| February 23, 2008 Uncut: Obama responds to Clinton's accusations
|
(NECN) - Barack Obama held a press conference at Ohio State University Medical center in Columbus on Saturday. Obama focused on health care, but also spent time responding to accusations that he betrayed a pledge to practice a new style of politics. The comments came from Hillary Clinton in Cincinnati Saturday morning, accusing Obama of sending out campaign material that falsely describes her health care plan and trade views.
Barack Obama responded by saying that the mailers were in fact accurate, and they have been around for several days at least. He is puzzled why she made it an issue just now.
More from the Associated Press.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton said Saturday
that a pair of mailings sent to voters by rival Barack Obama's
campaign criticizing her health care plan and trade views are
false, misleading and a betrayal of his pledge to practice a new
style of politics.
"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," Clinton said angrily, waving the mailings in the air.
"Meet me in Ohio, and let's have a debate about your tactics,"
she added.
The two presidential candidates will meet in a televised debate
in Cleveland Tuesday.
Obama responded that the mailers are accurate and said he's
puzzled why Clinton was raising them now since they have been
around for several days at least.
"It makes me think there is
something tactical about her
getting so exercised this morning," Obama said at a media
conference in Columbus, Ohio.
Clinton spoke to reporters after an early morning rally at
Cincinnati Technical College, one of several events she has held
across Ohio this week. After losing eleven straight contests to
Obama since Super Tuesday, the former first lady is banking on a
strong showing in primaries in Ohio and Texas on March 4 to save
her fading candidacy.
With so much on the line and the clock ticking, Clinton ripped
into Obama much more directly and forcefully than she has in the
past.
She compared Obama to President Bush during the rally,
suggesting the country had already taken a gamble on an
inexperienced candidate who promised change.
"People talk a lot about change. We have lived through some of
the worst change that anyone could imagine the last seven years,"
she said to loud applause. "People thought we were getting a
compassionate conservative, didn't they? It turned out he was
neither. We have lived with the consequences of those mistakes."
But the New York senator saved her toughest words for Obama's
mailings, saying she refused to see the campaign "polluted" by
such tactics.
"Enough about the speeches, and the big rallies, and then using
tactics right out of (former Bush political adviser) Karl Rove's
playbook. This is wrong and every Democrat should be outraged,"
Clinton said.
Clinton's advisers have repeatedly criticized the Obama
campaign's health care mailing, which says her plan for universal
coverage would "force" everyone to purchase insurance even if
they can't afford it. Her plan requires everyone to be covered, but
it offers tax credits and other subsidies to make insurance more
affordable.
Obama's plan does not include the so-called "individual
mandate" for adults, and he has argued that people cannot be
required to buy coverage if they can't afford it. He has said his
first priority is bringing down costs.
The Illinois senator's plan does include a mandate requiring
parents to buy health insurance to cover children.
The second mailing, on the North American Free Trade Agreement,
quotes a 2006 Newsday article suggesting Clinton believed the
agreement had been a "boon" to the economy. NAFTA and other trade
agreements are extremely unpopular in Ohio, which has suffered an
exodus of blue-collar jobs to other countries in part due to such
agreements.
It's a particularly sensitive matter for Clinton, whose husband
championed and pushed for passage of the agreement as president.
She is counting on the support of white, working class voters in
the state.
"I am fighting to change NAFTA," she insisted. "Neither of us
were in the Senate when NAFTA passed. Neither voted one way or the
other."
Clinton said Newsday had corrected the record about her views on
the agreement. Indeed, the paper published a blog item earlier this
month saying Obama's use of the word "boon" was unfair.
"Obama's use of the citation in this way does strike us as
misleading. The quote marks make it look as if Hillary said
"boon," not us. It's an example of the kind of slim reeds
campaigns use to try to win an office."
Earlier, Newsday published an item saying the word "boon" had
been their "characterization of how we best understood her
position on NAFTA, based on a review of past stories and her public
statements."
As evidence of their concern about the issue, the Clinton
campaign released two new ads in Ohio, including one featuring John
Glenn - a former astronaut and U.S. senator from Ohio for 24 years
- saying Clinton would fix trade agreements like NAFTA.
Bill Burton, Obama's campaign spokesman, responded, "We look
forward to having a debate this Tuesday on the facts, and the facts
are that Senator Clinton was a supporter of NAFTA and the China
permanent trade treaties until this campaign began. And she herself
has said that under the Clinton health care plan, she would
consider 'going after the wages' of Americans."
Clinton said she felt good about her prospects in Ohio and Texas
but refused to say whether she needed to win both states to stay in
the race.
"Let's let the people of Ohio vote. Let's actually have an
election and then we can look at the results," she said.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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