tv First Ladies Influence Image CSPAN January 28, 2014 12:00am-2:01am EST
12:00 am
her son and, of course, the broader community. point that must be must be taken seriously by the current owners. it is risking danger and it is only luck that leads to that gun not killing. luckily, most of the time, guns do not get abused. matter of luck if you were just leaving it around and ask people like adam with access to that weapon. >> it is 9:00. say, thank you for coming. thank you for your excellent input. this was an intellectually invigorating evening for all of us.
12:01 am
you may have noticed the cameras. c-span -- this will be broadcast. we can have a debate, a conversation like this where differences of opinion get raised. figure out complexities. -- we do not need to shout each other. i assume that bill o'reilly would say this evening was a failure because you are not going away angry or upset. it very encouraging and reassuring for our democracy that we can come together like this and share differences of opinion and understand that in those differences, we have a common goal, a common purpose to figure out how to live together peacefully. thank you for a wonderful evening. [applause]
12:02 am
12:03 am
12:04 am
>> here to tell us the story for the next 90 minutes are to journalist who know the clintons well by covering them for many years. a biographer of hillary clinton, her book in 2000 was called "hillary's choice." welcome to both of you. as we start here, i want to play a bit of video from 1992. it is 105 or six hillary clinton clips that has become
12:05 am
implemented of her. this is where she talked about how she might approach the role of first lady. let's listen. [video clip] >> primarily children but other issues. it is not true and i don't know what else to say. i suppose i could have stayed home and baked cookies, but i decided to fulfill my profession. >> they really were promoting this idea that she would be a very involved first lady. how did that work out for her?
12:06 am
>> they made a lot of mistakes in the beginning. the public was not prepared for the two-for-one presidency and i don't know if they ever will be, but i think it was stunning to suddenly see this really intelligent, outspoken, totally confident woman who had been given the role of copresident. if we had a copresident, that might be a cool thing because partners in power are more and more happening. hillary had gone from the 50's to the 70's in her four years and was suddenly plunged into a new women's movement. it actually took a hillary to raise the president. she did have to keep them in the channel because he was brilliant but all over the place, and reckless.
12:07 am
to swallow all of that was really quite an overkill for the american public. it took her almost six years to really figure out how to do it. i had an occasion to meet her in the ladies room and she kind of let down her hair and said i just don't know what to do, nothing i do works. she said i understand that i'm really threatening to man. the velocity of change between men and women and the way the country is going from one generation to the boomers is overwhelming, especially to men. i'm threatening to them, and i don't know what to do about it. >> was she a transitional figure? >> i would say she was almost one-of-a-kind. the role model she modeled herself after was eleanor roosevelt, but there was a great difference between the two. bill clinton and hillary clinton saw from the beginning that they
12:08 am
could get to further places together than they could apart. whereas elinor was active as a first lady, she was really on her own track him a different from president roosevelt. where bill clinton relied on hillary for much of his policy from the very beginning, going back to arkansas. it was a reality to them, and his presidency -- >> we said at the outset that hillary clinton wasn't first lady who was quite diverse. she was the first first lady to have a law degree. she was first to have an office in the west wing, where policy is made. she was later the first to testify before a grand jury in the investigations that were ramping up. she was the first first lady elected united states senator, the first to run for president,
12:09 am
and the first to serve as secretary of state. first you have to go back to the beginning. hillary clinton was born in chicago as hillary diane rodham. tell me about her childhood and what was significant about it. >> the most significant thing was the way she saw herself, which was from the age of eight or 10 as a star. her fantasy was, and she wrote about this, was to dance in the sun and spend under the sun and imagine that god was beaming the sundown only on her and that heavenly cameras were following and filming her every move. she made that a reality. for many years now, maybe not heavenly, but cameras nonetheless are following her every move. she made it happen. >> her father had worked in scranton, pennsylvania in the
12:10 am
factories and mines in the neighborhood of chicago. her mother was a traditional housewife. where does this come from in hillary? >> i would not call her mother a traditional housewife. she was very strong and independent. her father was a republican, and 99.5% right. he was in the deep heart of the midwest middle-class. he was very sheltered in that sense. she had her father's politics but it was sort of incidental to knew she thought she was. she was very strongly a methodist in that sense throughout her life, but it started in her early teenage years.
12:11 am
it was a very progressive person to challenge hillary to think about the world outside. that was when she blossomed and changed her politics. >> you told a story about a minister who would take his wife and kids to chicago to see how other people lived. >> she was enormously affected by that. she knew then that park ridge was a bubble and she wanted to know more about how the real world work. i have to say that her mother told me a significant story about her childhood. when they moved to park ridge that vicious social hierarchy of four-year-olds did not admit her, and a little girl named susie used to be her up every day. she came back crying, and one day her mother said, this house is no place for cowards. you go back out there and not that girl out. hillary came back home and said
12:12 am
now i get to play with the boys. >> and she has been doing it ever since. >> as a preteen she was reading barry goldwater. jill very young to be reading that. i did not read those books as a teenager. she had a high school teacher who was very conservative who is influencing her in the other direction. >> she did have some conservative teachers, but so did all of us. i don't think that teacher had a profound influence, no more so than her father. but it was enough to have her looking in those directions lyrically, but not so much internally. i wouldn't say the teachers had
12:13 am
more influence on her than the youth ministers at the methodist church, or her mother. >> she wanted to have equilibrium. she used a carpenter's level as a visual to say keep the bubble in the middle. she also wanted to warn her, never get divorced, because she, dorothy rodham, her parents had been divorced and they abandoned her. so hillary never agreed to give the president of divorce, even though at one point he wanted it. the other amazing thing about hillary was when she met martin luther king, introduced by don jones, the methodist minister. she heard him in chicago and realized that there were no black people that she saw in her class in part ridge. she read up on it and realized
12:14 am
that the emancipation proclamation had not really been carried out, and she wanted to do something. her aha moment was at wellesley when she heard about martin luther king being shot. that is when she turned off from being a little goldwater girl to being a real progressive -- a real liberal. >> she would graduate the next year. i think that is the moment she turned into an activist. hundreds of thousands of people of that generation, when they got to college invested in all of that. >> how did she get to wellesley, this midwest girl? >> she was very smart.
12:15 am
she was president of her high school class. it was an all girls school in suburban boston. her parents drove her out in the cadillac. >> it made her father furious when he realized it was a snobby eastern liberal girls school, and he never visited her there until her graduation. the fascinating thing to me what she wrote a number of letters to a high school friend that she gave me. she had a four-year identity crisis. she thought she had to select her identity and she laid them out like a smorgasbord. she said should i be a pseudo- hippie? that was ok, because she didn't care about her appearance. that she was a moral methodist. she read catcher in the right
12:16 am
and hated it. she said maybe i am a misanthrope. can you be a compassionate misanthrope? and she was, sort of. should she be an alienated academic? she finally came to a decision. she chose her identity, which was, she hated looking inward. she couldn't stand introspection and her father had taught her that any expression of emotionality was a sense of weakness. she wrote about that, no emotion. she decided she would help other people lead their best lives and help to save the world. >> she became president of the student body, is that correct? >> she did. >> she gave a speech at wellesley that actually thrust her into the national spotlight. what was that all about? >> her generation did not -- did not want to veer from a moderate republican -- she got up and
12:17 am
said we don't believe in just materialism and competitiveness. we are looking for ecstatic experiences. her student body just gave an uproar of applause, and the faculty was mortified. it got her into life magazine and she was already a star. then i asked, what was the most ecstatic experience of your 20's? she said falling in love with bill clinton. she said, he wasn't afraid of me. >> this was the essence of hillary, all of us exploring a world that none of us understand. there are some things we feel, competitive corporate life, is not the way of life for us. we are searching for more immediate, ecstatic, and
12:18 am
penetrating modes of living. >> so as you know if you have been watching us along the way, the thing that makes this program different and interesting for us at the table are your questions, and we welcome them three different ways. you can call us, the phone numbers are on the screen. you can post a comment on our facebook page. there is already quite a lively discussion going on about hillary clinton on our facebook age, and you can tweet us. a viewer wants to know whether or not hillary wanted to drop out of college but her mother encouraged her to stay.
12:19 am
did she ever consider dropping out of college? >> i don't remember reading that in her biography. she did go through a year of depression. there were a lot of highborn society girls at wellesley and that was not her bag at all. she wasn't sure that she was smart enough at the beginning, so she was depressed. i think it was in her sophomore year, so she may have considered it. >> how did she get to yale law school? what was the decision to study law? >> somebody who wanted to have an active life effecting change, that is what they would do. she got to law school in 1969, actually a year before bill clinton did. she took a five-year program to get through yell law school. she wanted to be a lawyer more than he ever did.
12:20 am
it was the way to the life that they wanted, effecting social change. yeah law school was a very socially active place during that time. it was like everything was rigid. >> which you have considered harvard law as well? >> yes. >> what was the environment for women studying law at yell law school when she arrived? >> there were not very many. she was quite unique there as she has been at every venue. she didn't speak an awful lot about prejudice. she was just too darn smart. when she and bill decided to enter a contest with the barristers union present their case for a live jury, she did all the work and all the writing and bill did the presenting. he was good at the presenting, but he goofed off during the preparation. when hillary, who made a real
12:21 am
impression on one of the judges, he later hired her for the impeachment committee on richard nixon. >> it sort of captured everything that was to come in a way. a fellow law school student described it as to kill a mockingbird and hillary was the logger. >> hillary clinton talks about how she and bill clinton met. let's watch. [video clip] >> he was standing out in the hallway and it was one of those moments that just clicks. i was sitting there and i just started staring at him. i thought, i really like the way he looks. i need to get to know him. then he caught my eye and begin staring back at me. here i am in the library, not reading. he is actually surrounded by people who are talking at him, not talking back.
12:22 am
finally i thought this is ridiculous. i am in this class with this person, so i put my books down and i went up and said if i'm going to keep looking at you in your going to keep looking at me, we ought to at least know each other's name. he says he could not remember his name. that makes me feel so good when he said that. he did sort of stumble out, i'm bill clinton. do you want me to go on about this? then it was the last day of class and we both showed up for the last day. i was walking out the door any kind of got to the door at the same time and said where are you going? i said i'm going to go register for my classes next year. so we walked together and stood in this in less line and we talked and talked. i finally got up to the line and
12:23 am
the registrar, this wonderful woman who i have kept in touch with said hillary, what are you going to take? and i started to fill it out and she said bill, why are you here? you registered yesterday. >> people always want to know, what was it that attracted these two people so strongly to one another? they seem so different in many ways. >> hillary had not been popular with boys in a boy-girl since. she liked big, handsome hunks, and here was this big, handsome redhaired guy with elvis sideburns, and he had this southern charm. he was just looking after her after class like a lovesick hound dog panting behind her. it really made her feel like a
12:24 am
woman. then she realized how brilliant he was, and how they clicked, and how she could really do something with this type. she could really bring him out. when she left the watergate impeachment committee to go out to little rock, fayetteville, her best friend was saying you are crazy, you are leaving this when she left the watergate fabulous career in washington where you are in line to be in a political life. she said, bill clinton is going to be president some day, and i'm going to marry him. >> from bill clinton's perspective, obviously there were a lot of women who were interested in him. during that time, his roommate at yale would say he would prepare and prep them for times when hillary was coming over because he wanted to impress her
12:25 am
so much. she would not put up with what she called his arkansas palaver. she was the one who had the guts to say come off it, bill. they actually did have a lot in common. they had the same ambitions. they thought they could get places together that they could not get to a park. they share a love of politics and movies and books and intellectual things. there was a spark there, that i think hillary from the beginning was head over heels for bill. i think he just saw her as someone different and someone who could really help him and be a partner. >> how long did it take from that first meeting to marriage, and how does the relationship progressed? >> it took several years.
12:26 am
what happened in between was quite fascinating. when bill was running for his first congressional race, the campaign was chaotic, and he was losing. hillary dropped everything and flew out there and came into the little campaign area. she was a college girl that he was having a romance with out the side door. she came in and said what is going on? that night, the night before the vote, they knew there were going to lose. she and the campaign manager and his wife all got locked in a room together to find out what was really going wrong here. hillary was giving them the third degree and the wife said i even had to take bill clinton's girlfriend as my babysitter to get him out of the way. she started swearing and cursing and throwing things. the next thing you know, the window was broken. and who sat through the whole
12:27 am
thing, nobody ever mentioned him? with capacity of a buddha -- bill clinton. that set the tone for the way she dealt with all of those, it was never his fault, it was always somebody else's fault. >> when she came out to arkansas he was running for the senate. it set the tone for the differences between them. bill clinton was the easy professor that gave everyone a b plus at the worst. that is because they were all going to be voters in arkansas sunday, he didn't want to upset them. hillary was completely organized. her classes were tough. the dean of the law school said if he was going to hire one of
12:28 am
the clintons to be a law professor, it would have been hillary. >> talk about her experience on the impeachment panel after watergate. one of the few women, one of the youngest lawyers. she defined it as one of the most important or formative experiences of her life. how did it shape her? >> it was a historic moment in american history. she worked for -- she had met him at yale when he was a judge. the congressional hotel is where the staff was working. her job was not the most exciting. a lot of the staffers were not getting into the grid of the
12:29 am
scandal itself. her job was to look at the constitutionality of impeachment. one of her bosses was ernie nussbaum. it was really an examination of close of power and the manipulation of power and the abuse of power. you could not work in that office without learning a lot about that. >> were going to take you next to fayetteville and the house that bill clinton bought for hillary a as he proposed, and where they got married. let's watch. >> this is where the clintons lived when they were professors in fayetteville. bill was driving her down this road to go to the airport and they saw the house and it was for sale.
12:30 am
hillary pointed at the house and said that is a cute house. bill took her to the airport and picked her up from the airport about a month later and said i bought your dream house, you have to marry me and live there with me. that was the fourth time he had proposed. and they were married right there. there were nine people at the wedding. it was a very small, intimate ceremony. the wedding announcement made no mention of the fact that hillary was retaining her own name. bill did not seem to be bothered by this. when they told hillary's mother, she cried. we have a replica of her wedding dress here at the museum. it was $53 off the rack and it was made by jessica mcclintock, a popular designer at the time. it was a very humble beginning for the clintons here in fayetteville. they were both making $14,000 a year as law professors. they used to sleep out here in the summers because they did not have air conditioning. this is the clinton kitchen. she referred to it as the room in the house that desperately
12:31 am
needed to be remodeled. this is what it looked like when the clintons were here. they had the harvest gold appliances. of course hillary never cooked. she said bill would occasionally fry things. the formal dining room the clintons called the war room. they used it as campaign headquarters for the attorney general campaign, which was the first successful political campaign in 1976. there was a map of arkansas and hillary had the idea to visit each county three times. fayetteville was a place where they readily settled in. they really thought they had arrived. they had got married, bought a house, they had successful jobs as law professors and they had finished law school.
12:32 am
they had reached a plateau where they had reached a lot of the things they set goals for in life. >> we are going to get some of our first callers in here and then we will pick up our story. let's begin with james in oakland, california, our first caller tonight. >> i am loving this series. one question for gail sheehy. she referred to a time when hillary clinton agreed to divorce bill clinton. i'm also curious about where she had major policy differences than bill clinton. thank you. >> it was 1989 when bill clinton had gotten caught with -- he had pulled back from running for governor again and hillary had
12:33 am
explored whether or not she should run for governor, when the polls showed that she was not going to be getting many votes at all. bill clinton fell in love with another woman, really fell in love with her. this was not a bimbo or a lounge singer. this was a woman, quality professional whose family was in arkansas and in politics. he asked hillary for a divorce, and she consulted with her minister and herself and came back and said nothing doing. that's not going to happen. and this affair is going to end. and that was the end of it. they never brought that up again and they found their own arrangement much later, which we can talk about later. >> there were some policy
12:34 am
differences. one of the major ones was more a nuanced and complete difference. early in the second term when bill clinton declared that the american government was over and was reforming welfare. hillary rodham clinton's mentor was marian wright edelman. she was very much opposed to what they were trying to do in terms of welfare reform and he quit the administration. that was one of the major differences. >> from brooklyn, you are on the air. >> will you ask the question again? >> i want to know what drives hillary clinton to want to become the first lady?
12:35 am
>> isn't something she had aspired to? you said from the beginning she knew that bill clinton was going to be president. >> she knew that he had it in him to be president, and she wanted to be part of that. she wanted to be a star, and she thought she would hitch our wagon to his star as a way to become a star herself, and she was right. >> we have had quite a few young callers calling in. chad crabtree is on twitter and he asked, how influential is religion and her faith. hrc does not seem as visible or vocal with it as president clinton. >> i think it is more important to her. she was a very moral methodist. a very buttoned up prude in many ways, socially conservative in
12:36 am
behavior. faith got her through some of the worst times. she really relied on it, and also the inspiration of eleanor roosevelt. >> bill clinton was a baptist, hillary was a methodist. hillary used her religion more as an excellent nation in her active life. her motto was do the best you can, the most you can, as often as you can. that was part of our methodist motto. >> good evening. i haven't talked to you since i doubt mckinley. these are two icons and i have read both your works.
12:37 am
i really enjoyed your work on character back in 1988. my question was, in response to a caller last week with mrs. bush, i think the question was over the relationship between the first lady's during the transition. i remember a quote of mrs. bush and i would like to get both your comments on it. after the informal tour of the white house, mrs. bush in response to reporters questions, i think the reporter said, do you have any advice for mrs. clinton? and mrs. bush said avoid reporters like the plague, and if they quote you, make sure they heard you. so i would like to find out from both of you in terms of what hillary clinton -- i don't remember her having much of a
12:38 am
comment then, but i would like to get your take on the transition, and thank you so much for your work. >> she certainly did not avoid the question. it is interesting that barbara bush on your program talked about how much she likes bill clinton now. i don't think that was necessarily true then. >> over time they became quite good friends. >> i had an experience with hillary early in 1992, actually the day after she and bill appeared on 60 minutes to address the gennifer flowers issue. i flew with hillary in a tiny little plane to pierre, south dakota before she was going to
12:39 am
appear at a roast. they're on the television screen was jennifer flowers. i was right next to hillary and i watched her expression. not an iota of surprise, then just directing her secretaries to get them on the phone. ride into battle mode. she swept into the roast, charmed the whiskers off the farmers, went to the phone again and came back boiling mad. we got on the plane and for the next half hour, she staked out what would be their battle plan for the rest of their time in the white house. she said they are now doing paid character assassination, and run against the press. the second one was a big mistake. she did shut the access to reporters off, which really
12:40 am
alienated them a great deal. and she stonewalled all the time, and she lied much of the time. and the press very early on stopped giving them a glass half-full and started giving them glass half empty. she had decided, she had made a choice. she was either going to -- they were symbiotic, joined at the hip. they had an unspoken agreement, she didn't ask him for any details about the women, and he didn't ask her about whitewater or her cattle futures or her investments. >> we have got to spend a little bit of time with the arkansas years.
12:41 am
we will not do it justice, but dave murdock asks how did the locals treat hillary? we use that as a jumping off point to say after the successful attorney general bid, he went on, bill clinton, to be elected to five nonconsecutive terms as governor of the state of arkansas. what is important about hillary clinton's time during that period? >> in some ways as she did as first lady of the united states. when bill clinton for started relying on her to make his most important policy issues. the precursor to health care in the white house was education reform in arkansas, where he appointed hillary to lead the effort to inform the arkansas school system, which was so bad that arkansas was 49 instead of 50th on test scores. she came into the first lady of
12:42 am
arkansas as hillary rodham. part of the campaign against bill was sort of this woman who would not take her husband's last name, and that was so un- arkansan. will clinton was called the protean character who could adapt to any setting. hillary was also adaptable. after the first two years, i think she looked to get out of work in arkansas and she was part of the whole social and political scene.
12:43 am
>> a lot of it had to do with image. she had not given any thought to her appearance, buying a dress off the rack. she dressed kind of like a hippie. she didn't wear makeup, her hair was not fixed, and she really spruced up. she pulled herself together and began to look more like an acceptable southern lady, and give teas and do more of the first lady duties. but she was also supporting him. the big thing she gave bill clinton was money. she was the breadwinner while he was making a very paltry salary for many years. she was made partner at the law firm three years after she retired when she was back in the governor's office, because that was now a very big in action.
12:44 am
>> a little parallel with the obama family, where michelle obama was the lawyer earning more money to allow her husband to pursue -- >> the difference is that michelle during that time had been happy with her husband being a political guy going off to springfield illinois. >> gail sheehy, in arkansas there were the seeds of things that she would take to the white house, and you referenced them. we should explain what decisions he made that would end up becoming investigations. the rose law firm and billing during that time, investing in futures were all things americans across the country would begin to hear about when they mated to the white house. talk about her involvement in these decisions that she made that would become national. >> the real story here is about
12:45 am
the decision to allow a special prosecutor. that was a big debate between bill and hillary. >> i'm looking at what she actually did there -- >> to this day, i don't think anybody really knows. she was investing. she had a hotshot investor who got her into cattle futures. >> a friend of their at the university when the clintons were there, and her husband was very sharp with trading. that is how they got into that. $1000 could make $100,000 on cattle futures. she got in trouble with the rose
12:46 am
law firm records and actions involving jim mcdougal who was actually bill clinton's friend. >> it was sort of the morass of arkansas politics they got trapped in. >> john is watching us from michigan. what is your question? >> like everyone, i have been following this series of programs and i want to commend you, susan, and all of c-span for such wonderful journalism. it has been great. >> i would like to go back to 1972, and i believe that bill clinton was in charge of the texas governor campaign, and hillary and a man who is now a historian also worked on that mcgovern campaign in texas in 1972. that was the first foray that the two of them, bill and hillary, got together. am i correct in that? one other thing connected with that, i think i heard this, and
12:47 am
i wonder if this is true or if it is improbable, i believe bill clinton said or wrote in one of his book that in the course of that, he drove cokie roberts dad, hale boggs, who was then the house majority leader, to the airport and dropped him off, because he was a campaign aide, and said goodbye to him and everything. that was the last that hale boggs was ever seen. >> we will get a response to your question. >> a big it was hugely informative because this was a very new kind of politics, which they believed in. mcgovern had the kind of platform that they were interested in. they thought they were going to bring that new politics to a larger america. i think that inspired them. >> they also met betsy right in
12:48 am
that campaign. she was furious with hillary for advancing bill clinton's career instead of striking out on her own, but hillary pulled back from that. she was more interested in making it as a twosome. >> taylor branch and bill clinton were very young and they were running texas. they had been hired by gary hart to run the state. texas was a political mess. there was a huge split between the progressives and the conservatives. it was an enormous learning experience for both the clintons. hillary was in san antonio and bill was in austin, running the campaign. he took george mcgovern out to
12:49 am
the pedernales to meet with lbj. clinton learned a lot in that campaign. he also learn how you can lose. from that moment on, bill clinton's concept was how you could be a moderate progressive and still hang onto something in america as it was changing. >> during his term as governor, the clintons increased their national profile, leading to the 1992 presidential campaign. the mentioned earlier that it was a bruising one. including the arrival of ross perot's candidacy in the campaign. it brought bill clinton and hillary clinton to the white house.
12:50 am
after they arrive, there was the announcement about health care. we have a couple of clips to show you that help demonstrate the intention of the first lady's involvement in health care. let's watch. [video clip] >> i'm glad hillary has agreed to share this task force and she will be sharing some of the heat i expect to demonstrate. in the coming months, the american people will learn that we have a first lady of many talents, but most of all who can bring people together around on flex issues to hammer out consensus and get things done. >> as the president said, and as he believed, this is not a partisan issue. it is not an ideological battle. it is a problem to be solved that affects all of us. and i'm looking forward over the next weeks and months to not only working with you, but to watching you craft the most important social policy that our nation will have confronted in many decades. >> a lot of people thought i
12:51 am
should not be making recommendations about legislation or that i shouldn't be involved in working on behalf of what my husband asked you to work on, which was one of his primary objectives. they felt that was somehow inappropriate, that if you exercise influence, do it behind the scenes where nobody can see you. i find that curious. i like to know what goes on in front of the scenes, because i'm very much the kind of person who believes that you should say what you mean and mean what you say and take the consequences. just like anybody else who is involved in public life. >> emily on twitter says what and why was the difference in hillary clinton's health care proposal failing compared to obama care? why did that not work for the clintons?
12:52 am
>> i would say that one of the contradictions in hillary's statement, she talked about how she liked to be open and upfront. one of the big problems with that effort to push through health care was that it was so secretive and congress did not feel they were part of it. of any sort of major initiative through congress is difficult to matter who is controlling it. there was pretty much antipathy toward it and money spent by insurance companies to defeat it. president obama was able with the democratic majority to just barely get it through by working with them. one of the major problems with the clintons effort is there was not the feeling they were actually partners in it and that
12:53 am
they had just concocted it in secret meetings. >> how important was it, the appointment of hillary clinton ultimately in its trajectory? >> i think it was a long hangover for the clintons. you can see from the video that hillary came on with a modulated voice. she speaks without notes and paragraphs, all the skills that we have seen her practice all along, but she never said i'm not an expert, but. she never showed any deference to the people on this committee, one of the most important committees in washington, to say i look over to your expertise. she said i know, i've studied, i've talked to thousands of americans, and this is what we need to do. think she got off on the wrong foot with members of congress. as david said, then everything was in secret, many, many meetings, and then this giant thing with thousands of pages
12:54 am
was dropped on the table. the same complaints, the same opposition from republicans on every single score, including will americans be guaranteed they can keep their health care plan if they like it? the key was in her defense when she said i don't understand why i could make policy just like any other public official. she was a public official. >> in 1994, the republicans took control for the first time in several decades. i don't want to do a bill clinton presidency discussion but i want to frame this question in terms of how it affected hillary clinton's record. republicans took over the investigation. can you talk about that? >> the defeat in 1994 was to the
12:55 am
clintons exactly like the defeat in 1980 when they lost the governorship. they had to recover in the same way. they had to think of what the apology would be, how to get back into the game. even though they were not on the ballot in 1994, it that defeat was the same as any other for them. everything started to unravel from there. >> we will talk more about the charges and the investigations later on. the decision to put hillary in charge of health care, the uprising against it which then had an effect on the election, which then change the course of the presidency. >> other causes that she was involved in continually were children and also women's issues.
12:56 am
she published a book during this time and it became another phrase him of money with her, "it takes a village." >> i followed her on that book tour, and the public loved it. that contest was really hillary's. it was her form of family values. we need to take the village to support -- that women who could work and have a family at the same time would be productive in the community. it is not all just pull yourself up by your bootstraps. she was mocked for it by the press for a while, but she was so popular on the book tour, and her book became a big best seller. she was able to rehabilitate herself with that book, and then became a book writer among her many other talents, which she
12:57 am
continues to use. >> she did win a grammy award. >> sort of like barack obama's nobel peace prize. >> hillary clinton held the white house new summit lobby for passage of the foster care independence act. >> she also called out the military on agent orange and made them finally admit that this was a disease that was the result of warfare in vietnam. >> let's go to jason next in louisville, kentucky. >> thank you for doing this special and also thanks to c- span. not really a question, just a comment around the historical
12:58 am
significance of hillary clinton as secretary of state. specifically that she made bringing equality of the gay community to the forefront. one way she did that was with her historic speech before the human rights council in geneva where she famously said, "gay rights are human rights." much as she did in beijing regarding women's rights. we had not have someone at that level to take that stand and really make that push. >> thank you for calling in tonight. talking about her interest in children's issues, we have not talked about the clintons child, chelsea, who was born in 1980. a word about their style as parents and how they raised her. >> you could see when they got to the white house that they were protecting her.
12:59 am
she wasn't part of the story until there were certain times when they needed to present her as a family. there is nothing negative to say about their parenting, and there shouldn't be. they were excellent parents. they showered her with knowledge and books and love, and she became very much like parts of both of them, the better parts of each of them, i would say. >> when you watched how they managed to give her something of a normal life in that very public environment, what were your observations? >> there were the awkward years in middle adolescence when she was kind of gawky, but she carried herself with confidence that they must have instilled in her while she was going through that awkward stage. she was devoted to her mother, and then her father used to come
1:00 am
home and have dinner with her all the time when hillary was traveling, so he would have his she was devoted to her mother, and then her father used to come home and have dinner with her all the time when hillary was traveling, so he would have his saturday night date with chelsea. that was one of the things that was most heartbreaking for him when he had really gone over the line with monica lewinsky. he kind of lost chelsea for a while. >> there was a time when he was governor of arkansas and chelsea was asked, what does your father do? she said he talks on the telephone. >> hillary clinton actually wrote a book while she was in the role, "an invitation to the white house, at home in history." man i ask each of you to comment about her stewardship of the white house and how they used the white house politically to advance their goals?
1:01 am
would you talk about her interest in the history of the white house and how she approached it? >> she started america's treasures preservation and did a lot of research and found a lot of things and put them on display. she did restoration of the treaty room, several of the rooms in the white house. she was not as active as jacqueline kennedy was, but she was still pretty active. i don't know much about their social entertaining. they had some big white house lawn parties, but they didn't use the white house nearly as much as the kennedys who made it a cultural center. she was very busy doing other policy things. >> we know about the lincoln bedroom. they brought in a lot of musicians. bill clinton loved music, much like president obama and michelle bringing in various
1:02 am
musicians, the clintons did as well. they also turned it into something of a sleepover place. a lot of friends stayed there often. no one actually lived there like under roosevelt. also a lot of big donors would get rewarded with a night in the lincoln bedroom. >> let me take a couple of calls and then we have to talk about the investigations and legal troubles of the clintons as a political partnership. ellie, you are on the air. >> you had a funny look on your face there. this has to do with something that was brought up last week with barbara bush.
1:03 am
a person talked about how the bushes put the fear of the lord in the press and they would not get called back to the white house if they printed something that barbara bush was not in agreement with. barbara bush knew her husband had been having an affair and so did a number of the press, but they would not acknowledge that. hillary clinton, she lied that she knew a lot of things. why do you suppose the press and the public would be much more willing to accept the grandmotherly barbara bush, who was very steely, as opposed to hillary clinton who was quite a bit more vulnerable? >> i am not sure i understand the question.
1:04 am
hillary was furious that george bush reputedly had a gennifer, too. when i did an interview with hillary clinton, she interrupted and raised this issue that she had been sitting with the head of the atlanta newspaper and she brought this up. this woman said, why doesn't the media investigate george bush's gennifer? and hillary said they are just , going to circle the wagons because that is what the republicans do. she planted this in my tape recorder. barbara bush slammed back and said, how dare she talk about my husband that way. hillary had to eat humble pie
1:05 am
and she was depicted on the cover of the new york post saying, well, shut my mouth. it was just before the new york primary. she and bill clinton arrived in albany for the last day before the primary. bill clinton had to step in front of a very rare appearance apologizing for hillary. he did it with a slight smile on his face. hillary was beside herself that they could get away with this kind of thing, but she couldn't. >> the story of the clinton administration was a story of investigations and scandals. let me show you a clip from 1994, early in their white house years.
1:06 am
talks about the level of trust. talks about the level of trust. hillary at a news conference >> in the recent news reports about the first lady's future earnings and with all of these whitewater allegations, many americans are having a hard time with your credibility. is there a fundamental distrust of the clintons in america? >> i hope not. that would be something i would regret very much. i do think we are transition figures. we do not fit easily into a lot of our pre-existing categories. i think that having been independent, having made decisions, it is a little difficult for us as a country to make the transition of having a woman, like many of the women in this room, sitting in this house. to some extent, the expectations and the demands have changed.
1:07 am
i am trying to find my way through it and trying to figure out how best to be true to myself and how to fulfill my responsibilities to my husband and daughter and the country. >> that is the famous pink suit press conference where she talked for several hours. she was embroiled in controversy at that point. what she said has a lot of merit to it. they were transitional figures. she was facing things that no first lady had done before. some of it was part of the culture of the moment and some of it was self-induced. you cannot really separate the two. they did many things that did not help them. it is also true that they were being judged in ways different than anybody before them.
1:08 am
especially hillary. >> i will show two more clips, 1998, where we see a transition from the beginning until the end of the year. january of 1998, let's watch. >> the story here for anybody willing to find it and write about it and explain it is this vast right wing conspiracy that has been conspiring against my husband since the day he announced for president. >> these past months have been a torturous process of coming to terms with what i did. i understand that accountability demands consequences and i am prepared to accept them. painful of the combination of -- of the condemnation of the -- it wouldld be pale in comparison to the consequences of the pain i have
1:09 am
caused my family. there is no greater agony. >> quite a long year. so much to talk about. what is important for people to know about that year? are putting that in the framework of hillary as first lady. >> a year elapsed before bill clinton was finally able to come clean. to hillary, and then to the country. that was a torturous year for both of them. she tried to change the story. it is about the right wing conspiracy, not about my husband. she did not know or allow herself to know that monica lewinsky was really a sexual relationship until bill clinton actually had to sit her down and tell her. and then she threw things at him and exploded. we saw how the family split apart and it was very tragic to watch. for most of that year, she was right in there fighting for him.
1:10 am
the attorney working with them on that damage control, when they were sitting there preparing defense, the body language must've been pretty hostile. he said, not at all. they were holding hands. they were totally affectionate. they were in this together. when crisis engulfed them, they would be like it was a war. they were in the foxhole together. bombs were exploding all around and it was their battle buddy. it is you to against the world and it made them closer. what would also happen when things erupted, when she would turn into a lioness and sit down to make the battle plans, though clinton would reward her with affection, intimacy. that was when she got the closest to him.
1:11 am
it was a loop. it was not all bad for hillary when things erupted. >> that is exactly right. there was the cycle to the relationship -- when one was up, the other would be down. it kept them together through all of this. in 1999, things fractured. the thing to remember is they stayed together. one of the ironies is the clintons have stayed together when families like the gores split apart. >> that is watching us from cleveland. >> i have been watching the
1:12 am
series. i heard that hillary clinton garnered or earned a lot of loyalty in terms of people that worked for her, and that is why there has been no tell-all stories because she has earned that kind of loyalty. does that speak to her genuineness? her character? i would think that would be an admirable characteristic. i was fortunate enough to shake hands and meet them when he was running in 1992. that was quite a thrill. if you could speak to her character. >> we wanted to show you an interesting illustration.
1:13 am
just yesterday -- it speaks to these interrelationships that hillary clinton and bill clinton have forged throughout their many years of public life. it is called madame secretary of the universe. you can see her as the center of the sun. >> both hillary and bill kept notes on people. they had files. even if they were visiting a military base one year and coming back the next year, they would know to ask -- did your wife have the baby yet? even more important for hillary,
1:14 am
were the women she brought into her family. she would treat them almost like family members, really pay attention to their ups and downs and when they needed help. the loyalty that she showed to anthony weiner's wife. that was very endearing, i think. having a hillary land and having wonderful women, really smart, supporting her and her loyalty to them has been important. there is a downside. patty soli-doyle was her chief of staff for a while -- she kept patty on as the campaign director. patty was not ready for prime time. a lot of things went wrong because of her.
1:15 am
it was killing for hillary to have to finally fire her. >> david meredith, we have about 20 minutes left and so much to cover. we left the story with bill clinton's troubles, which led to his being the second president to the impeached. hillary clinton was considering a bid for the united states senate. will you talk about her decision to become a candidate? how did she pull that off? >> the last time we were on tv together, it was on "meet the press" in 1999 and tim asked us whether we thought hillary would ever run for office and we both said yes. that day, the head of the democratic senate campaign committee, started talking about hillary running for the senate. i think she had her eye on that. because of bill clinton's troubles, she was frustrated in those last couple of years and was looking to go out on her own.
1:16 am
they had risen together as far as they could for 25 years and now was her turn. i think that is the way she felt. >> even more about that, the very day the impeachment vote was taking place, bill clinton stopped in to say hello to her guests and hillary did not even look up. they did not want anything to do with them. hillary did everything she good -- everything she could to line up the ducks. now she was moving on and this was the biggest passage in her life. she said to harold a keyes, -- ickes, i want independence. i have to have it.
1:17 am
she was 53 years old. i do not think it will take another -- with the current generation, it will not take that long. she started her campaign before she left the white house, moved to new york, started a whole new life. she began to move away and develop a separate channel. they never got divorced, but they found a way to cohabit in the universe. >> what distinguished her in terms of her eight years in the senate? >> she was very well-liked in the senate. i don't think you could point specific legislation, although to any early in her first term, 9/11 happened. she was the senator from new york where that took place. the key issue that hurt her in 2008 was the vote in 2003 about invading iraq. she supported it.
1:18 am
you could see the connection between being a senator from new york where the twin towers were hit and her vote a couple of years later. one could easily make the case that that vote cost her the democratic nomination. barack obama gave a strong speech opposing the iraq war won the progressive vote in iowa. >> from the time she had been considering the run for the senate, did she have her eye on the presidency? >> she was asked in early 2000 if she thought -- when we would have a woman president. she said 2008. i heard her say that. we didn't have a woman president but she tried as hard as >> she she could to be >> she thought one. she would be the one. >> here is 2008 in new hampshire. this is a pretty familiar piece of video.
1:19 am
>> it is not easy. and i could not do it if i did not passionately believe it was the right thing to do. i have so many opportunities from this country and i do not want to see us fall backwards. [applause] >> why did that campaign fail? >> it was a mess. the campaign itself had all of these different factions of hillary people and build people -- and bill people and a lot of disagreements and tactical errors. all of that had to do in terms of whether they were focused on caucus states. in the end, it always comes down to the candidates themselves.
1:20 am
an interesting thing about that clip is that it shows hillary at a point where barack obama is winning the emotion vote. his speeches, the energy that he had. hillary is considered too much of a machine. there she is trying to show, i am human, too. it was a little bit too late. >> absolutely right, david. bill clinton said, you cannot run as a woman. you have to run as a man. you have to be the strongest man in the cabinet. you have to be the commander in chief. she had just lost in iowa, a terrible shock to her. she comes to new hampshire. it was just a small group of women. an older woman asked her how do , you do it day after day? that kind of got to her. it was hillary unplugged for once.
1:21 am
you saw a little bit of being a human and a woman and then she got slammed for crying. she did not cry, she just choked up a little bit. men were crying all over the place in politics and getting away with it. >> ida is in west palm beach, florida. >> thank you for taking my call. we spoke when you had the series on jackie kennedy. i am enjoying this so very much. i have a quick question. does the panel feel she will run again for the presidency considering all of the scrutiny she went through the first time? if she does not run, is her health going to be a factor? thank you for the series. i have really enjoyed it. >> thank you for watching. >> i think she cannot not run unless she has a serious health problem. that would be the only reason to hold her back. she now has the former obama machine, project usa -- is that what it is called?
1:22 am
>> which is obama's people. >> she has ready for hillary, a grassroots operation that has been going on for a year that has raised almost a couple of million dollars. she cannot disappoint all of these people. she has had so much scrutiny and here we are scrutinizing her all over again. everybody else will be doing the same. i think she is in many ways bulletproof on a lot of what has gone on. >> there were a lot of people who voted for barack obama. a couple of years after that were thinking, maybe hillary would have been a good president. history is never inevitable.
1:23 am
even though it looks like it will happen, i am counterintuitive enough to think something else might occur. >> in 2008, she dropped out of the presidential race and endorsed barack obama. she agreed to serve as the secretary of state. was that a momentous decision? >> it certainly was. i just found out more recently that she came into that discussion with a strong negotiating position. she did not just accept it right away. i have my own agenda. i want to bring my vital voices to empower women and work for gender equality in countries around the world. she wanted to bring that into the state department as an official u.s. policy.
1:24 am
she said, if you can accept that, fine. otherwise, you can find somebody else. and he agreed and she did do that. that may be her greatest legacy, and to have made progress for women and girls around the world. >> as she became the most traveled secretary of state, 112 countries, we had a caller earlier who commended her for her work on a gay rights. in fact, this particular clip of her testimony after the attack in benghazi will probably be most remembered for her tenure as secretary of state. >> we have no doubt they were terrorists. they were militants they , attacked us and they killed our people. what was going on and why they were doing what they were doing -- >> we were misled that there were supposedly protests.
1:25 am
that was not the facts. people could have known that within days. >> with all due respect, we had four dead americans. was it because of a protest or because of guys out for a walk one night? what difference does it make? it is our job to figure out what happened and do everything we can to prevent it from ever happening again, senator. honestly, i will do my best to now answer your questions about , this, but the fact is people were trying in real time to get to the best information. the ic has a process. you know, to be clear, from my perspective, it is less important today looking backwards as to why these militants decided they did it than to find them and bring them to justice.
1:26 am
and then maybe we will figure out what was going on in the meantime. >> that also was hillary unplugged. that is the hillary that people have seen in campaign meetings behind the scenes. she is angry. that is the way she was feeling. some legitimate points she was making. she said today that benghazi was her main regret as secretary of state. four people were killed on her watch. there is a lot to be determined about benghazi. the reporters i trust the most say that it is much more complicated than the republicans have tried to portray it. there is some responsibility of the obama administration and the state department. >> a lot of it is a money issue.
1:27 am
cutbacks on providing security for american outposts around the world have been severe. they did not have enough people. hillary was very aware of taking care of people in the state department. obviously, she did not think of libya as being a place that needed to be fortified in advance. if she could've done anything important, that would have been it. >> the larger scheme of things, the quote of benghazi will be most remembered in the short term. in the course of history, people can say, what did she do as secretary of state? in terms of international diplomacy, you cannot point to that many accomplishments. but you can point to something
1:28 am
that has been part of her from when she went to beijing as the first lady and spoke about women's rights. the larger impact that hillary clinton has had on the world has to do with her speaking out so strongly about those issues. >> we have about five minutes left. we will take a call from springdale, arkansas. >> i am here. why did hillary get so little coverage as secretary of state when under the bush administration, condoleezza rice was in the news every day? >> that is a good question. perhaps you know, david? >> i do not know what the difference would be between her and condoleezza rice except when condoleezza rice was there, we were dealing with wars -- one step removed from iraq and afghanistan.
1:29 am
>> one of the reasons she did not show any major accomplishments was because foreign policy was very much held tight by the white house. hillary wanted richard holbrook as her deputy secretary of state. the obama administration did not agree because it would have put too much power in the state department. hillary did not have a major brief. what she did mainly was to make friends and try to undo the damage that had been done by the bush administration in alienating allies and exacerbating enemies. >> president obama took over the economy, all of the focus of that presidency was on the economy. the press was paying attention was what going on domestically.
1:30 am
>> philadelphia. >> will she win the presidency? yes or no? >> david answered that earlier. >> i was hoping the packers would win the super bowl. i am interested in the results, but i know no more than you or anyone else. >> on twitter -- does hillary have any interests or hobbies outside of politics? >> she is primarily -- she really does not like to exercise. she does not play any instruments. she says she cannot sing. i am not sure what else he likes
1:31 am
-- what else she likes to do. she does not like to do her hair, i can tell you that. she cannot do it herself and that is why she let it grow long. it took a lot of nudging by her hillary land pals to get her to cut her hair. >> is bill a political ally or a liability? how is the approaching this? -- how is he approaching this? >> you can go back to 2008. he was both a liability and a help. he loves being campaign manager. he loves breaking down every precinct and county in iowa and new hampshire. he also understands and learned some lessons from 2008 that he has to be careful about what he says and how he affects her candidacy.
1:32 am
it is both a liability -- in my experience of covering politics for several decades, he is the smartest politician i have ever met. >> we are just about out of time. we have women who are very much living and with us and writing their own stories. how should we put a capper on this story? what should people think about her? >> i think hillary clinton wanted to be helpful in advancing the security, the opportunity, and the impact of women and the protection of girls.
1:33 am
you see that in every framework that she has operated in. i think that has been her greatest impact on the world. she and bill clinton have been in rehab for a long time. i think she has rehabilitated herself much more than he. >> we only skimmed the surface here. we did not talk about his heart attacks. in closing, what should people know about this woman? >> i think she is the best-known woman in the world. she has an incredible story, whether you like her or dislike her and everybody has an opinion. i think she is a pioneer. she blazed a path for everyone
1:34 am
to follow in terms of her political career and activism. she is a survivor, as is her husband. she keeps showing up. >> thank you very much for being here. we have looked at the life of hillary clinton. thank you for your time. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2014] [captioning performed by national captioning institute]
1:35 am
>> next monday, the life of laura bush, wife of george w. bush, the 43rd president. she worked as a teacher and librarian. in 1977, she married to the future governor and president within four months of meeting him. as first lady of texas and later the united states, an advocate of education and literacy.
1:36 am
worked on an international campaign for women and children's health. showing us next monday for the life of laura bush on c-span, c-span3 and c-span radio. -- join us next monday for the life of laura bush. this book includes biographies and a portrait of each first lady. it is available for the discounted price of $12.95 plus shipping. that is c-span.org/first lady's. -- c-span.org/firstladies. americans who have
1:37 am
become unemployed. that is why we extended or increased unemployment benefits for more than 18 million americans. 65%ade health insurance cheaper for families. we passed 25 different tax cuts. forme repeat, we cut taxes 95% of working families. we cut taxes for small businesses, we cut taxes for first-time homebuyers, he cut taxes for terrance trying to care for their children. we cut taxes for 8 million americans paying for college. our preview program starts live, tuesday night, at eight eastern, with the president at nine, followed by the response from republican conference chair , cathy mcmorris rodgers. of the union, tuesday night, live on c-span, c-span
1:38 am
radio and c-span.org. up next here on c-span, a preview of president obama's state of the union address. that is followed by the discussion with federal reserve response to the 2008 financial crisis. remarks by hud secretary shaun donovan on reducing homelessness. >> on monday, state department that iranianfirmed nuclear talks would resume in mid-february in new york. here are some of her remarks from the briefing. check, there are reports out of iran that they want talks on a competitive agreement that are due to take place in new york at the end of february. i wonder if you could give confirmation. >> sure, it is our understanding
1:39 am
that those talks will be in new york in mid-february with states still being confirmed on schedules. hopefully in the next days we will have more specifics. >> why the move to new york as opposed to the wonderful city of geneva? >> geneva is beautiful this time of year, but new york was agreed to by high representative ashton. it has a similar support infrastructure to geneva and we believe that the u.n. and international support is important for agreement. no more reason than that. held within the you and buildings? or will it be outside. >> that is a good question, i'm not sure if that level of detail has been determined, but i can check. plus wendybe sharif sherman? >> the next step is the political directors, so from
1:40 am
here would naturally be undersecretary sherman. we will defer to them as for who will be sent. we will first focus on seeing when the date is and how we will proceed and we will go from there. >> do you have your agenda set? the first set of the next stage. a lot of this will be determined and will be announced when appropriate by the eu. as i understand, some of the details are still being worked through. >> does that mean that given that this round will be in new york that the process moves to new york or you will hold this round in new york and it could be in geneva or here. >> is a good question.
1:41 am
i can see if there has been any determination past that have has been made. >> next, a preview of president obama state of the union address. this is 40 minutes. >> welcome back. our guest is todd will ache. he is the washington correspondent. thank you for being with us. obama haspresident capitol hill for the state of the union. tell us what you're looking
1:42 am
forward to watching. >> it is his sixth speech. for those of us who work here, let's be honest about this speech. it is one of the rare occasions when the public really pays attention. they pay attention at other times, things pop up when there is a big news event area did this is the president's one chance to really capture the attention of the country in prime time. i read that ratings last year were for the state of the union, among the lowest of the last 20 or 30 years. but still, 30 million viewers. this is a lot. it is not celebrity bachelor, but it is pretty good. all the networks carry it. you're looking for public attention. that is the president's opportunity. from the president's perspective, this comes as no surprise. he has a congress that is recalcitrant, that is not coming along with his agenda in any
1:43 am
way. the only thing that is getting is must pass legislation, things that have to get done like fiscal cliffs, spending bills 16 days late, so we had a shutdown. it looks like we may be on the cusp of a farm bill. two years late. within that context is a president who is going to get up agenda. his domestic most people who are watching that speech should know that legislatively it is not going anywhere, especially in an election year. what the white house has told us to expect is a president who will work with the congress when he can or when they will work with him. but to go around the congress and use his executive power to get things done, the president can issue executive orders and presidential directives. you will expect a president who is traveling a lot, who is
1:44 am
getting with ceos, who is getting with captains of industry with recognizable and important people. as doingto be seen something for an agenda. congress is extraordinarily unpopular. his approvalan rating. it stands to reason if you want to protect their president's aretical profile, if you going to congress saying please then yourand that, legacy becomes tied with what the public sees as congress is dysfunction. you don't want your success rate to be tied to people who are adding seven percent or eight percent. try to go around them, see what you can do on your own, perhaps more importantly see what you can be perceived to doing on your own without congress in a time when the middle-class is not doing well and the country
1:45 am
is hobbling back to economic recovery. people don't like washington but they want to see some measure of action. i think that is the marketing milieu that the operate -- that the white house is operating under. ., how much of the president's approach will be tied to the fact that 2014 is an election year? >> politics is always in the background of the state of the union address. democrats, roughly half the people, a little bit of less than half the people sitting in the crowd are looking up at that podium seeing, give us some firm
1:46 am
ground to stand on, mr. president, as democrats. you mentioned taking back the house. only the most pollyanna-ish haverat will say that they a good chance of taking back the house. only the most partisan democrat believes that anything is possible. what they are fighting for is preserving the senate. democrats coordinated message, which started to emerge a couple the debate over unemployment insurance which is taking place in the senate, we saw some failed votes and , dovetails, coincidently, with a large part of the message you will hear from the president. on income inequality. the white house has cast this as economic mobility. as a country is limping toward recovery, middle-class wages are stagnant and have been for many years. it is not new. you're going to see a message
1:47 am
that democrats like, that they think appeals to a lot of moderate voters and not just liberals. one of income inequality, of course unemployment insurance and renewing it which polls strongly with mamie republicans. minimum wage increase, making college more affordable. bread-and-butter middle-class issues of the pocket book you will see the president mentioned , and democrats want to run on that. we just got done talking about the fact that congress is not terribly interested in the senate republican minority. not interested in passing things the president is going to call for. the president can go around and say i have my pen and my phone and i am going to be executive about these things. article one of the constitution does not give him a lot of leeway in terms of ui. one thing you may see on the
1:48 am
is that one thing the white house can do on minimum wage, the white house is a gigantic employer. i don't know if there is a federal employee that makes minimum wage, but the president can drag his pen across an executive order and federal agencies have to favor contracts from private companies, they have to favor companies that offer at least $10 an hour or $10.10. that is the number that gets kicked around. that provides a bit of a market push and causes employers who do business with the federal government which is worth many billions. goodbye example, good for workers. good by example, good for workers.
1:49 am
i hope he does address the minimum wage. i think what the guy just said --ut favoring companies iing his executive powers, hope he addresses immigration policy. . think that would help in 2016 it is worth taking back some of the seats. i don't think we can take back the house but i think democrats could gain a lot of momentum with a different policy that they tried to do. minimum wage is something that everybody needs and wants. i thank god that i don't have to work under the minimum wage. i have a great job, but i think that would help a lot of people. raised, i needs to be don't know how much, but i think
1:50 am
it should be raised. >> the caller mentions immigration which i left out. would wager a dollar that the president will mention immigration. actually, any congress that does relatively little, immigration has a pulse all of a sudden. been -- ihave shouldn't say happy -- they're confident that it has been working for them either way. mitt romney lost latinos by 38 points. which iserm election the one coming up, in individual congressional seats which are carved out an gerrymandered and have their own local issues, not as much of a deal. but republicans know that something has to get done for 2016 and they have to improve their position with latino
1:51 am
voters. republicans are headed to the policy retreat within the next couple of days. what we are told to expect from the republicans coming out of an immigration reform plan from house republicans that is designed to get some bipartisan support. most importantly, one of the key areas of disagreement between senate democrats and the president and house republicans citizenship.to not expecting republicans to have that in their bill, but at least legalization, normalization for undocumented immigrants, which is something on first glance that democrats say ok, we can talk. republican leaders have been telling us that this is designed to try to get something passed. brightght be the one legislative spot that you see in 2014 early this year. maybe it might be time in the spring to give all caps sides -- to give all sides a path to
1:52 am
immigration. the only other things i must pass like the debt limit. abc's "thisy was on week." saw in, i think what we 2013 was a washington that did not deliver for the american people. the presidency, this is a year of action, to work with congress where he can and bypass congress where necessary to folks who want to come up in the middle class. >> congress has had a bad year and the president has had a bad year in terms of the public perception. not had a lothas of legislative victories, those things that have passed have been avoiding disaster, not a glitch is it of successes. the government shutdown for 16 perceivesthe public
1:53 am
that conservative republicans caused this. the rollout of the affordable care act was a disaster that did not help the president. the worsening war in syria did not help the president. if you look back a couple of months, the somatic stumbling where russia came to the rescue syrian chemical weapons confrontation, that did not play well for the president. they are looking for some perception victories as well. the state of the union is as good a place as any for a president to regain his footing and push off on solid ground. democrats want that, too. this is the most important thing, knowing that there really is very little room, except on immigration, for this divided togress and this president come together on major policy issues.
1:54 am
going it alone and using this platform for himself is the best he can do right now. >> our next caller is in baltimore. >> how're you doing, guys? unionk the state of the is a traditional thing to be done. it does not really resonate with the american people like you believe it used to. andre not united in any way some of the things obama wanted to do he will not be able to accomplish because you have an election year for congress people. if you wanted to do major things, that would've been overnight when he first got in. that would've been his big shot at minimum wage and doing controversial things. in six years it would've made a dent in our budget crisis. the republicans are not going to give him anything he wants. they are trying to fight to keep
1:55 am
their seats. for us to hear him say the state of the union, we are united and all that, we as americans know that is a lie and false. all i can say is hopefully we have maybe some republicans try to sign on immigration and things like that. that is all fine and good but what about jobs? that is all we need to worry about. maybe if he can get some of that done then maybe we will be united. without getting these people back to work, that is going to unite the country. thank you. >> the caller is correct that the congress is not going to do much with this president. let's be fair, the president did use a lot of lyrical capital in 2009 which is why we have the affordable care act. the gracias, for all their gripes about the guts of the policy, are thrilled overall
1:56 am
that if anything else is president is going to leave this office with a health program for tens of millions of people. it is a major accomplishment, assuming that the law continues for the next couple of years. there's no reason to believe that it won't. don't know that the president is necessarily going to get on the podium and try to convince people that the country is united. messagee subtext of his is, we are really not. you won't cooperate with me, you won't pass legislation that i can sign, you don't like my agenda, so i'm going to go around you to the public. that is confrontational. talk showsd paul on yesterday criticizing the president for ruling by fiat and for power grabs. has used similar language about abuse of power from the white house. i think this would fall into that rubric.
1:57 am
i don't think you will be disappointed to see a president --y act like the concrete like the country and congress are united. >> i have a couple points i weld like to make to mr. have provisions to feed people, house them, take care of their medical needs and other positions to keep them out of poverty. i was wondering, what laws do we really need? you say congress is not really working with the president. i we don'tw what new law have that we need now. the issuen --
1:58 am
of whether the president is more need to gethite, we over this issue of race. >> i don't know if we're going to solve the race problem at this table. maybe we will leave it there. the president is a first. any time a big-time politician is a first, there is a national conversation about it. we have to go much further with it than that. in terms of programs for the poor, the caller raises an interesting point. when you talk about income inequality and programs for the poor, one thing you're going to see, as soon as today, potentially, i talked about the farm bill. call was from oklahoma, and my right? gigantic bill with lots of subsidies for sugar and dairy and cattle. the largest part of that is food
1:59 am
stamps. supplemental food assistance for the poor. many monthsicans ago passed a bill that would've cut the food stamp program by billion dollars. senate democrats had terms of only 4 billion. in the emergent deal, -- in the emerging deal, it will be cuts of roughly $9 billion. toclosing some loopholes remove people who are gaming the system, it looks like it will cut about $9 billion over 10 years without cutting the value of benefits, which is something democrats have always wanted. that is an existing law, that is not a new law. have obamacare haters saying medicare expansion in the affordable care act that was sorry i for -- i'm
2:00 am
should have said medicaid. he did get some extra money in the latest budget deal for early childhood education in head start. under sequestration, a lot of these programs were getting cut. progressive democrats insisted and went to the mat on that issue and got more money for early child education. there is not money for everything right now. host: i want to ask about the politics. many republicans are departing from the state of the union response script. and once careful response to be as uniform a message as possible is given away two free agencies.
167 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CSPAN Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on