June 27, 2006
Russ Feingold galvanizes Meet The Press
It's more than just experiencing a politician who
can simultaneously think and talk, although such has sadly become a
rare species. It's reveling in someone actually making sense, defending
values and beliefs and challenging the basis of those of other pols,
making and taking a non-mealymouth stand on multiple issues. It's what
I want in a Democratic politician.
It's Russ Feingold. He was interviewed on Sunday's "Meet The Press"
show and I half expected Tim Russert to close their get-together by
asking if Feingold could appear every Sunday--that's how impressive the
Senator from Wisconsin was. His coherent and cogent responses to
Russert's probing was as impressive a display of inspirational eloquence
as could be found in years.
I'm still a Brian Schweitzer backer (I'm waiting til 2007 to see what
happens) but Feingold is right now my second choice. He will not have
as much appeal in the Mountain West as Schweitzer but the contrast
between George Bush's struggle to connect thoughts and sentences with
Feingold's incisive articulation is transparent and striking. And
that's the absolute key for the 2008 Democratic presidential
nominee--to be someone who can viscerally connect with your average Joe
and Josephine America. Al Gore and John Kerry failed miserably in
coming anywhere close to Bill Clinton's oratory and his ability to
annex himself to individuals. Feingold certainly isn't Clinton but he
commands respect rather than caricature and ridicule.
Here some Feingold snippets from his appearance. See if you agree or disagree:
MR. RUSSERT: The
Iraqi prime minister today, Senator, unveiled a national reconciliation
plan. He calls on the Iraqi legislature to set a timeline for the
withdrawal of U.S. troops,
SEN. FEINGOLD:
Well, first, on the timeline, it appears to me that the American people
understand it’s time for a timeline to withdraw the troops from Iraq.
The Iraqi people and the Iraqi government understand it. It seems like
it’s only here in Washington that people don’t understand it’s time to
end this mistake, to end our military involvement there. And the votes
in Washington don’t show it, but the people in this country and the
people of Iraq want us to stop it.
MR. RUSSERT: As you
know, General George Casey, the U.S. commander of ground troops in
Iraq, met with President Bush and Pentagon leaders this week, and this
is one of the news reports about his meetings. “The top U.S. commander
in Iraq has drawn up plans that could lead to sharp reductions in
American forces there as early as September and cut the number of
combat brigades by nearly two-thirds by late 2007.
SEN. FEINGOLD: Not
only does it make sense, but it sort of shows that all this talk
about a timetable being unreasonable or ridiculous is just wrong. Even
General Casey is talking about how realistic it is to bring the troops
home, and our timetable that we proposed last week had to do with
bringing the troops home within one year. I mean, how is this
different? And of course, the claim is, if you tell the terrorists that
you’re going to leave, that somehow they’re going to be able to wait us
out. Well, apparently General Casey and the administration is allowing
us to tell them this.
The fact is it is a public
timetable, just of the kind that General Casey here is basically
talking about, where everybody’s going to know about it, is the best
way to transition so that the Iraqis know what’s going to happen, we
know what’s going to happen, the American people know what’s going to
happen. That is the way to have confidence in the process in Iraq and
get us refocused on the broader fight against terrorism in those places
in the world, Tim, where we’re losing ground. We’re losing ground in
Afghanistan. We don’t have enough resources in Indonesia and Malaysia
area in this regard. We have lost ground in Somalia. And the fact is
that Iraq is draining our strength. I think General Casey knows that.
And this plan is very similar to the type of thing that Senator Kerry
and I actually proposed in the United States Senate this week...
MR. RUSSERT: The
vice president, Cheney, weighed in on the debate. He offered these
comments: “The worst possible thing we could do is what the Democrats
are suggesting. And no matter how you carve it, you can call it
anything you want, but basically it is packing it in, going home, and
persuading and convincing and validating the theory that the Americans
don’t have the stomach for this fight.”
SEN. FEINGOLD: The
worst thing we could possibly do is what Vice President Cheney and
President Bush did, which was take us into an unnecessary war that had
nothing to do with 9/11 on false pretenses. They have done the worst
thing that’s ever been done in this regard. The question is, do we just
keep making the same mistake over and over again? Do we just stay in
Iraq so that Cheney and Bush can say that, that they were right? That
appears to be why we’re there. That appears to be the only logical
reason to stay in a situation that is draining our military, that is
hurting our recruiting, that is allowing Osama bin Laden to have us
exactly where he wants us...
MR. RUSSERT: ...the
campaign finance reform bill. John McCain, your partner in that effort,
had this to say about the debate on, on Iraq: “When our country went to
war, we incurred a moral duty to not abandon the people of Iraq to
terrorists and killers. If we withdraw prematurely, risking all-out
civil war, we will have done precisely that. I can hardly imagine that
any U.S. senator would want our nation to suffer that moral stain.”
SEN. FEINGOLD: We
have a moral responsibility to continue to be engaged in Iraq after our
military mission is over. Our military mission should be over. I agree
with John McCain. We need to support them economically. We need to help
them militarily in terms of helping their military stand up, in terms
of training. We need to make sure that we are engaged in that country
and not abandon them. But I’ll tell you our number one moral
responsibility. Our number one moral responsibility is to protect the
American people, to focus on those who attacked us on 9/11, to not be
distracted into a situation where even the administration did not have
Iraq as one of the 45 countries that was connected with al-Qaeda. Our
number one responsibility is to protect the American people from being
killed by terrorists. Iraq has very little to do with that at this
point. Iraq is obviously the place where they’re training people, but
the idea of standing up and keeping a military involvement forever in
Iraq will actually weaken the American people’s ability to go after
terrorists who, frankly, look like they’re taking over Somalia right
now.
You know, Tim, today it
was announced that, that a guy named Hassan Dahir Aweys is now the head
of the government that has taken over in Mogadishu, in Somalia. He is
on the State Department’s terrorist list. He is known as an al-Qaeda
operative or somebody that is connected with al-Qaeda. While we are
asleep at the switch, while we are baggedbogged down in, in Iraq,
while we are all focused on Iraq as if it is the be-all and end-all of
our American foreign policy, we are losing the battle to al-Qaeda
because we’re not paying attention. I asked Ambassador Crumpton at a
hearing the other day, how many people in our federal government are
working full time on the problem in Somalia. He said one full-time
person. We spent $2 million dollars on Somalia in the last year, while
we’re spending $2 billion dollars a week on Iraq. This is insanity, if
you think about what the priorities are in terms of those who have
attacked us and who are likely to attack us in the future...
MR. RUSSERT: You said some Democratic senators told you privately they felt intimidated to vote for the war. Why?
SEN. FEINGOLD: They
may not have used that exact word, but they certainly indicated that
they felt that there was enormous political pressure. Because the White
House has done a terrible job of running the fight against terrorism. A
terrible job in Iraq, but they’ve done a brilliant job of intimidating
Democrats. Somehow Democrats are afraid to say, “Look, not only was
this a mistake, but it continues to be a mistake and it’s being run in
a mistaken way.” And I cannot understand why the structure of the
Democratic Party, the consultants that are here in Washington,
constantly advise Democrats not to take a strong stand. This election
could turn on this Iraq issue, in fact, the 2006 election, and maybe
even 2008. The party that says we have a reasonable plan to bring the
troops home by, by this date and to refocus on the anti-terrorism issue
is the party that will win. And I believe that my political instincts
tell me...
MR. RUSSERT: But Senator, you only have 13 votes for your resolution.
SEN. FEINGOLD: Yeah, that’s not the American people. The 13 votes...
MR. RUSSERT: But that’s the Democratic Party.
SEN. FEINGOLD: No, it’s not.
MR. RUSSERT: It’s less than a third of those in the Senate.
SEN. FEINGOLD: The
Democratic Party of this country is the people of this country.(!!!!!!!) And I
have been all over Wisconsin, all 72 counties, to 12 different states.
I can tell you, the one thing I’m sure of, Tim, is the American people
have had it with this intervention. They do want a timetable for
bringing home the troops. And the fact that the United States Senate
doesn’t get it shouldn’t surprise you.
MR. RUSSERT: So the majority of the Democratic Senate is out of touch with the American people?
SEN. FEINGOLD: Yes, it is at this point.
To read the entire interview, go here.
top
RSS feed
|