify Mexico and
Canada, NAFTA is gone in six months.
SEN. CLINTON: No, I will say we will opt out of NAFTA unless we
renegotiate it, and we renegotiate on terms that are favorable to all
of America.
But let's be fair here, Tim. There are lots of parts of New York
that have benefitted, just like there are lots of parts of Texas that
have benefitted. The problem is in places like upstate New York,
places like Youngstown, Toledo, and others throughout Ohio that have
not benefitted. And if you look at what I have been saying, it has
been consistent.
You know, Senator Obama told the farmers of Illinois a couple of
years ago that he wanted more trade agreements. I -- right now --
MR. RUSSERT: We're going to get -- we're going to get to Senator
Obama, but I want to stay on your terms --
SEN. CLINTON: Well, but that -- but that is important --
MR. RUSSERT: -- because this was something that you wrote about
as a real success for your husband. You said it was good on balance
for New York and America in 2004, and now you're in Ohio and your
words are much different, Senator. The record is very clear.
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I -- I -- you don't have all the record
because you can go back and look at what I've said consistently. And
I haven't just said things; I have actually voted to toughen trade
agreements, to try to put more teeth into our enforcement mechanisms.
And I will continue to do so.
But you know, Tim, when you look at what the Cleveland Plain
Dealer said when they examined the kind of criticism that Senator
Obama was making of me -- it's not me saying it -- they said it was
erroneous. And it was erroneous because it didn't look at the entire
picture, both at what I've said and what I've done.
But let's talk about what we're going to do. It is not enough
just to criticize NAFTA, which I have, and for some years now. I have
put forward a very specific plan about what I would do, and it does
include telling Canada and Mexico that we will opt out unless we
renegotiate the core labor and environmental standards -- not side
agreements, but core agreements; that we will enhance the enforcement
mechanism; and that we will have a very clear view of how we're going
to review NAFTA going forward to make sure it works, and we're going
to take out the ability of foreign companies to sue us because of what
we do to protect our workers.
I would also say that you can go back and look at from the very
beginning -- I think David Gergen was on TV today remembering that I
was very skeptical about it.
It has worked in some parts of America. It has not worked in
Ohio. It has not worked in upstate New York. And since I've been in
the Senate -- neither of us voted on this. That wasn't something
either of us got to cast an independent vote on. Since I have been in
the Senate, I have worked to try to ameliorate the impact of these
trade agreements.
MR. RUSSERT: But let me button this up. Absent the change that
you're suggesting, you are willing to opt out of NAFTA in six months?
SEN. CLINTON: I'm confident that as president, when I say we
will opt out unless we renegotiate, we will be able to renegotiate.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Obama, you did in 2004 talk to farmers and
suggest that NAFTA had been helpful. The Associated Press today ran a
story about NAFTA, saying that you have been consistently ambivalent
towards the issue. Simple question: Will you, as president, say to
Canada and Mexico, "This has not worked for us; we are out"?
SEN. OBAMA: I will make sure that we renegotiate, in the same
way that Senator Clinton talked about. And I think actually Senator
Clinton's answer on this one is right. I think we should use the
hammer of a potential opt-out as leverage to ensure that we actually
get labor and environmental standards that are enforced. And that is
not what has been happening so far.
That is something that I have been consistent about. I have to say,
Tim, with respect to my position on this, when I ran for the United
States Senate, the Chicago Tribune, which was adamantly pro-NAFTA,
noted that, in their endorsement of me, they were endorsing me despite
my strong opposition to NAFTA.
And that conversation that I had with the Farm Bureau, I was not
ambivalent at all. What I said was that NAFTA and other trade deals
can be beneficial to the United States because I believe every U.S.
worker is as productive as any worker around the world, and we can
compete with anybody. And we can't shy away from globalization. We
can't draw a moat around us. But what I did say, in that same quote,
if you look at it, was that the problem is we've been negotiating just
looking at corporate profits and what's good for multinationals, and
we haven't been looking at what's good for communities here in Ohio,
in my home state of Illinois, and across the country.
And as president, what I want to be is an advocate on behalf of
workers. Look, you know, when I go to these plants, I meet people who
are proud of their jobs. They are proud of the products that they've
created. They have built brands and profits for their companies. And
when they see jobs shipped overseas and suddenly they are left not
just without a job, but without health care, without a pension, and
are having to look for seven-buck-an-hour jobs at the local fast-food
joint, that is devastating on them, but it's also devastating on the
community. That's not the way that we're going to prosper as we move
forward.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator, two journalists here in Ohio wrote a piece
called "Business as Usual," which is very well known, suggesting it
wasn't trade or manufacturing jobs that were being lost because of it,
but rather business as usual: lack of patents, lack of innovation,
lack of investment, 70 percent of the Ph.D.s in biology, chemistry,
engineering leaving the state.
The fact is, exports now have the highest share of our national income
ever. Ohio ranks fourth in terms of exports to Canada and Mexico.
Are you sure this has not been better for Ohio than you're suggesting?
SEN. OBAMA: I'm positive it hasn't been better for Ohio. But
you are making a very legitimate point, which is, is that this trade
(can/can't ?) be the only part of our economic agenda. But we've seen
seven years in which we have a president who has been looking out for
the well-heeled and people who are doing very well in the global
economy, in the financial industries, in the telecommunications
industries, and has not been looking out for ordinary workers.
What do we have to do? We're going to have to invest in
infrastructure to make sure that we're competitive. And I've got a
plan to do that. We're going to have to invest in science and
technology. We've got to vastly improve our education system. We
have to look at energy and the potential for creating green jobs that
can not just save on our energy costs but, more importantly, can
create jobs in building windmills that will produce manufacturing jobs
here in Ohio, can put rural communities back on their feet by working
on alternative fuels, making buildings more energy efficient.
We can hire young people who are out of work and put them to work in
the trade. So there are all sorts of things that we're going to have
to do to make the United States economy much more competitive, and
those are plans that I have put forward in this campaign and I expect
to pursue as president of the United States of America.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Clinton, on the issue of jobs, I watched
you the other day with your economic blueprint in Wisconsin saying,
this is my plan; hold me accountable. And I've had a chance to read
it very carefully. It does say that you pledge to create 5 million
new jobs over 10 years.
And I was reminded of your campaign in 2000 in Buffalo, my
hometown, just three hours down Route 90, where you pledged 200,000
new jobs for upstate New York. There's been a net loss of 30,000
jobs. And when you were asked about your pledge, your commitment, you
told The Buffalo News, "I might have been a little exuberant."
Tonight will you say that the pledge of 5 million jobs might be a
little exuberant?
SEN. CLINTON: No, Tim, because what happened in 2000 is that I
thought Al Gore was going to be president. And when I made the pledge
I was counting on having a Democratic White House, a Democratic
president who shared my values about what we needed to do to make the
economy work for everyone and to create shared prosperity.
And as you know, despite the difficulties of the Bush administration
and a Republican Congress for six years of my first term I have worked
very hard to create jobs but obviously as president I will have a lot
more tools at my disposal. And the reason why we can create at least
5 million new jobs -- I mean, this is not a big leap. Twenty-two
point seven million new jobs were created during the eight years of
the Clinton administration under my husband. We can create at least 5
million new jobs.
I'm not just talking about it. I helped to pass legislation to
begin a training program for green collar jobs. I want to see people
throughout Ohio being trained to do the work that will put solar
panels on roofs, install wind turbines, do geothermal, take advantage
of biofuels, and I know that if we had put $5 billion into the
stimulus package to really invest in the training and the tax
incentives that would have created those jobs as the Democrats wanted,
as I originally proposed, we would be on the way to creating those.
You know, take a country like Germany. They made a big bet on
solar power. They have a smaller economy and population than ours.
They've created several hundred thousand new jobs, and these are jobs
that can't be outsourced. These are jobs that have to be done in
Youngstown, in Dayton, in Cincinnati. These are jobs that we can
create here with the right combination of tax incentives, training,
and a commitment to following through. So I do think that at least 5
million jobs are fully capable of being produced within the next 10
years.
MR. RUSSERT: Brian?
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator Obama, yesterday Senator Clinton gave a
speech on foreign policy and I'm going to read you a quote from it.
Quote, "We've seen the tragic result of having a president who had
neither the experience nor the wisdom to manage our foreign policy and
safeguard our national security. We cannot let that happen again.
America has already taken that chance one time too many." Some of the
comments in the speech were more pointed. The senator has compared
your foreign policy expertise to that of George W. Bush at the same
period. Provided you could be going into a general election against a
Republican with vast foreign policy expertise and credibility on
national security, how were her comments about you unfair?
SEN. OBAMA: Well, Senator Clinton I think equates experience
with longevity in Washington. I don't think the American people do
and I don't think that if you look at the judgments that we've made
over the last several years that that's the accurate measure. On the
most important foreign policy decision that we face in a generation --
whether or not to go into Iraq -- I was very clear as to why we should
not -- that it would fan the flames of anti-American sentiment -- that
it would distract us from Afghanistan -- that it would cost us
billions of dollars, thousands of lives, and would not make us more
safe, and I do not believe it has made us more safe.
Al Qaeda is stronger than anytime since 2001 according to our own
intelligence estimates, and we are bogged down in a war that John
McCain now suggests might go on for another 100 years, spending $12
billion a month that could be invested in the kinds of programs that
both Senator Clinton and I are talking about. So on Pakistan, during
the summer I suggested that not only do we have to take a new approach
towards Musharraf but we have to get much more serious about hunting
down terrorists that are currently in northwestern Pakistan.
And many people said at the time well, you can't target those
terrorists because Musharraf is our ally and we don't want to offend
him. In fact, what we had was neither stability in Pakistan nor
democracy in Pakistan, and had we pursued a policy that was looking at
democratic reforms in Pakistan we would be much further along now than
we are. So on the critical issues that actually matter I believe that
my judgment has been sound and it has been judgment that I think has
been superior to Senator Clinton's as well as Senator McCain's.
MR. WILLIAMS: Well, Senator Clinton, in the last debate you
seemed to take a pass on the question of whether or not Senator Obama
was qualified to be commander in chief. Is your contention in this
latest speech that America would somehow be taking a chance on Senator
Obama as commander in chief?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I have put forth my extensive experience in
foreign policy, you know, helping to support the peace process in
Northern Ireland, negotiating to open borders so that refugees fleeing
ethnic cleansing would be safe, going to Beijing and standing up for
women's rights as human rights and so much else. And every time the
question about qualifications and credentials for commander in chief
are raised, Senator Obama rightly points to the speech he gave in
2002. He's to be commended for having given the speech. Many people
gave speeches against the war then, and the fair comparison is he
didn't have responsibility, he didn't have to vote; by 2004 he was
saying that he basically agreed with the way George Bush was
conducting the war. And when he came to the Senate, he and I have
voted exactly the same. We have voted for the money to fund the war
until relatively recently. So the fair comparison was when we both
had responsibility, when it wasn't just a speech but it was actually
action, where is the difference? Where is the comparison that would
in some way give a real credibility to the speech that he gave against
the war?
And on a number of other issues, I just believe that, you know,
as Senator Obama said, yes, last summer he basically threatened to
bomb Pakistan, which I don't think was a particularly wise position to
take. I have long advocated a much tougher approach to Musharraf and
to Pakistan, and have pushed the White House to do that.
And I disagree with his continuing to say that he would meet with some
of the worst dictators in the world without preconditions and without
the real, you know, understanding of what we would get from it.
So I think you've got to look at, you know, what I have done over
a number of years, traveling on behalf of our country to more than 80
countries, meeting and working out a lot of different issues that are
important to our national security and our foreign policy and our
values, serving on the Senate Armed Services Committee for now five
years. And I think that, you know, standing on that stage with
Senator McCain, if he is, as appears to be, the nominee, I will have a
much better case to make on a range of the issues that really America
must confront going forward, and will be able to hold my own and make
the case for a change in policy that will be better for our country.
MR. WILLIAMS: Senator Obama, a quick response.
SEN. OBAMA: Let me just follow up. My objections to the war in
Iraq were simply -- not simply a speech. I was in the midst of a U.S.
Senate campaign. It was a high-stakes campaign. I was one of the
most vocal opponents of the war, and I was very specific as to why.
And so when I bring this up, it is not simply to say "I told you so,"
but it is to give you an insight in terms of how I would make
decisions.
And the fact was, this was a big strategic blunder. It was not a
matter of, well, here is the initial decision, but since then we've
voted the same way. Once we had driven the bus into the ditch, there
were only so many ways we could get out. The question is, who's
making the decision initially to drive the bus into the ditch? And
the fact is that Senator Clinton often says that she is ready on day
one, but in fact she was ready to give in to George Bush on day one on
this critical issue. So the same person that she criticizes for
having terrible judgment, and we can't afford to have another one of
those, in fact she facilitated and enabled this individual to make a
decision that has been strategically damaging to the United States of
America.
With respect to Pakistan, I never said I would bomb Pakistan.
What I said was that if we have actionable intelligence against bin
Laden or other key al Qaeda officials, and we -- and Pakistan is
unwilling or unable to strike against them, we should. And just
several days ago, in fact, this administration did exactly that and
took out the third-ranking al Qaeda official.
That is the position that we should have taken in the first place.
And President Musharraf is now indicating that he would generally be
more cooperative in some of these efforts, we don't know how the new
legislature in Pakistan will respond, but the fact is it was the right
strategy.
And so my claim is not simply based on a speech. It is based on
the judgments that I've displayed during the course of my service on
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, while I've been in the United
States Senate, and as somebody who, during the course of this
campaign, I think has put forward a plan that will provide a clean
break against Bush and Cheney. And that is how we're going to be able
to debate John McCain. Having a debate with John McCain where your
positions were essentially similar until you started running for
president, I think, does not put you in a strong position.
Tim Russert.
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I guess that --
MR. RUSSERT: Let me talk about the future -- let me talk the
future about Iraq, because this is important, I think, to Democratic
voters particularly. You both have pledged the withdrawal of troops
from Iraq. You both have said you'd keep a residual force there to
protect our embassy, to seek out al Qaeda, to neutralize Iran. If the
Iraqi government said, President Clinton or President Obama, you're
pulling out your troops this quickly?
You're going to be gone in a year, but you're going to leave a
residual force behind? No. Get out. Get out now. If you don't want
to stay and protect us, we're a sovereign nation. Go home now." Will
you leave?
SEN. OBAMA: Well, if the Iraqi government says that we should not be
there, then we cannot be there. This is a sovereign government, as
George Bush continually reminds us.
Now, I think that we can be in a partnership with Iraq to ensure
the stability and the safety of the region, to ensure the safety of
Iraqis and to meet our national security interests.
But in order to do that, we have to send a clear signal to the
Iraqi government that we are not going to be there permanently, which
is why I have said that as soon as I take office, I will call in the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, we will initiate a phased withdrawal, we will
be as careful getting out as we were careless getting in. We will
give ample time for them to stand up, to negotiate the kinds of
agreements that will arrive at the political accommodations that are
needed. We will provide them continued support. But it is important
for us not to be held hostage by the Iraqi government in a policy that
has not made us more safe, that's distracting us from Afghanistan, and
is costing us dearly, not only and most importantly in the lost lives
of our troops, but also the amount of money that we are spending that
is unsustainable and will prevent us from engaging in the kinds of
investments in America that will make us more competitive and more
safe.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Clinton, if the Iraqis said I'm sorry,
we're not happy with this arrangement; if you're not going to stay in
total and defend us, get out completely; they are a sovereign nation,
you would listen?
SEN. CLINTON: Absolutely. And I believe that there is no
military solution that the Americans who have been valiant in doing
everything they were asked to do can really achieve in the absence of
full cooperation from the Iraqi government. And --
MR. RUSSERT: Let me ask -- let me ask you this, Senator. I want
to ask you --
SEN. CLINTON: And they need to take responsibility for
themselves. And --
MR. RUSSERT: I want to ask both of you this question, then. If
we -- if this scenario plays out and the Americans get out in total
and al Qaeda resurges and Iraq goes to hell, do you hold the right, in
your mind as American president, to re-invade, to go back into Iraq to
stabilize it?
SEN. CLINTON: You know, Tim, you ask a lot of hypotheticals.
And I believe that what's --
MR. RUSSERT: But this is reality.
SEN. CLINTON: No -- well, it isn't reality. You're -- you're --
you're making lots of different hypothetical assessments.
I believe that it is in America's interests and in the interests
of the Iraqis for us to have an orderly withdrawal. I've been saying
for many months that the administration has to do more to plan, and
I've been pushing them to actually do it. I've also said that I would
begin to withdraw within 60 days based on a plan that I asked begun to
be put together as soon as I became president.
And I think we can take out one to two brigades a month. I've also
been a leader in trying to prevent President Bush from getting us
committed to staying in Iraq regardless for as long as Senator McCain
and others have said it might be, 50 to a hundred years.
So, when you talk about what we need to do in Iraq, we have to
make judgments about what is in the best interest of America. And I
believe this is in the best interest.
But I also have heard Senator Obama refer continually to
Afghanistan, and he references being on the Foreign Relations
Committee. He chairs the Subcommittee on Europe. It has jurisdiction
over NATO. NATO is critical to our mission in Afghanistan. He's held
not one substantive hearing to do oversight, to figure out what we can
do to actually have a stronger presence with NATO in Afghanistan.
You have to look at the entire situation to try to figure out how
we can stabilize Afghanistan and begin to put more in there to try to
get some kind of success out of it, and you have to work with the
Iraqi government so that they take responsibility for their own
future.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Obama, I want you to respond to not holding
oversight for your subcommittee. But also, do you reserve a right as
American president to go back into Iraq, once you have withdrawn, with
sizable troops in order to quell any kind of insurrection or civil
war?
SEN. OBAMA: Well, first of all, I became chairman of this
committee at the beginning of this campaign, at the beginning of 2007.
So it is true that we haven't had oversight hearings on Afghanistan.
I have been very clear in talking to the American people about
what I would do with respect to Afghanistan.
I think we have to have more troops there to bolster the NATO effort.
I think we have to show that we are not maintaining permanent bases in
Iraq because Secretary Gates, our current Defense secretary, indicated
that we are getting resistance from our allies to put more troops into
Afghanistan because they continue to believe that we made a blunder in
Iraq and I think even this administration acknowledges now that they
are hampered now in doing what we need to do in Afghanistan in part
because of what's happened in Iraq.
Now, I always reserve the right for the president -- as commander
in chief, I will always reserve the right to make sure that we are
looking out for American interests. And if al Qaeda is forming a base
in Iraq, then we will have to act in a way that secures the American
homeland and our interests abroad. So that is true, I think, not just
in Iraq, but that's true in other places. That's part of my argument
with respect to Pakistan.
I think we should always cooperate with our allies and sovereign
nations in making sure that we are rooting out terrorist
organizations, but if they are planning attacks on Americans, like
what happened in 9/11, it is my job -- it will be my job as president
to make sure that we are hunting them down.
MR. WILLIAMS: And Senator, I need to reserve --
SEN. CLINTON: Well, but I have -- I just have to add --
MR. WILLIAMS: I'm sorry, Senator, I've got to --
SEN. CLINTON: Now wait a minute, I have to add --
MR. WILLIAMS: I've got to get us to a break because television
doesn't stop.
SEN. CLINTON: -- because the question -- the question was about
invading -- invading -- Iraq.
MR. WILLIAMS: Can you hold that thought until we come back from
a break? We have limited commercial interruptions tonight, and we
have to get to one of them now. Despite the snowstorm swirling
outside here in Cleveland, we're having a warm night in the arena.
We'll return to it right after this. (Laughter, applause.)
(Announcements.)
(Cheers, applause.)
MR. WILLIAMS: We are back, and because our first segment went
long and we are in a large arena -- (cheers, applause) --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: (Off mike) -- for Hillary!
MR. WILLIAMS: -- we are just now welcoming back both of our
candidates to the stage and asking our cooperation of the audience.
We're back live tonight in Cleveland, Ohio.
Senator Obama, we started tonight talking about what could be
construed as a little hyperbole. Happens from time to time on the
campaign trail. You have recently been called out on some yourself.
I urge you to look at your monitor and we'll take a look.
SEN. CLINTON: (From videotape.) Now I could stand up here and
say: Let's just get everybody together. Let's get unified. The sky
will open -- (laughter) -- the light will come down -- (laughter) --
celestial choirs will be singing -- (laughter) -- and everyone will
know we should do the right thing, and the world will be perfect!
SEN. OBAMA: Sounds good! (Laughter.)
MR. WILLIAMS: Of all the charges -- (laughter, applause) -- of
all the charges and countercharges made tonight, we can confirm that
is not you, Senator Obama.
SEN. OBAMA: (Chuckles.)
MR. WILLIAMS: That was Senator Clinton. But since we played
that tape, albeit in error, for this segment, how did you take that?
SEN. CLINTON: (Laughs.)
(Laughter.)
MR. WILLIAMS: How did you take those remarks when you heard
them?
SEN. OBAMA: Well, I thought Senator Clinton showed some good
humor there. I would give her points for delivery.
SEN. CLINTON: (Laughs.)
(Laughter.)
SEN. OBAMA: Look, I understand the broader point that Senator
Clinton's been trying to make over the last several weeks. You know,
she characterizes it typically as speeches, not solutions, or talk
versus action. And as I said in the last debate, I've spent 20 years
devoted to working on behalf of families who are having a tough time
and they're seeking out the American dream. That's how I started my
career in public service, that's how I brought Democrats and
Republicans together to provide health care to people who needed it,
that's how I helped to reform a welfare system that wasn't working in
Illinois, that's how I've provided tax breaks to people who really
needed them as opposed to just the wealthy, and so I'm very proud of
that track record.
And if Senator Clinton thinks that it's all talk, you know, you
got to tell that to the wounded warriors at Walter Reed who had to pay
for their food and pay for their phone calls before I got to the
Senate. And I changed that law. Or talk to those folks who I think
have recognized that special interests are dominating Washington and
pushing aside the agenda of ordinary families here in Ohio.
And so when I pass an ethics reform bill that makes sure that
lobbyists can't get gifts or meals or provide corporate jets to
members of Congress and they have to disclose who they're getting
money from and who they're bundling it for, that moves us in the
direction of making sure that we have a government that is more
responsive to families.
Just one point I'll make, I was in Cincinnati, met with four
women at a table like this one. And these were middle-aged women who,
as one woman put it, had done everything right and never expected to
find themselves in the situation where they don't have health care.
One of them doesn't have a job. One of them is looking after an aging
parent. Two of them were looking after disabled children. One of
them was dipping into their retirement accounts because she had been
put on disability on the job. And you hear these stories and what you
realize is nobody has been listening to them. That is not who George
Bush or Dick Cheney has been advocating for over the last seven years.
And so I am not interested in talk. I am not interested in
speeches. I would not be running if I wasn't absolutely convinced
that I can put an economic agenda forward that is going to provide
them with health care, is going to make college more affordable, and
is going to get them the kinds of help that they need not to solve all
their problems, but at least to be able to achieve the American dream.
MR. WILLIAMS: Well, let me ask you, Senator Clinton: What did
you mean by that piece of videotape we saw from the campaign?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I was having a little fun. You know, it's
hard to find time to have fun on the campaign trail, but occasionally
you can sneak that in.
But the larger point is that I know trying to get health
insurance for every American that's affordable will not be easy. It's
not going to come about just because we hope it will or we tell
everybody it's the right thing to do. You know, 15 years ago I
tangled with the health insurance industry and the drug companies, and
I know it takes a fighter. It takes somebody who will go toe-to-toe
with the special interests.
You know, I have put forth very specific ideas about how we can
get back $55 billion from the special interests -- the giveaways to
the oil companies, the credit card companies, the student loan
companies, the health insurance companies. These have all been
basically pushed on to these special interests not just because of
what the White House did, but because members of Congress went along.
And I want to get that money back and invest it in the American middle
class -- health care, college affordability, the kinds of needs that
people talk to me about throughout Ohio, because what I hear as I go
from Toledo to Parma to Cleveland to, you know, Dayton is the same
litany that people are working harder than ever, but they're not
getting ahead. They feel like they're invisible to their government.
So when it came time to vote on Dick Cheney's energy bill, I
voted no, and Senator Obama voted yes. When it came time to try to
cap interest rates for credit cards at 30 percent -- which I think is
way too high, but it was the best we could present -- I voted yes and
Senator Obama voted no.
MR. WILLIAMS: And Senator -- Senator --
SEN. CLINTON: So part of what we have to do here is recognize
that the special interests are not going to give up without a fight.
And I believe that I am a fighter, and I will fight for the people of
Ohio and the people of America.
MR. WILLIAMS: What I was attempting to do here is to show
something Senator Obama said about you, and I'm told it's ready.
MR. RUSSERT: Let's try it.
MR. WILLIAMS: Let's try it. Hang on. Watch your monitor.
Let's try it. We're going to come back to you.
SEN. OBAMA: But I'm going to have an opportunity to respond to
this.
SEN. OBAMA: (From videotape.) -- herself as co-president during
the Clinton years. Every good thing that happened she says she was a
part of. And so the notion that you can selectively pick what you
take credit for and then run away from what isn't politically
convenient, that doesn't make sense.
MR. WILLIAMS: Now, Senator Obama, you can react to it and
whatever you wanted to react to from earlier, but I've been wanting to
ask you about this assertion that Senator Clinton has somehow cast
herself as co-president.
SEN. OBAMA: Well, I think what is absolutely true is, is that
when Senator Clinton continually talks about her experience, she is
including the eight years that she served as first lady, and you know,
often says, you know, "Here's what I did."
"Here's what we did." "Here's what we accomplished" -- which is fine.
And I have not -- I have not in any way said that that experience is
not relevant, and I don't begrudge her claiming that as experience.
What I've said, and what I would continue to maintain, is you can't
take credit for all the good things that happened but then, when it
comes to issues like NAFTA, you say, well, I -- behind the scenes, I
was disagreeing. That doesn't work. So you have to, I think, take
both responsibility as well as credit.
Now there are several points that I think Senator Clinton made
that I -- we need to discuss here. First of all, she talked about me
objecting to caps on credit cards. Keep in mind, I objected to the
entire bill -- a bill that Senator Clinton, in its previous version,
in 2001 had voted for. And in one of the debates with you guys said,
well, I voted for it, but I hoped it wouldn't pass -- which, as a
general rule, doesn't work. If you don't want it to pass, you vote
against it. (Laughter.)
You know, she mentioned that she is a fighter on health care.
And look -- I do not in any way doubt that Senator Clinton genuinely
wants to provide health care to all Americans.
What I have said is that the way she approached it back in '93, I
think, was wrong in part because she had the view that what's required
is simply to fight. And Senator Clinton ended up fighting not just
the insurance companies and the drug companies, but also members of
her own party. And as a consequence, there were a number of people,
like Jim Cooper of Tennessee and Bill Bradley and Pat Moynihan, who
were not included in the negotiations. And we had the potential of
bringing people together to actually get something done.
I am absolutely clear that hope is not enough. And it is not
going to be easy to pass health care. If it was, it would have
already gotten done. It's not going to be easy to have a sensible
energy policy in this country. ExxonMobil made $11 billion last
quarter. They are not going to give up those profits easily.
But what I also believe is that the only way we are going to
actually get this stuff done is, number one, we're going to have to
mobilize and inspire the American people so that they're paying
attention to what their government is doing. And that's what I've
been doing in this campaign, and that's what I will do as president.
And there's nothing romantic or silly about that. If the American
people are activated, that's how change is going to happen.
The second thing we've going to have to do is we're actually
going to have to go after the special interests.
Senator Clinton in one of these speeches -- it may have been the same
speech where you showed the clip -- said you can't just wave a magic
wand and expect special interests to go away. That is absolutely
true, but it doesn't help if you're taking millions of dollars in
contributions from those special interests. They are less likely to
go away.
So it is important for us to crack down on how these special
interests are able to influence Congress. And yes, it is important
for us to inspire and mobilize and motivate the American people to get
involved and pay attention.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Obama, let me ask you about motivating,
inspiring, keeping your word. Nothing more important. Last year you
said if you were the nominee you would opt for public financing in the
general election of the campaign; try to get some of the money out.
You checked "Yes" on a questionnaire. And now Senator McCain has
said, calling your bluff, let's do it. You seem to be waffling,
saying, well, if we can work on an arrangement here.
Why won't you keep your word in writing that you made to abide by
public financing of the fall election?
SEN. OBAMA: Tim, I am not yet the nominee. Now, what I've said
is, is that when I am the nominee, if I am the nominee -- because
we've still got a bunch of contests left and Senator Clinton's a
pretty tough opponent. If I am the nominee, then I will sit down with
John McCain and make sure that we have a system that is fair for both
sides, because Tim, as you know, there are all sorts of ways of
getting around these loopholes.
Senator McCain is trying to explain some of the things that he has
done so far where he accepted public financing money, but people
aren't exactly clear whether all the T's were crossed and the I's were
dotted.
Now what I want to point out, though, more broadly is how we have
approached this campaign. I said very early on I would not take PAC
money. I would not take money from federal-registered lobbyists.
That -- that was a multimillion-dollar decision but it was the right
thing to do and the reason we were able to do that was because I had
confidence that the American people, if they were motivated, would in
fact finance the campaign.
We have now raised 90 percent of our donations from small donors,
$25, $50. We average -- our average donation is $109 so we have built
the kind of organization that is funded by the American people that is
exactly the goal and the aim of everybody who's interested in good
government and politics supports.
MR. RUSSERT: So you may opt out of public financing. You may
break your word.
SEN. OBAMA: What I -- what I have said is, at the point where
I'm the nominee, at the point where it's appropriate, I will sit down
with John McCain and make sure that we have a system that works for
everybody.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Clinton, an issue of accountability and
credibility. You have loaned your campaign $5 million. You and your
husband file a joint return. You refuse to release that joint return,
even though former President Clinton has had significant overseas
business dealings.
Your chief supporter here in Ohio, Governor Strickland, made
releasing his opponent's tax return one of the primary issues of the
campaign, saying repeatedly, "Accountability, transparency." If he's
not releasing, his campaign said, his tax return, what is he hiding?
We should question what's going on.
Why won't you release your tax return, so the voters of Ohio,
Texas, Vermont, Rhode Island know exactly where you and your husband
got your money, who might be in part bankrolling your campaign?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, the American people who support me are
bankrolling my campaign. That's -- that's obvious. You can look and
see the hundreds of thousands of contributions that I've gotten. And
ever since I lent my campaign money, people have responded just so
generously. I'm thrilled at so many people getting involved. And
we're raising, on average, about a million dollars a day on the
Internet. And if anybody's out there, wants to contribute, to be part
of this campaign, just go to HillaryClinton.com, because that's who's
funding my campaign.
And I will release my tax returns. I have consistently said
that. And I will --
MR. RUSSERT: Why not now?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I will do it as others have done it: upon
becoming the nominee, or even earlier, Tim, because I have been as
open as I can be.
You have -- the public has 20 years of records for me, and I have very
extensive filings with the Senate where --
MR. RUSSERT: So, before next Tuesday's primary?
SEN. CLINTON: Well, I can't get it together by then, but I will
certainly work to get it together. I'm a little busy right now; I
hardly have time to sleep. But I will certainly work toward
releasing, and we will get that done and in the public domain.
MR. RUSSERT: One other issue. You talked about releasing
documents. On January 30th, the National Archives released 10,000
pages of your public schedule as first lady. It's now in the custody
of former President Clinton. Will you release that -- again, during
this primary season that you claim that eight years of experience, let
the public know what you did, who you met with those eight years?
SEN. CLINTON: Absolutely. I've urged that the process be as
quick as possible. It's a cumbersome process, set up by law. It
doesn't just apply to us, it applies to everyone in our position. And
I have urged that our end of it move as expeditiously as we can. Now,
also, President Bush claims the right to look at anything that is
released, and I would urge the Bush White House to move as quickly as
possible.
MR. RUSSERT: But you've had it for more than a month. Will you
get to him -- will you get it to the White House immediately?
SEN. CLINTON: As soon as we can, Tim. I've urged that, and I
hope it will happen.
MR. RUSSERT: Senator Obama, one of the things in a campaign is
that you have to react to unexpected developments.
On Sunday, the headline in your hometown paper, Chicago Tribune:
"Louis Farrakhan Backs Obama for President at Nation of Islam
Convention in Chicago." Do you accept the support of Louis Farrakhan?
SEN. OBAMA: You know, I have been very clear in my denunciation
of Minister Farrakhan's anti-Semitic comments. I think that they are
unacceptable and reprehensible. I did not solicit this support. He
expressed pride in an African-American who seems to be bringing the
country together. I obviously can't censor him, but it is not support
that I sought. And we're not doing anything, I assure you, formally
or informally with Minister Farrakhan.
MR. RUSSERT: Do you reject his support?
SEN. OBAMA: Well, Tim, you know, I can't say to somebody that he
can't say that he thinks I'm a good guy. (Laughter.) You know, I --
you know, I -- I have been very clear in my denunciations of him and
his past statements, and I think that indicates to the American people
what my stance is on those comments.
MR. RUSSERT: The problem some voters may have is, as you know,
Reverend Farrakhan called Judaism "gutter religion."
OBAMA: Tim, I think -- I am very familiar with his record, as are the American people. That's why I have consistently denounced it.
This is not something new. This is something that -- I live in Chicago. He lives in Chicago. I've been very clear, in terms of me believing that what he has said is reprehensible and inappropriate. And I have consistently distanced myself from him.
RUSSERT: The title of one of your books, "Audacity of Hope," you acknowledge you got from a sermon from Reverend Jeremiah Wright, the head of the Trinity United Church. He said that Louis Farrakhan "epitomizes greatness."
He said that he went to Libya in 1984 with Louis Farrakhan to visit with Moammar Gadhafi and that, when your political opponents found out about that, quote, "your Jewish support would dry up quicker than a snowball in Hell."
RUSSERT: What do you do to assure Jewish-Americans that, whether it's Farrakhan's support or the activities of Reverend Jeremiah Wright, your pastor, you are consistent with issues regarding Israel and not in any way suggesting that Farrakhan epitomizes greatness?
OBAMA: Tim, I have some of the strongest support from the Jewish community in my hometown of Chicago and in this presidential campaign. And the reason is because I have been a stalwart friend of Israel's. I think they are one of our most important allies in the region, and I think that their security is sacrosanct, and that the United States is in a special relationship with them, as is true with my relationship with the Jewish community.
And the reason that I have such strong support is because they know that not only would I not tolerate anti-Semitism in any form, but also because of the fact that what I want to do is rebuild what I consider to be a historic relationship between the African-American community and the Jewish community.
You know, I would not be sitting here were it not for a whole host of Jewish Americans, who supported the civil rights movement and helped to ensure that justice was served in the South. And that coalition has frayed over time around a whole host of issues, and part of my task in this process is making sure that those lines of communication and understanding are reopened.
But, you know, the reason that I have such strong support in the Jewish community and have historically -- it was true in my U.S. Senate campaign and it's true in this presidency -- is because the people who know me best know that I consistently have not only befriended the Jewish community, not only have I been strong on Israel, but, more importantly, I've been willing to speak out even when it is not comfortable.
When I was -- just last point I would make -- when I was giving -- had the honor of giving a sermon at Ebenezer Baptist Church in conjunction with Martin Luther King's birthday in front of a large African-American audience, I specifically spoke out against anti- Semitism within the African-American community. And that's what gives people confidence that I will continue to do that when I'm president of the United States.
WILLIAMS: Senator...
CLINTON: I just want to add something here, because I faced a similar situation when I ran for the Senate in 2000 in New York. And in New York, there are more than the two parties, Democratic and Republican. And one of the parties at that time, the Independence Party, was under the control of people who were anti-Semitic, anti- Israel. And I made it very clear that I did not want their support. I rejected it. I said that it would not be anything I would be comfortable with. And it looked as though I might pay a price for that. But I would not be associated with people who said such inflammatory and untrue charges against either Israel or Jewish people in our country.
And, you know, I was willing to take that stand, and, you know, fortunately the people of New York supported me and I won. But at the time, I thought it was more important to stand on principle and to reject the kind of conditions that went with support like that.
RUSSERT: Are you suggesting Senator Obama is not standing on principle?
CLINTON: No. I'm just saying that you asked specifically if he would reject it. And there's a difference between denouncing and rejecting. And I think when it comes to this sort of, you know, inflammatory -- I have no doubt that everything that Barack just said is absolutely sincere. But I just think, we've got to be even stronger. We cannot let anyone in any way say these things because of the implications that they have, which can be so far reaching.
OBAMA: Tim, I have to say I don't see a difference between denouncing and rejecting. There's no formal offer of help from Minister Farrakhan that would involve me rejecting it. But if the word "reject" Senator Clinton feels is stronger than the word "denounce," then I'm happy to concede the point, and I would reject and denounce.
CLINTON: Good. Good. Excellent.
(APPLAUSE)
WILLIAMS: Rare audience outburst on the agreement over rejecting and renouncing.
We're going to take advantage of this opportunity to take the second of our limited breaks. We'll be back live from Cleveland right after this.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
WILLIAMS: We are back from Cleveland State University. We continue with our debate.
The question beginning this segment is for you, Senator Obama.
The National Journal rates your voting record as more liberal than that of Ted Kennedy.
In a general election, going up against a Republican Party, looking for converts, Republicans, independents, how can you run with a more liberal voting record than Ted Kennedy?
OBAMA: Well, first of all, let's take a look at what the National Journal rated us on.
It turned out that Senator Clinton and I had differences on two votes. The first was on an immigration issue, where the question was whether guest workers could come here, work for two years, go back for a year, and then come back and work for another two years, which meant essentially that you were going to have illegal immigrants for a year, because they wouldn't go back, and I thought it was bad policy.
The second -- and this, I think, is telling in terms of how silly these ratings are -- I supported an office of public integrity, an independent office that would be able to monitor ethics investigations in the Senate, because I thought it was important for the public to know that if there were any ethical violations in the Senate, that they weren't being investigated by the Senators themselves, but there was somebody independent who would do it.
This is something that I've tried to push as part of my ethics package.
OBAMA: It was rejected. And according to the National Journal, that position is a liberal position.
Now, I don't think that's a liberal position. I think there are a lot of Republicans and a lot of Independents who would like to make sure that ethic investigations are not conducted by the people who are potentially being investigated. So the categories don't make sense.
And part of the reason I think a lot of people have been puzzled, why is it that Senator Obama's campaign, the supposed liberal, is attracting more Independent votes than any other candidate in the Democratic primary, and Republican votes as well, and then people are scratching their head? It's because people don't want to go back to those old categories of what's liberal and what's conservative.
They want to see who is making sense, who's fighting for them, who's going to go after the special interests, who is going to champion the issues of health care and making college affordable, and making sure that we have a foreign policy that makes sense? That's what I've been doing, and that's why, you know, the proof is in the pudding. We've been attracting more Independent and Republican support than anybody else, and that's why every poll shows that right now I beat John McCain in a match-up in the general election.
WILLIAMS: Let's go from domestic to foreign affairs and Tim Russert.
RUSSERT: Before the primary on Tuesday, on Sunday, March 2, there's an election in Russia for the successor to President Putin. What can you tell me about the man who's going to be Mr. Putin's successor?
CLINTON: Well, I can tell you that he's a hand-picked successor, that he is someone who is obviously being installed by Putin, who Putin can control, who has very little independence, the best we know. You know, there's a lot of information still to be acquired. That the so-called opposition was basically run out of the political opportunity to wage a campaign against Putin's hand-picked successor, and the so-called leading opposition figure spends most of his time praising Putin. So this is a clever but transparent way for Putin to hold on to power, and it raises serious issues about how we're going to deal with Russia going forward.
I have been very critical of the Bush administration for what I believe to have been an incoherent policy toward Russia. And with the reassertion of Russia's role in Europe, with some of the mischief that they seem to be causing in supporting Iran's nuclear ambitions, for example, it's imperative that we begin to have a more realistic and effective strategy toward Russia. But I have no doubt, as president, even though technically the meetings may be with the man who is labeled as president, the decisions will be made by Putin.
RUSSERT: Who will it be? Do you know his name?
CLINTON: Medvedev -- whatever.
RUSSERT: Yes.
CLINTON: Yes.
RUSSERT: Senator Obama, do you know anything about him?
OBAMA: Well, I think Senator Clinton speaks accurately about him. He is somebody who was hand-picked by Putin. Putin has been very clear that he will continue to have the strongest hand in Russia in terms of running the government. And, you know, it looks -- just think back to the beginning of President Bush's administration when he said -- you know, he met with Putin, looked into his eyes and saw his soul, and figured he could do business with him.
He then proceeded to neglect our relationship with Russia at a time when Putin was strangling any opposition in the country when he was consolidating power, rattling sabers against his European neighbors, as well as satellites of the former Soviet Union. And so we did not send a signal to Mr. Putin that, in fact, we were going to be serious about issues like human rights, issues like international cooperation that were critical to us. That is something that we have to change.
RUSSERT: He's 42 years old, he's a former law professor. He is Mr. Putin's campaign manager. He is going to be the new president of Russia. And if he says to the Russian troops, you know what, why don't you go help Serbia retake Kosovo, what does President Obama do?
OBAMA: Well, I think that we work with the international community that has also recognized Kosovo, and state that that's unacceptable. But, fortunately, we have a strong international structure anchored in NATO to deal with this issue.
We don't have to work in isolation. And this is an area where I think that the Clinton administration deserves a lot of credit, is, you know, the way in which they put together a coalition that has functioned.
OBAMA: It has not been perfect, but it saved lives. And we created a situation in which not only Kosovo, but other parts of the former Yugoslavia at least have the potential to over time build democracies and enter into the broader European community.
But, you know, be very clear: We have recognized the country of Kosovo as an independent, sovereign nation, as has Great Britain and many other countries in the region. And I think that that carries with it, then, certain obligations to ensure that they are not invaded.
RUSSERT: Before you go, each of you have talked about your careers in public service. Looking back through them, is there any words or vote that you'd like to take back?
Senator Clinton?
CLINTON: Well, obviously, I've said many times that, although my vote on the 2002 authorization regarding Iraq was a sincere vote, I would not have voted that way again.
I would certainly, as president, never have taken us to war in Iraq. And I regret deeply that President Bush waged a preemptive war, which I warned against and said I disagreed with.
But I think that this election has to be about the future. It has to be about what we will do now, how we will deal with what we're going to inherit.
You know, we've just been talking about Russia. We could have gone around the world. We could have gone to Latin America and talked about, you know, the retreat from democracy. We could have talked about Africa and the failure to end the genocide in Darfur.
We could have gone on to talk about the challenge that China faces and the Middle East, which is deteriorating under the pressures of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the interference that is putting Israel's security at stake.
We could have done an entire program, Tim, on what we will inherit from George Bush.
And what I believe is that my experience and my unique qualifications on both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue equip me to handle with the problems of today and tomorrow and to be prepared to make those tough decisions in dealing with Putin and others, because we have so much work to do, and we don't have much time to try to make up for our losses.
RUSSERT: But to be clear, you'd like to have your vote back?
CLINTON: Absolutely. I've said that many times.
RUSSERT: Senator Obama, any statements or vote you'd like to take back?
OBAMA: Well, you know, when I first arrived in the Senate that first year, we had a situation surrounding Terri Schiavo. And I remember how we adjourned with a unanimous agreement that eventually allowed Congress to interject itself into that decisionmaking process of the families.
It wasn't something I was comfortable with, but it was not something that I stood on the floor and stopped. And I think that was a mistake, and I think the American people understood that that was a mistake. And as a constitutional law professor, I knew better.
And so that's an example I think of where inaction...
RUSSERT: This is the young woman with the feeding tube...
OBAMA: That's exactly right.
RUSSERT: ... and the family disagreed as to whether it should be removed or not.
OBAMA: And I think that's an example of inaction, and sometimes that can be as costly as action.
But let me say this, since we're wrapping up this debate. We have gone through 20 debates now. And, you know, there is still a lot of fight going on in this contest, and we've got four coming up, and maybe more after that.
But the one thing I'm absolutely clear about is Senator Clinton has campaigned magnificently. She is an outstanding public servant. And I'm very proud to have been campaigning with her.
And part of what I think both of us are interested in, regardless of who wins the nomination, is actually delivering for the American people.
You know, there is a vanity aspect and ambition aspect to politics. But when you spend as much time as Senator Clinton and I have spent around the country, and you hear heartbreaking story after heartbreaking story, and you realize that people's expectations are so modest.
You know, they're not looking for government to solve all of their problems. They just want a little bit of a hand-up to keep them in their homes if they're about to be foreclosed upon, or to make sure their kids can go to college to live out the American dream.
You know, it is absolutely critical that we change how business is done in Washington and we remind ourselves of what government is supposed to be about.
And, you know, I have a lot of confidence that whoever ends up being the nominee that the Democratic standard-bearer will try to restore that sense of public service to our government. That's why I think we're both running, and I'm very pleased that I've had this opportunity to run with Senator Clinton.
RUSSERT: But the voters can only choose one, Brian.
RUSSERT: And I think you have a question.
WILLIAMS: Well, we don't have such thing in our format as a closing statement, but I am going to ask a closing and fundamental question of you both. And I'll ask it of you fist, Senator Obama.
What is the fundamental question you believe Senator Clinton must answer along the way to the voters here in Ohio and in Texas, and for that matter across the country, in order to prove her worthiness as the nominee? And then we will ask the same question of Senator Clinton.
OBAMA: I have to say, Brian, I think she is -- she would be worthy as a nominee. Now, I think I'd be better. Otherwise, I wouldn't be running. But there's no doubt that Senator Clinton is qualified and capable and would be a much better president than John McCain, who I respect and I honor his service to this country, but essentially has tethered himself to the failed policies of George Bush over the last seven years.
On economics, he wants to continue tax cuts to the wealthy that we can't afford, and on foreign policy he wants to continue a war that not only can we not afford in terms of money, but we can't afford in terms of lives and is not making us more safe. We can't afford it in terms of strategy.
So I don't think that Senator Clinton has to answer a question as to whether she's capable of being president or our standard bearer.
I will say this, that the reason I think I'm better as the nominee is that I can bring this country together I think in a unique way, across divisions of race, religion, region. And that is what's going to be required in order for us to actually deliver on the issues that both Senator Clinton and I care so much about.
And I also think I have a track record, starting from the days I moved to Chicago as a community organizer, when I was in my 20s, on through my work in state government, on through my work as a United States senator, I think I bring a unique bias in favor of opening up government, pushing back special interests, making government more accountable so that the American people can have confidence that their voice is being heard.
Those are things -- those are qualities that I bring to this race, and I hope that the people of Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island and Vermont decide that those are qualities that they need in the next president of the United States.
WILLIAMS: Senator Clinton, same question, and that is again -- is there a fundamental question Senator Obama must answer to the voters in this state and others as to his worthiness?
CLINTON: Well, Brian, there isn't any doubt that, you know, both of us feel strongly about our country, that we bring enormous energy and commitment to this race and would bring that to the general election and to the White House.
As I said last week, you know, it's been an honor to campaign. I still intend to do everything I can to win, but it has been an honor, because it has been a campaign that is history making.
You know, obviously I am thrilled to be running, to be the first woman president, which I think would be a sea change in our country and around the world, and would give enormous...
(APPLAUSE)
... you know, enormous hope and, you know, a real challenge to the way things have been done, and who gets to do them, and what the rules are.
So I feel that either one of us will make history.
The question that I have been posing is, who can actually change the country? And I do believe that my experience over 35 years in the private sector as well as the public and the not-for-profit sector, gives me an understanding and an insight into how best to make the changes that we all know we have to see.
You know, when I wasn't successful about getting universal health care, I didn't give up. I just got to work and helped to create the Children's Health Insurance Program. And, you know, today in Ohio 140,000 kids have health insurance. And yet this morning in Lorain, a mother said that she spent with the insurance and everything over $3 million taking care of her daughter, who had a serious accident. And she just looked at me, as so many mothers and fathers have over so many years, and said, "will you help us?"
That's what my public life has been about. I want to help the people of this country get the chances they deserve to have. And I will do whatever I can here in Ohio, in Texas, Rhode Island, in the states to come making that case. Because I think we do need a fighter back in the White House.
You know, the wealthy and the well-connected have had a president. It's time we had a president for the middle class and working people, the people who get up every day and do the very best they can. And they deserve somebody who gets up in that White House and goes to bat for them.
And that's what I will do.
WILLIAMS: Senator, thank you.