We Three Candidates Of Democrats Are

February 5, 2007, 8:56pm

Three more Democratic presidential candidates had their time in the party’s spotlight at the Democratic National Committee meeting over the weekend, and PoliticsTV captured their speeches on film.

Sen. Joseph Biden Jr. of Delaware:

Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico:

Gov. Tom Vilsack of Iowa:

Categories: AirCongress, Delaware, Iowa, New Mexico, Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., Presidency 2008, Bill Richardson, Tom Vilsack, Gov. Bill Richardson, Joseph Biden Jr.

Joe Biden: How Not To Run For President

February 1, 2007, 8:31pm

Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden Jr. hoped to make a statesmanlike splash yesterday with this video against a troop surge in Iraq as he officially announced his candidacy for president in 2008:

Instead, he made a bigger splash when he told the New York Observer that one of his rivals for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, is the “first mainstream African American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.”

And that bit of racial insensitivity reminded many Biden watchers about his other bout with racial insensitivity last summer. “You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts [in Delaware] unless you have a slight Indian accent.”

That gaffe worked to the financial advantage of Raj Bhakta, an Indian-American congressional candidate in neighboring Pennsylvania who used Biden’s words to solicit donations of $7.11.

Bhakta lost his race, but Biden is the one looking more like a loser to a lot of folks these days.

Categories: Delaware, Illinois, Producer's Picks, Iraq, Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., Presidency 2008, Barack Obama, Race, Joseph Biden Jr.

Anti-War Talk: Hypocrisy Or Patriotism?

January 30, 2007, 9:21pm

What do Democrats think of Iraq today? Something quite different than what they used to think, according to the Republican Party. The GOP has a new ad that highlights past statements of Democratic leaders in an effort to paint them as hypocrites for their views now.

Most of the statements are from 2002. Here are some examples:

  • Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.: “Saddam Hussein in effect has thumbed his nose at the world community, and I think that the president is approaching this in the right fashion.”
  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California: “Saddam Hussein certainly has chemical and biological weapons. There’s no question about that.”
  • Sen. John (Jay) Rockefeller of West Virginia: Hussein is “working aggressively to develop nuclear weapons.”
  • And Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, a likely 2008 presidential candidate: “I can support the president. I can support an action against Saddam Hussein.”

The ad also features excerpts from two other presidential contenders — Sen. Joseph Biden Jr. of Delaware and former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina — and from Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh.

On the other side of the Iraq debate, VoteVets features Iraq war veterans in a new 30-second ad titled “Stop Escalation.” “If you support escalation,” said one veteran without a left hand, “you don’t support the troops.”

That effort followed a video spot from three months ago titled “Because of Iraq,” which blamed the U.S. focus on Iraq for the failure to capture al Qaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden, for spreading the military too thin, for creating more terrorists, and for making America less secure. “Saying these things out loud is patriotic,” one veteran says.

Categories: New York, California, Delaware, Indiana, Nevada, West Virginia, Iraq, Harry Reid, Sen. Hillary Clinton, Evan Bayh, Sen. Joseph Biden Jr., John (Jay) Rockefeller IV, Presidency 2008, John Edwards, Nancy Pelosi, Hillary Clinton, AdWatch, Joseph Biden Jr.

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