Posted on 08/12/2002 11:29:34 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
WASHINGTON -- Here we go again.
Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe, long-time fund-raising pal of ex-President Clinton, told a whopper Sunday about his old boss on ABC's "This Week," while attacking President Bush as part of a GOP-bashing campaign before the midterm elections.
McAuliffe maintained that, unlike Bush, Clinton took the high ground and didn't "blame his predecessors" for the economic woes he inherited in 1993.
"There are 1.6 million Americans today who have lost their jobs since George Bush became president. And what does this administration do? All they do is blame others," he told ABC's Sam Donaldson.
"When Bill Clinton became president, he had a 7 percent unemployment rate. We were in a recession (and) he had the largest budget deficit in the history of our country," McAuliffe went on.
"Did he blame his predecessors?" he said. "No, he got to work. He brought Democrats, Republicans together."
His statement is demonstrably untrue, yet Donaldson left it unchallenged and quickly moved on to the next question ("Let's talk about your party, the Democratic Party. Joe Lieberman ...").
Luckily, Lexis-Nexis -- the database that archives old media articles and transcripts of speeches and press conferences going back decades -- doesn't have as short a memory as Donaldson or McAuliffe.
Here are just a few of the many complaints that Clinton, as both president and candidate, made about what he called the "failed" economic policies of his Republican predecessors, Presidents Bush and Reagan (who, it should be noted, implemented markedly different fiscal policies during their terms, despite Clinton's attempt to link them together as one seamless policy over their combined 12 years).
"We were dealing with 12 years of trickle-down Reaganomics, which exploded our deficits and sent our jobs overseas, and divided our people," Clinton added.
"Our national debt quadrupled," he added. "From 1989 to 1992, we experienced the slowest growth in a half-century."
"It took us from a $1 (trillion) to a $4 trillion debt (and) a huge deficit," he added.
"Trickle-down has had 12 years," he added. "I'm tired of it. We're not going to do the same thing for four more years."
"This policy has failed," he said. "The Republicans in Washington have compiled the worst economic record in 50 years."
Referring to other incendiary statements McAuliffe made about Bush in a DNC speech over the weekend, Republican National Committee Chairman Marc Racicot said his counterpart is prone to "hyperbole," but stopped short of calling him dishonest.
"He is incredibly inaccurate," he told the Sean Hannity radio show Monday, "and sometimes almost reckless."
And yes its my Trophy and you can't have it ....until the next Super Bowl .....Maybe ....LOL
I was in a discussion with a friend from overseas and mentioned that US presidents (traditionally) do not criticize their successors. I offered Bill Clinton as an exception. My friend was sceptical. Can someone point me toward a resource that details Bill Clinton's attempts to interfere with the current administration's policies since he left office?
I refer you to The New York Times and Time Magazine -- any copy will do. :-)
How come your "two cents" usually comes out to be, on the average, at least a Lincoln and change?
Racicot is clueless and needs to resign.
It's hard toi believe, but he is worse than the last RNC Chairman.
The rats use propganda better than Goebbels and the Nazi's and will lie, cheat, murder, and steal to gain and keep power.
The GOP is pathetic at getting it's message out.
The RNC leadership should be replaced immediately with people that understand the concept of presenting a united front and coherent simple message for the simpletons across the land that call themselves moderates.
The RNC fights like the French.
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