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Barack Obama interview with Fox’s Chris Wallace
By David EdwardsDespite challenge, Barack Obama says no to debate with Hillary Clinton before May 6 primaries
HOPE YEN
AP NewsApr 27, 2008 10:10 EST
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama on Sunday brushed aside a challenge from Hillary Rodham Clinton to debate before the May 6 primaries in Indiana and North Carolina.
On Saturday, Clinton said she wants Obama to face off with her in a debate without a moderator, Lincoln-Douglas style.
“I’m not ducking. We’ve had 21″ debates, Obama said on “Fox News Sunday.”
“For two weeks, two big states, we want to make sure we’re talking to as many voters on the ground, taking questions from voters,” he said. “We’re not going to have debates between now and Indiana.”
The more open style of debating where each side presents an argument gets its name from the famed debates that took place during the 1858 U.S. Senate race in Illinois between Republican Abraham Lincoln and Democrat Stephen Douglas.
Trailing in delegates and the popular vote, Clinton has been stepping up the pressure on Obama for more debates in advance of primaries on May 6 in Indiana and North Carolina.
Obama was planning to return to his home in Chicago on Sunday and had no public events scheduled. Clinton was spending the day campaigning in North Carolina.
Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean said superdelegates should make known their choices on the Democratic nominee for president by the end of June. Ultimately, he said he believes their decisions will be based on who is more electable, rather than necessarily who has the most pledged delegates, because that is what party rules stipulate.
“This is essentially pretty close to a tie here,” Dean said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
“What’s going to happen in the last nine primaries is there’s going to be some feeling at some point that one of these candidates is more likely to win than the other and that person will get the nomination. I can’t tell you who that is, I have no idea who that is, but that’s what’s going to happen,” Dean said.
Dean also said he expected the party to heal from the bitter primary race if superdelegates make their decisions in June and that he believes Michigan and Florida delegates will be “seated in some way.”
“If you go into the convention divided, it’s pretty likely you’ll come out of the convention divided,” he said.
The Democratic Party stepped up its attack on Sen. John McCain, using a new party ad to cast the presumed Republican presidential nominee as a commander in chief who would keep troops in Iraq for 100 years. The ad is part of a half-million-dollar, three-week national cable television campaign aimed at linking the Arizona senator to the policies of President Bush.
The ad set to begin airing Monday accuses McCain of wanting to remain in Iraq for “maybe 100″ years, a link to a remark McCain made in January while campaigning in New Hampshire. The ad concludes, “If all he offers is more of the same is John McCain the right choice for America’s future?”
Since then, McCain has repeatedly said he has no intention of extending the war into the next century, but would keep a U.S. military presence in Iraq much as the United States has in Germany, Japan and South Korea.
The Democratic candidates have also acknowledged they would keep non-combat troops in Iraq to ensure its stability. But they have said they would begin withdrawing combat troops promptly upon becoming president, a step McCain has said would be precipitous.
The DNC has been organizing a drumbeat against McCain at the state party level to coincide with McCain’s travels across the country.
Meanwhile, Obama has become a Republican target. The North Carolina Republican Party aired an ad, over McCain’s objections, that uses remarks by Obama’s former pastor to portray Obama as too extreme. The ad points out that the two Democrats running for state governor have endorsed the Illinois senator.
Freedom’s Watch, a conservative group, and the National Republican Congressional Committee are running ads in Louisiana criticizing Obama’s health care proposal and linking him to a Louisiana congressional candidate.
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Associated Press writer Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.
(with wire reports)
Here is Barack Obama’s full interview with Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday.
This video is from Fox’s Fox News Sunday, broadcast April 27, 2008.
11 Responses to “Barack Obama interview with Fox’s Chris Wallace”
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April 27th, 2008 at 12:04 pm
Another bait attempt. FIXED NEWS GETS SLAMMED!!!
What morons…
April 27th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
Why does anyone bother to watch Chris Wallace? He has NOTHING to offer.
You don’t have to be a blind conservative not to see it, just an ignorant one to deny it.
April 27th, 2008 at 12:29 pm
[…] Politics Blog | Breaking Political News and Views. wrote an interesting post today on Barack Obama interview with Foxâ
April 27th, 2008 at 1:52 pm
What the hell is wrong with you guys. 18 minutes on race, wright and anything else that has been beaten to death. FOX news is no better than Jerry Springer, your news service is a joke.
April 27th, 2008 at 2:27 pm
I am disappointed with Senator Obama for adding some semblance of legitimacy to the fascist news network.
Calling themselves a ‘news’ network has the same creditability as calling the current regime ‘elected’.
April 27th, 2008 at 2:43 pm
[…] from rawstory.com posted with vodpod […]
April 27th, 2008 at 7:01 pm
Chris Wallace looks like a pasty-faced, closet fascist racist. Fair and balanced? Bullshit!
April 27th, 2008 at 8:24 pm
Obama is so eloquent, intelligent, dignified, and honest. His words are thoughtful and disciplined and reflect wisdom and deep compassion even for his political opponents. I have to think that his integrity and leadership gifts must be apparent to anyone who listens without bias. I bet that even Chris Wallace said “wow” to himself several times during and after this interview.
April 28th, 2008 at 2:28 am
Remember that little outburst of Chris Wallace’s a few weeks ago when he chewed out the Fox and Friends hosts for ragging on Obama over the “Typical White Person” comment? A month later Obama is sitting down with Wallace in a “Fox News Exclusive!”.
Suddenly the cynic in me is thinking that was Fox’s way of outing Wallace as the most Pro-Obama personality at Fox, maybe softening up some of their viewers on Obama. It did give him a chance to talk to the Fox viewers who otherwise he never would have reached.
I do think he did a good job.
.
April 28th, 2008 at 8:15 am
“You know the head of Central Command tops the President.” “You know we have a military dictatorship in this country that supersedes any puppet in the White House.” That’s what Chris Wallace really wanted to say. Read between the lines.
April 30th, 2008 at 9:24 pm
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