tv Obama MSNBC July 3, 2021 6:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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an ally, be aware year-round because as queer people we live and breathe pride 365 days a year, and you can too. i'm jonathan capehart. have a good night and happy pride. this is an msnbc special series. >> together we will begin the next great chapter in the american story! >> the time for games has passed. now is the season for action. >> yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! >> you have done what the cynics said we couldn't do.
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♪♪ attention on board the aircraft. the president-elect has departed with a 20-minute drive time. >> we were having the opportunity to have our first african american president come on board the aircraft. as an african american man, to have the opportunity to be one of the first to greet him aboard the airplane meant a lot to me. >> you're the pilot? >> yes, sir. it will be my privilege to serve you. >> you know, i have to say you are out of central casting. you are exactly what i wanted. >> he is very excited to be on the airplane and he is having a very jovial conversation with the aircraft commander. >> you look like you know how to fly. you look like sam shepherd in "the right stuff."
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>> thank you very much, sir. >> they're standing there having a laughing moment. so for me, i'm trying to say, okay, do i just fall right into the humor or do i just keep it as professional as i can. >> welcome you aboard. >> thank you. >> and introduce you to reggie dixon, the senior flight attendant. >> good to see you, sir. >> my pleasure to meet you. >> thank you. >> welcome aboard. i will be serving dinner. not sure if you have had dinner already. >> see how you guys do it. medium well. like salad or something like that. >> no fries or anything like that. >> i'll still take the fries. >> yes, sir. ♪♪ >> incoming president is getting ready to deplane the airplane, and i look and all of a sudden he's walking through the crew area, up to the flight deck. >> good to see you, all right. see you in a couple of weeks.
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>> and, you know, it made me think at that time, i'm going to be in for a great journey along with this new incoming president. ♪♪ >> somebody napping in there. don't want to wake them. >> those early months, nobody could be convinced that barack obama had a chance. >> hello. hi, how are you? who is this? i'm barack obama. >> we had a lot of heavy lifting to do to convince people that this wasn't just tilting at windmills. >> did you expect at this point in your campaign that you would be gaining more ground in the polls? >> yeah, we always knew that
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i've got to introduce myself to voters in a way that some of the other candidates don't have to do. >> barack obama is untested, two years out of the illinois state senate, no national political experience, no national political organization. going up against hillary clinton who is incredibly strong. >> the party had already coalesced behind hillary clinton. it was going to be her turn. he will be running not just against the party and the establishment but really against someone who had been a key supporter. the clintons were big supporters of barack obama when he came into the senate. >> hillary clinton, first lady, united states senator. very competent, very capable united states senator. she was not some fly-by-night political hack. here you had this sort of upstart, two-term state senator from illinois who no one knew, african american, and we all know the history of black folks and white folks in this country. so, you know, why would you dance on that pinhead? >> a new poll has hillary
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clinton now trouncing her closest challenger, barack obama, by 33 points. for the first time -- >> that's a big problem for her challengers who complain that her campaign and a lot of her media coverage gives the impression that she is already somehow the nominee. >> senator, hillary clinton widened her lead, a 30-point lead. i have to ask. does it concern you at all. >> come on. i mean we're having a good time in iowa, you know. the national poll story -- >> there was no lifelong plan for barack obama to run for president. >> some people wanted him to run so badly that they said, don't worry, you'll see the girls, you can be home on weekends, and i wear my emotions on my face. and i had a funny look on my face and michelle said, stop talking, i want to hear from melissa. i said, no, it is going to be terrible, running for president is terrible and you are not going to see your family and we have to know that going in. she was like, thank you. >> may. >> mayor. >> mayor.
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>> that period of time in the democratic party, it was divided in two. you had the clinton wing of the party, and everybody who had never been a part of the clinton wing. it was a desire for an alternative to the clinton machine, and that's who was getting excited about obama. >> he had a lot of quiet support among some really establishment democrats who couldn't be open about it obviously because hillary clinton was the presumptive nominee. >> i called him into my office, and i basically said to him, i think this is a time you should consider running for president. he said, what? i said, i really think the country is ready for you. he was more than surprised. >> i think it was mrs. obama who said it, among the many reasons why it was the right time was they were very much average americans with student debt, with two-working-parent household. they really could genuinely express the fears and the struggles of what everyday americans were experiencing.
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they would be able to take that perspective into the white house in a very unique way. >> the reality is obama is not going to be the nominee for the simple fact he has never run a competitive race outside a state legislative district in illinois. that is not going to happen. >> it is unclear if mr. obama has the stomach for the rough-and-tumble politicking required to win national office. >> hey. >> how are you? >> this is my polk county staff. are any of these people over 30? >> iowa was all about boots on the ground. they wanted me to work dubuque. >> everybody was out making phone calls, knocking on doors, campaigning to try to help barack and michelle have success. >> we need your support, too. >> yeah. >> talking about you both. you're undecided? >> we're undecided. >> oh, goodness. >> the standoff -- >> if hillary clinton won early
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she was going to be almost impossible to stop. she had to have a circuit breaker moment, and the circuit breaker moment would be iowa. >> she authorized the war and then recently started voting on this iran resolution. you can't be fooled twice. >> we would build a grassroots campaign, because it is the campaign he wanted to run and we didn't have institutional political support so we had to go to the people. >> i want to stop talking about the outrage of 47 million americans without health care and start actually doing something about it. >> he was getting a lot of pressure from african americans around the country, saying, hey, you're not spending time with us. we had a meeting in chicago in the fall about, you know, should we remain faithful to the iowa strategy. >> a lot of people from the african american community felt like they were connected to the clintons, that they felt bill clinton was someone who had done
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great things for neighborhoods and churches and for black americans as a whole. this idea that, oh, well, he is an african american, i'm an african american, i should obviously be voting for this guy because we are kindred spirits and correlated and connected, et cetera, et cetera, it didn't really happen like that. >> i had known president clinton, i had worked with him. it was very hard to make the decision to support hillary over obama, but i made it. >> it really shook him because john lewis is a hero of his. it was a pretty low moment. he is like, listen, i may not win, but it is not okay for me to lose and not do well with african americans. so should i start spending more time to get those numbers up? i just said, listen, the only way to get the african american numbers up is to start winning early. >> 74. 75. >> tonight the voters of iowa caucus in the nation's first presidential contest. >> if you're not totally
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undecided, make your way around the room here, finalize your decision. >> if you are edwards, stay right over here and keep a corridor. seven, eight. >> come on. we just need nine more. 132 with obama. [ cheering ]. >> this is the final count. i can't stress that enough! >> three for obama. >> 25. >> 26. >> 27. >> we are back on the air here in des moines, and we have news to report at this hour. nbc news is projecting that when all of the caucus goers' preferences are counted up, barack obama will win. >> oh, my god! [ cheering ]. >> at this defining moment in history, you have done what the cynics said we couldn't do. [ cheering ] >> no one was deceived.
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♪♪ that's dirty snow, and i have to campaign some more. >> new hampshire, in four days you have a chance to change america. in four days you can do what the cynics said could not be done. >> obama's big win in iowa has given him a huge bump here in new hampshire where he now leads hillary clinton by double digits. >> their only chance is to do something bold, dramatic and to completely change the narrative. >> as a woman, i know it is hard to get out of the house and to
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get ready. my question is very personal. how do you do it? >> you know, i have so many opportunities from this country. i just don't want to see us fall backwards. no. so, you know, this is very personal for me. it is not just political. it is not just public. >> hillary clinton according to our reporters on the scene visibly teared up. >> is that a scripted moment? is that a genuine moment? is it an appealing moment, is it repugnant? >> thank you! thank you. >> take care! >> hillary clinton woke up this primary morning, her presidential aspirations potentially on the line, ready to work for every last vote. >> nbc news is making -- >> there it is. >> hillary clinton has won the new hampshire primary for the democratic party for 2008. she has pulled a stunning upset. >> thank you so much. thank you. >> the emotion she showed had an
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enormous impact, and they voted for her. >> i want to congratulate senator clinton on a hard-fought victory here in new hampshire. she did not -- >> we lost new hampshire, and it was a shock because we felt like we had such huge momentum coming out of iowa. >> we've been warned against offering the people of this nation false hope, but in the unlikely story that is america there has never been anything false about hope. >> we wrote that speech thinking we would win that primary and thinking, let's just uncork and write the best victory speech we possibly can and use this "yes, we can" phrase as a call and response. >> when we have been told we're not ready or that we shouldn't try or that we can't, generations of americans have responded with a simple creed that sums up the spirit of a people, "yes, we can." yes, we can.
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>> yes, we can! >> yes, we can. >> yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! >> what's interesting is in the moment of defeat, that's actually when he sometimes is at his best and the delivery of that speech is so powerful. >> and together we will begin the next great chapter in the american story with three words that will ring from coast to coast, from sea to shining sea, "yes, we can!" thank you, new hampshire. thank you! >> i remember being back in my tiny studio apartment in chicago a couple of days later and waking up to this viral video that had been made with all of these celebrities, will i am. >> it was whispered by slaves and abolitions as they blazed trails towards freedom. yes, we can. >> yes, we can, to justice and equality. yes, we can, to opportunity and
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prosperity. i didn't know that that would be one of the biggest campaign tools and how it would, you know, become so big on social media and beyond, to help really advance the campaign and create that phrase to be something that will forever go down in history. >> yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! >> during the campaign, shepard ferry calls me and he says, hey, i have this image that i did. i'm happy to let the campaign use it. do you think they would be interested in it? i knew then senator obama was going to be in los angeles, so, you know, i take the tube of the art and i give it to reggie. the next day they call me and they say, hey, hill, we really like this one image, but do you
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think he would change what it says on the bottom? it said "progress." and they said, our campaign, you know, we are about hope and change. do you think he would be willing to change it to like hope? i was like, i don't know. you got to call him, it is his artwork. he changed it to hope, and the rest is history. ♪♪ >> obama was something of a rock star at the time. i think there were many people on my side of the political aisle who felt like the media was sort of allowing that to occur. >> the interesting thing about obama is he was the most uncomfortable person about the cultive personality that was growing up around him. he would like at the hope poster and he would say, you know what? the image on the poster always fades, nobody can live up to all of this adulation, and so it make him slightly unnerved. >> we cannot wait to bring this war in iraq to a close.
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we cannot wait! >> super-duper tuesday has been a split, a horse race in the delegate towns. >> this is where we start going into what is going to be a very active caucus and primary calendar. >> if we could stop thinking in terms of black, white, hispanic, asian, gay, straight, old, young, rich, poor. i'm going to reward teachers for their greatness by giving them higher salaries and giving them more support. >> obama has an opportunity here to put a little distance between himself and hillary clinton over the next few weeks. we had to expand the electorate, quite frankly, to beat hillary clinton in the primaries, but also expand the electorate for the general election. >> the only way we were going to do that was to drive turnout amongst young people, amongst african american voters, and to win back some of the suburban voters who had been drifting
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republican. >> john lewis switched sides and threw his support to barack obama. >> obama had emerged as this bright, shining star. it was a decision that i thought was the right decision to make. >> in the new "usa today" gallup pole, obama is pulling ahead with a double digit lead with democrats pinning him as their best chance to beat the gop. >> the stuff we have done overseas and now brought right back into our own front yards! >> the inflammatory remarks about race and the 9/11 attacks made in sermons by his personal pastor -- >> it is important that he figure out how to bring short-term closure to this issue, and if he can't, then he is not going to be president and he might not be the democratic nominee. with relapsing forms of ms... there's a lot to deal with.
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right now barack obama leads hillary clinton among pledge delegates, 1,408 to 1,251 and there are 566 more that are at stake. >> he can't win the election. >> why not? >> i don't think that america is ready for it yet. >> for barack obama as a presidential candidate, the biggest risk factor, of course, was race because the biggest sort of achilles heel in the united states has always been race. david axelrod and david plouffe, the chief strategists for senator obama when he was running for president, really understood how to run a black candidate. there was a theory which is that you don't run too black. >> he needed to be palatable enough to white america so they wouldn't be afraid of him, so he wouldn't be seen as a race man that would come in and tilt the playing field toward black people. they were down playing race as much as they could.
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their goal was to run him as a candidate from illinois, a senator, and to sort of drain race out of the equation. >> the government gives them the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes a three-strike law and then wants us to sing "god bless america." no, no, no. not god bless america. damn america. >> when the reverend wright tapes hit, it was one of those deep-breath moments. one of those moments that wasn't any political handbook anywhere because this moment had never happened in america before. >> jeremiah wright was the pastor of barack obama. married he and michelle, presided over the baptism of their children. jeremiah wright is in that vaunted tradition of trying to bring a powerful megaphone to those who would express outrage at injustice. >> there was just an explosion. it seemed to feed into this idea that he had inherited this anti-american radicalism from
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reverend wright. >> how could you go to this church for 20 years and not know this guy said this? >> we don't have a choice when it comes to our relatives. we have a choice when it comes to our pastors. >> new polls say barack obama is taking a big hit because of his pastor. >> the notion that somehow that barack obama was an acolyte of this guy could be really damaging to places that barack obama needed to win. it energized the anti-obama forces, and they were significant. for some independent voters, i think it was, wait, do we really know this guy? >> barack was at a dinner. he called me. i said, hey, man, i think this reverend wright thing is a blessing in disguise, and they started laughing. he said, "marty said it is a blessing in disguise," they started laughing. i said, "look, it is a hurdle that you have to clear, that
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nobody else in the field has the opportunity to clear. so you clear this hurdle, you win." he said, "i guess i got to give the speech." i said, "i guess you got to give the speech." [cheering and applause] >> thank you. thank you. reverend wright's comments were not only wrong, but divisive. divisive at a time when we need unity. >> i didn't know the speech was a good idea, but i knew we didn't have a better idea. he called david axelrod and i and said he had just done a series of interviews, cnn, msnbc and fox. he said, that is not going to satisfy, more importantly i'm not satisfied about it. i can't talk about this in a 30-second answer. >> the man i met more than 20 years ago is a man who helped introduce me to my christian faith, a man who spoke to me about our obligations to love one another, to care for the sick and lift up the poor. as imperfect as he may be, he has been like family to me.
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>> he didn't want to be president if he couldn't be himself, and so he stood up in front of the american people and he just shared his perspective. >> but i can no more disown him than i can disown my white grandmother, a woman who helped raise me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this world, but a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed her by on the street and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial or ethnic stereotypes that made me cringe. these people are part of me, and they are part of america, this country that i love. >> i think that was the balance that no one else could strike because the average black couldn't imagine what a white grandmother thinks and the average white couldn't imagine the anger that is generated from
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being marginalized and discriminated against with blacks. that was a moment america had never seen, because here was a guy in one body that understood in his own being, in his own blood line the bias of some whites and fear, and the results of bigotry, what it meant to blacks. >> yes, we can! yes, we can! >> there were moments that he had perfect pitch, and i think that that speech about reverend wright may have been one of those moments. >> and we are covering a big night, the democratic race. barack obama has won a decisive victory in north carolina. >> i think it is born out by the fact that six weeks later he's secured enough delegates to clinch the nomination. [cheering and applause] >> primary season has finally
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come to an end. [ cheering and applause ] >> tonight i can stand here and say that i will be the democratic nominee for the president of the united states of america. >> yes, we can! yes, we can! yes, we can! ♪♪ >> now that the primary battles are over, barack obama and john mccain are looking ahead to the fall election. >> we have two very patriotic men, but we have men with very, very different senses of what our country should be. >> the old, tired big government policies he seeks to dust off and call new won't work in a world that has changed dramatically since they were last tried and failed.
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let's make john mccain, my friend an american hero the next president of the united states. >> barack obama ran against a consensus u.s. hero in john mccain. this veteran senator, naval aviator, annapolis graduate, p.o.w., was going to be the standard bearer for the republican party. >> we will campaign to strengthen job growth in america with lower taxes and less regulation. >> what senator mccain stood for was the stability and leadership quality of america that we needed more of a substantive type of leadership presence, not soaring rhetoric that was going to lead us nowhere. >> the biggest criticism from pundits and people who didn't support us was sort of a lack of foreign policy experience and how he would sort of ascend on the world stage. >> mccain, like george h.w. bush, was kind of at home in
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world politics. well, barack obama with his lack of experience was a question mark. >> so our face-off tonight, does obama have the foreign policy credentials. >> he is great on the themes and photo ops but it is not governing in foreign policy. >> so we decided to send obama just a few months before the election to afghanistan, iraq, jordan, israel, france, the united kingdom, germany. >> he becomes the first afro-american president in november, he will bring peace. >> i doubt we're going to have a million screaming germans. let's tamp down expectations. >> 900,000.
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>> the center piece of the whole trip was the speech he would give in berlin. we envisioned this as, you know, deliberately echoing some of the more iconic presidential speeches overseas. reagan, "tear down this wall." kennedy, benign berliner. >> the walls between allies on either side of the atlantic cannot stand. the walls between the countries with the most and those with the least cannot stand. the walls between races and tribes, natives and immigrants, christians and muslims and jews cannot stand. these now are the walls we must tear down. thank you, berlin. god bless you. thank you. >> the world can see something that was hopeful. i think the people internationally could see, you know, when america is better the world is better, too, and with a great leader, like, we could be at our best.
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>> barack obama very rarely made a mistake. we were 12, 13 points behind and we were dropping on a daily basis. and the most effective line of attack was posing the question to the country, do we really want to have a celebrity president? >> he's the biggest celebrity in the world. >> obama! obama! >> but is he ready to lead? >> let's try to make his greatest asset his chief liability, and that was the purpose of those ads. and then from their airing over the course of the summer, we were able to get some traction, and by the time the democratic convention began it was essentially an even race. >> my friends, fellow americans, i am very privileged to introduce to you the next vice president of the united states, governor sarah palin of the great state of alaska! >> i did not know much about her
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other than the fact that she was the most popular governor in the country. at that moment in time we had to excite the conservative base of the republican party who was apathetic about mccain, and we needed to close a massive gender gap that disabled any prospect of us winning. >> i was just your average hockey mom and signed up for the pta. i love those hockey moms. you know, they say the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? lipstick. >> she electrified the hall. she electrified the republican party. we believed, the country believed, the obama campaign believed maybe it was possible that john mccain could win the election. >> are you ready to change things up in washington? [ cheering ]
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>> the media, i think, immediately fell in love with sarah palin. they found her a fascinating and interesting and endlessly talkable. >> sarah palin is speaking to her generation of women. >> and now she even has her own action doll. >> we were getting a lot of pressure from the party. like, you guys got to take down palin. she is going to win the race for mccain. obama was super chill. he was like, i'm not worried about it, it is me and mccain. >> turns out one of his earliest supporters is a man named bill ayers who according to "the new york times" was a domestic terrorist. and it sure would be nice if even just once he would say that he wants america to win! >> the thing i think that was the most jarring for people who were watching what she was doing were the ways in which she just openly invited white americans to hate barack obama. >> now, this is not a man who sees america as you and i see
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america. this, ladies and gentlemen, has nothing to do with the kind of change that anyone can believe in, not my kids and not your kids. >> there were a lot of code words. i mean sarah palin had her role to play, and that role was to kind of stoke the sense of suspicions, this fear of who barack obama was and what he potentially represented. you know, laying those seeds out there that were seeds of doubt, if you will, into the actual character -- not necessarily the politics, but the character of barack obama. >> obama is a terrorist, don't you know that? >> he wasn't born in america. >> i do not want a black man running my country. >> this is little hussein. >> the ways in which sarah palin openly invited racism and hatred, if they aren't new in american politics but they certainly are new on television. what she unleashed is something
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very hard to put back in the bottle. bottle >> on the broadcast tonight, meltdown, the american financial system is rocked to its foundation as top wall street institutions topple under a mountain of debt. >> as we were going down the final stretch of this campaign, the economic meltdown was happening in real-time. >> lehman brothers declares bankruptcy. >> by far the largest bankruptcy ever in this country. >> three of the five biggest investment banks are gone. the country's biggest mortgage lender is gone. >> american taxpayers woke up this morning to learn their money makes up most of a bailout package to save a huge insurance conglomerate called aig. >> people were in the grip of a brutal economy. >> you are seeing, like, massive acceleration and job losses, firms were cutting into investment across the country. there was a general condition of terror. you were at the edge of panic. >> a tough situation for america, but we'll recover from it.
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>> george bush's last days and the collapse of the economy, there was a lot of uncertainty. >> you had the iraq war going badly. >> there was a lack of confidence in the bush administration in george w. bush himself, the handling of katrina. there was a sense everything was failing. >> people were really frustrated with washington and they wanted a change, and there was one candidate who was promising change. >> don't believe for a second this election is over. don't think for a minute that power will concede anything without a fight. we're going to have to work like our future depends on in these last few days because it does! >> but it was clear as, you know, the days unfolded palin was going to end up being a net negative for mccain. >> the whole question of sarah palin, except there was an issue was overwhelmed by the economic meltdown and people's
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insecurities and anxieties about what was going to happen in the economy and who was best to deal with it. >> obama will end this day thousands of miles and many hours away in hawaii at the bedside of the very sick grandmother who raised him. >> i was on the press plane when he went back to see his grandmother. he knew that she was sick and it was, you know, sort of an unexpected detour off the campaign trail in the final weeks, and he was very, very introspective. i remember him being particularly bothered by our presence in hawaii. not quite realizing or accepting, like, the new place he was in his life, and he was still really chafing against those demand and the interest. he wanted to have a walk and he walked down the street and thought that he could do that without anybody or any of us taking notice, and there's this picture of him walking where his head is down, he just looks extraordinarily lonely and annoyed with us for trying to get that picture, but it was a very -- you know, it was a very sad time for him. you know, like his grandmother raised him and he wanted that space, and when you are talking
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about a few weeks before the election, you know, that was -- it wasn't something a lot of people were willing to give him. >> for senator obama, this day took an incredibly sad turn. the unfortunate news tonight that his beloved grandmother has lost her ongoing battle with cancer just one day shy of this historic election. >> you know, obviously there's a little bit of a bittersweet time for me. some of you heard that my grandmother, who helped raise me, passed away early this morning. >> love you, brother! >> and, look, she -- she has gone home. her name was madelyn dunham. she was one of the quiet heroes we have all across america. all they try to do is just try to do the right thing. and in this crowd there are a lot of quiet heroes like that. that's what america is about.
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that's what we're fighting for. after decades of broken politics in washington, after eight years of failed policies from george w. bush, you don't need to boo, you just need -- you just need to vote. [ cheering ] >> after 21 months of a campaign that has taken us from the rocky coast of maine to the sunshine of california, we are one day away from changing america. one day. it's the sound of low cash mode from pnc bank giving you the options and extra time needed to help you avoid an overdraft fee. low cash mode on virtual wallet from pnc bank. one way we're making a difference. (vo) nobody dreams in conventional thinking. it didn't get us to the moon. it doesn't ring the bell on wall street. or disrupt the status quo. t-mobile for business uses unconventional thinking to help
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chicago. he wanted to have a basketball game for good luck. >> a bunch of guys from chicago came down to iowa. we played basketball on caucus day, won iowa, did not play basketball on primary day in ne day, won iowa. did not play basketball on primary day in new hampshire, lost new hampshire. so obviously the campaign gods said that if you want to win, you need to play basketball on election day. >> we wanted to spend time that day just playing with old friends of his. most of them went back with him longer than i did, high school friends, college friends, law school friends, some people on the campaign. >> once we walked out onto the court, the only thing any of us were thinking about was, you know, we gotta win, we gotta win this game. >> i remember hacking him once, i figured this was my last chance to do something physical
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before he has secret service. >> it was a wonderful day. that was completely the same guy that i knew and played basketball with at harvard law school. same guy. trying to make a basket. trying to win. trying to help his team win. we sat around after the game, everybody is tired, people are stretching. and he says, okay, i'm going back, i'm going to go to the hotel and get my hair cut and then i'll see you guys at grant park. we were like, yeah, see you later, blah blah blah. >> decision 2008. election night. >> good evening. we're already under way. >> we had the tvs on in the locker room. >> kentucky goes in the mccain column. >> kentucky had just announced and obviously it was not for him. and we were like, oh, man, come on, come on, come on. >> new hampshire being called, also maryland, the district of columbia. >> and delaware as well for senator obama.
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>> mccain on the board again in tennessee. >> i talked to a former executive director of the republican party. he has no idea which candidate is going to win the outer suburbs. >> in arizona it is too close to call. >> and i did not want to be in chicago. i wanted to watch the service in martin luther king's church in atlanta. >> i felt and believed somehow, some way, that i had to be with the people that i knew best. >> in georgia, the projected winner, senator mccain, 15 electoral votes. >> republican john mccain will win alabama, mississippi. >> new york tonight predictably for senator obama. >> michigan goes as expected. >> minnesota goes to obama. >> 11:00 p.m. on the east coast. we have news. an african-american has broken a barrier as old as the republic. the celebrations begin.
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>> people are rushing the stage where there's a big jumbotron. >> the crowd is snapping pictures, hugging each other. i saw some tears in a few people's eyes. >> overwhelming to see the numbers of people out here right now, and the degree of joy that they feel. >> i jumped so high, i didn't think my feet were going to touch the floor. i started crying. and i cried and i cried. i was crying for president kennedy. for president johnson. i was crying for martin luther king jr. for hundreds and thousands of people of color who never had an opportunity to register to vote. didn't leave to see a person of color elected as president of the united states of america. >> we went from dying for
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fighting for the right to vote, to a black man being able to become president of the united states, inside of four decades. >> hello, chicago. [ cheering ] >> all that stuff we went through. this was three centuries of work. the people who made it possible were not there. i wished for a moment they could have seen the fruits of their labor. >> americans who sent a message to the world that we have never been just a collection of individuals or a collection of red states and blue states. we are and always will be the united states of america. [ cheering ] >> dear president-elect obama, i am 18 years old. voting for you in this election was truly the first time i had
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done something that went against my father. i truly believe that you are the man who can make this place we call home a great one again. sincerely, benjamin durritt. >> to those americans whose support i have yet to earn, i may not have won your vote tonight, but i hear your voices. i need your help. and i will be your president too. in this country we rise or fall as one nation, as one people. let's resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long. >> dear president-elect obama. i am a dyed in the wool republican. i have voted since i was 18. the late eight elections. i may not have supported you before, but as of today, i am committed to serving you as a
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citizen and to praying for you daily. best regards, geri harris. >> this is our time to reclaim the american dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth that out of many, we are one. that while we breathe, we hope. and where we are met with cynicism and doubt and those who tell us that we can't, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people. yes, we can. thank you. god bless you. and may god bless the united states of america. [ cheering ] >> he had finished speaking and he came over to me and i just said something like, congratulations, mr. president-elect. what do you say? he just said, we've got a lot of work to do. and that was it.
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if i had to describe president obama in one word? >> i just can't do it in a word. >> one word? >> empathetic. >> tough. >> pragmatic. >> cool. >> the mean answer -- no, i'm not going to say that on tape. >> barack obama is a gentleman. >> nice guy. >> complicated. >> wisdom with compassion. >> that word would be "steady." >> american. >> patriot. >> remarkable. >> to overcome the battering ram of historic resistance and on his slim shoulders rested the weight of american history and democracy for eight years. remarkable. ♪♪ >> the feeling in the air was
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electric and incredibly exciting. i'll never forget that sense of hope and that sense of possibility. >> it was truly one of the greatest days i've ever experienced. we were cold, but just really great. >> the day of the inauguration, it's myself, barack obama, we're all kind of standing back there waiting. he's the last one that they're announcing the stage. >> a little bit of surrealness. i can remember looking out from the capitol and seeing all wait down to lincoln, and basically just the sea of people. >> january 20th, 2009, was this very, very poignant moment in american history for a few reasons. we were seeing the inauguration of america's first african-american president. something that seemed unfathomable as recently as a decade or so beforehand. there were 1.8 million people on the mall that day.
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washington, d.c. had never seen anything like that. >> are you prepared to take the oath, senator? >> i am. >> i, barack hussein obama do solemnly swear. >> i was sitting home and watching the inauguration take place, seeing him being sworn in. a lot of people in general that, to be frank, never thought this day would come. >> i remember a tear comes down my cheek. i'm like, what was that? i'm a journalist, i'm impartial, which i am, but i was struck by the history of the moment as an african moment. >> preserve, protect, and defend the constitution of the united states. >> congratulations, mr. president. [ cheers and applause ]
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>> on the day of the inauguration, i walked up to president obama and said, mr. president, will you sign this? it was just a little piece of paper. and he wrote on it, it is because of you, john. i said, thank you, mr. president. the election of this man changed so many people and inspired so many of us. >> it is my honor to present the 44th president of these united states, barack obama. >> actually i'll say he was nervous before the speech, also because it was really cold, and the guy is a hawaiian dude, he was like, i don't want to be up here, teeth chattering. i said to him, i think there's a heater in the podium.
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so you should be warm at least for your speech. before he went out, gave him a little fist bump. i was like, you got it, you're going to be great, you're going to crush it, as he always did. >> my fellow citizens, i stand here today humbled by the task before us. grateful for the trust you've bestowed. >> ladies and gentlemen, the president of the united states. [ cheering ] >> i remember the day that he was inaugurated. there were these series of parties. but the first one featured beyonce. ♪ at last ♪ ♪ my love has come along ♪ >> and she's singing "at last,"
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and the first couple, this newly-elected african-american president and his beautiful wife are dancing to beyonce. it was an emotional moment for anyone who was there and anyone who watched on television that night. >> the night president obama is inaugurated, a number of republicans get together at a steakhouse in washington, including paul ryan who would become the speaker later, kevin mccarthy, who later became house majority leader. eric cantor. >> barack obama i think at the time, maybe a 70 or 72% approval rating, which meant those of us in the minority, as republicans, were going to have a tough road to try and assert what we believed in terms of policy, to try and address the challenges that were facing the country. >> a lot of discussion is, okay, how can we continue to work on republican priorities, work with the president, how do we get
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some things done over the next two to four years? >> former house speaker newt gingrich, who had engineered the takeover of the house of representatives in 1994, reminded everybody seated there, you know, we were once cast out, we were once irrelevant. we found our way back. we can do it again. we will do it again. >> they basically plot out a campaign of opposition, in effect, to say, we can't give him victories. if we do that, we lose our relevance as a republican party. >> at the very conclusion of the evening, speaker gingrich said to everyone, we will look back on this day as the day that the seeds of triumph in 2010 and 2012 were sewn. >> this was a president who has no idea of the storm that's coming. republicans have really essentially mapped out their plan to get back the white house. and one we discover. one that's been tamed and one that's forever wild.
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it sure is good to see you. i'm really nervous. welcome back, america. i don't know what i should wear. just wear something not too crazy, remember it's a business dinner not a costume party. on a spotty network this is what she heard... just wear something crazy, remember it's a costume party. a costume party!? yes! anybody want to split a turkey leg? (upbeat pop music in background throughout)
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the first days, when you were in the white house, there's a lot of pressure. >> yeah, you know why? because today i get to learn about how to set up an emergency press conference. >> oh, really? >> it was like jumping on a moving train. >> he didn't just come down, did he? so he's been down. that's what i thought. all right. >> the first few days, you know, when the president walks into a room, everybody stands up. that's the tradition. and he would get really -- guys, guys, don't stand up, sit down. and within a couple of weeks, that's gone. he's accustomed, he walks in there, everybody stands up. >> we were trying to function when we just didn't even know our way around the building.
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one little corridor which we called the outer oval, has about four doors in it. you actually can't tell which door is the door to the hallway to the colonnade and which door is the door to the oval and which is the door to the cabinet room. i remember being stuck in there one time when the doors were closed and it was like, oh, my god, which one do i open? because you really don't want to open the wrong door, right? >> the thing about working in the white house, you're not just someone who works there. you represent the president of the united states. we never wanted him to be criticized for giving us a chance. i remember the first day we walked into the oval office. i get teary thinking about it. in that one second, before he was potus for the rest of his life, it was kind of like, just us for a minute. really taking in how crazy it was. i don't think any of us can really talk about the first day,
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now, after everything that's happened in the last couple of years, and not get really emotional thinking about what that office really means and what it stands for. we just thought it was the most special place on earth. >> there was ample and stunning proof today there is no place to hide from the effects of this country's crumbling economy. >> we have in fact been in a recession for a year. >> it was only the 12th time in u.s. history the dow has fallen 500 or more points in a day. >> the unemployment figure now over 8% for the first time in over a century. >> foreclosures across the country are up. anger in this country is at a modern day high. >> the kind of moment was taking over, arguably the most perilous point. a new president has taken over, since fdr, everything that could go wrong seems to be going wrong. >> the greatest economic downturn since the great
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depression. the financial system was on the brink of collapse. >> i felt some serious fear in those first weeks. it was really terrifying. you sort of think, well, this is the point at which the grownups go sit in the room and close the door and figure it out. it's quite another thing to be in the room with the brilliant people and realize, holy mackerel, they're not omniscient, they're flawed humans, and holy mackerel, i'm one of them. >> in the early weeks i would be coming into a meeting and the people walking out of the room why the economic team and he would just look like the weight of the world had been dropped on his shoulders. >> he doesn't have a huge amount of experience. who had any experience with financial crises like this? he did what you should do, which is to try to listen to people and ask some hard questions. but then choose and act. >> when it comes to rebuilding our economy, we don't have a moment to spare. the businesses that are shedding jobs to stay afloat, they can't
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afford inaction or delay. the workers who are returning home to tell their husbands and wives and children that they no longer have a job. and all those who live in fear that their job will be next on the cutting blocks, they need help now. they're looking to washington for action, bold and swift. and that is why i hope to sign the american recovery and reinvestment plan into law in the next few weeks. >> the stimulus bill was a mix of tax cuts and temporary spending measures and infrastructure. we spent a long period of time negotiating a strategy that maximizes the chance that some republicans could support that legislation. >> we feel that so much of the spending that's in the bill, frankly, although may be laudable in and of itself, has no place in the stimulus bill. >> they're not willing to increase the deficit. they're actually saying we need to cut the deficit in the short
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run rather than increase it. >> the bill that is scheduled to come to the floor this week will come to the floor without any consultation among house republicans and with, uh, with categorical opposition. >> so they're not only opposed to the particulars of obama's bill. they're opposed to any stimulus bill. >> lots of numbers. >> it passed the house and faces the senate on monday. >> the white house is trumpeting its first big victory. >> an ambitious plan at a time we badly need it. >> the economy was growing again in six months. the worst part of the crisis had passed. >> history will record that barack obama prevented the country from falling into a great depression. and republicans were completely and totally obstructionist
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towards his agenda. >> there was no bipartisanship. not even close. there was virtually no support from republicans. >> the republicans bear some of the blame. so did barack obama. he was, i think, injured in part by some of his odd manners. he could not help communicating that he was the smartest guy in the room, which he often was. all the more reason not to flaunt it. >> what the obama people did basically is they took the rhetoric of bipartisanship, they asked for it only on their terms, and when they didn't get it, then they could rant and rave against the enemies of bipartisanship. it was extremely slick politics. >> if we can't work together on something this urgent to address a crisis this significant, the prospects for bipartisan cooperation in the future are rather dim. leep to people who were tired of being tired.
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i would run from football games to work and trying to balance it all. so, what do you see when you look at yourself? i see a person that's caring. sometimes i care too much, and that's when i had to learn to put myself first, because i would care about everyone all the time but i'm just as they are. botox® cosmetic is fda approved to temporarily make frown lines, crow's feet and forehead lines look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com
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the opportunities to do what you want as a president can be kind of limited. you can't just pick up and walk off the south grounds and out to the public street. i recall once talking to the president outside, and he was like, man, if i could just drive a car. >> he was a free spirit who was spontaneous, loved to just go and come as he pleased. you can't do that when you have secret service. >> there is a bubble in the white house. he's probably the most normal person to become president. most people who become president have been famous for most of their lives. they've had these big staffs of yes men and yes women. this is somebody who was pumping his own gas and paying student loans two years before the presidency. the bubble changes you.
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>> the obamas recognized this was going to be a different environment for the children to be raised. michelle obama wanted to make it as normal as possible. i had a private meeting with mrs. obama and her staff to talk about the kids. couldn't help but think, she's a mother looking after her kids and i'm a stranger. in my mind i wanted to let her know we're going to do what we needed to do to make sure they were safe but also experience what other kids do growing up. >> mrs. obama in her book tells a story of sending her kids off to school the first day in an armored car with men with guns. she said, my goodness, what have i done to my family? >> she had her round little face pressed up against the window of the suv. her thoughts were unreadable but her expression sober. we were asking so much of them. >> i get nervous about how they're going to adjust when they're teenagers, they start having dates, they've got secret
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service guys following them around and there may be issues about somebody asking them out because they're the president's daughter as opposed to if they really like them. it's already a self-conscious time in life. >> i think he wanted to always be empathetic and available and to help them get through the process. he would always sort of say, look, i grew up without my father, i lost my mother at an early age, you know, and those things are hard to go through. you never want to, you know, waste those moments. having been through it himself, i think also never wanted his children to feel the way that he felt growing up at times. >> president obama and michelle and the kids went to st. john's church and walked back. they went to the kids' plays or would go to the basketball games. in fact president obama coached for a little while sasha's basketball team. >> i can remember the first time the vipers, sasha's basketball
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team, executed the pick and roll in a game. you would have thought michael jordan had returned to the game of basketball and just hit a buzzer beater. he always enjoyed when they competed, because it was sort of one of those simplifying things about life. >> what's your name? good to see you. >> how are you? >> i'm doing well, thank you so much. >> my daughter grace. >> grace, how have you been? >> he used to draw a distinction between people who wanted to be something and people who wanted to do something. i drew from that, he didn't just want to be president. he wanted to do something as president. he wanted to do something for people. >> 400 years, our country has been striving to provide health care for all americans in terms of access to quality affordable health care. so when president obama became president, this of course is a priority for us. >> i come from the immigration policy world. that world likes to argue that he should have done immigration
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first. but part of the reason for the decision to tackle the affordable care act so soon after the recovery act is because of the clear understanding of the high cost of health care and the relationship to the economy and bringing the economy back online. but there were plenty of people outside the white house and a few inside the white house who thought he was being too a.m. bibbs. >> i do believe at the time it was probably not the issue that needed to be first and foremost, given what the country had just gone through and the near collapse of wall street, the mortgage crisis and the rest. >> as someone who had worked on president clinton's health reform effort that famously failed, to me it seemed obvious that if you didn't do it right away, it wouldn't happen. >> our goal will be to enact comprehensive health care reform by the end of this year. >> very first thing the president did when he decided we're going to tackle health care was have a bipartisan meeting at the white house. we had a health care summit.
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we brought down the entire republican leadership. we brought outside experts. we brought the same with democrats. they had over a hundred people there. it was on the question of affordability that he opened that conference in the white house. i'll never forget it, i'm like, wow, this is exactly where i think both sides can come together, is if you reduce costs, you can increase access. >> kickoff to the president's health reform effort. it wasn't sort of a gab fest. it was a lot of goodwill. i took a lot of encouragement from that. president obama and our team at the white house worked closely with senator kennedy. >> nobody was better at the internal politics of health care than ted kennedy. >> the odds were against health care passing. i don't think any president tried to do it on the heels of the economy slipping into an economic collapse. so yes, we went in with our eyes wide open that this was probably a 60/40 proposition.
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>> hello, everybody. >> there's this quote from president lyndon johnson. there is but one way for a president to deal with the congress and that is continuously, incessantly, and without interruption. and i taped that above my computer monitor and that was sort of my mantra every day. that was president obama's mantra too. there were certain issues that were hot buttons for some of the republicans and we were figuring out ways to work with them. >> the first shot off the bat out of the democratic proposal was they wanted government option, meaning government to provide the insurance as an option for people to choose when they were looking at the other options in health care, if they didn't get one from their employer. that was a nonstarter for republicans who don't believe the government has a constitutional mandate to provide insurance like that. it was too far of a reach for us.
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>> we have government controlled health care, we're going to have illegal immigrants involved in the system. >> let's stop this rampage towards bigger and bigger government. >> let's keep a four-letter word out there, a good word. that's "cost." >> i don't want them running my plan. >> the president couldn't have been more focused. he was spending a couple of hours a day having meetings with individual members, senators, groups of them, trying to help speed them along, to get to a bill. and i was very positive, until that august recess. of an asthma attack... that doesn't happen. this is the sound of better breathing. fasenra is a different kind of asthma medication. it's not a steroid or inhaler. fasenra is an add-on treatment for asthma driven by eosinophils. it's one maintenance dose every 8 weeks. it helps prevent asthma attacks, improve breathing,
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i think we're taking our first steps toward full-fledged socialism. >> you know i can't find one little paragraph in here that says that the government has a right to take over our health care. >> god will take care of health care. >> diry thieves! >> i've done some research into obama. he's a marxist. >> some of the things obama is doing are the exact same things hitler did. >> town meetings started up around the country. senators and house members were trying to explain what was in the bill and they were greeted by insults and shouts. that's all over talk radio. >> you said medicare is being run by experts. who are these people? this is a program that's $39 trillion in the red. >> as i said, there is a nationally coordinated effort to disrupt these meetings. >> who sent me here? i sent myself! how dare you, how dare you claim that i'm part of a conspiracy!
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>> we were watching the town halls occurring around the country. it was really a low point. i think everyone was pretty frustrated about whether we were actually going to be able to get this done. >> one day god is going to stand before you and he's going to judge you. >> it was clear that what was happening over that august recess was not a positive thing for the momentum of health reform. that's when you saw the tea party beginning to form. >> i believe obama is running our country into the ground. >> there's been too much money we don't have. they're going to put future generations into debt they'll never get out of. >> we must stop this government takeover of health care. >> i thought the tea party was one of the most refreshing movements i've ever seen in the country. and it's been maligned and misrepresented in a lot of ways. i did go to a lot of the rallies. it was people from all walks of life, many had never been involved with politics. >> some of that opposition is coming from former alaska governor sarah palin.
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she wrote a comment, made a statement on her facebook page. she called this health plan of the president's downright evil. she said, quote, the america i know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with down syndrome will have to stand in front of obama's death panel. >> what we often ran into was, if the other side couldn't win on the facts, they would just invent the facts. death squads is a great example. there were no death squads in the bill. the president would try as best he could that those things weren't true but it stale became part of the debate. >> what you can't do, or you can but you shouldn't do, is start saying things like we want to set up death panels to pull the plug on grandma. i mean, come on. >> the affordable care act became the proximate focus of anger and dissatisfaction at government. and the tea party really became
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the anti-obama movement. >> i had a sick feeling that what had been bubbling up was now a grassroots organized movement against the affordable care act and it was going to make it much harder to get the legislation done. >> so we met in early august of 2009 to talk about the prospects. the president started the meeting by asking me what i thought. and i told him i thought we still could get it done. i wasn't sure how, what the path was going to be. he then went around the room and heard from a lot of other people. >> the chief of staff, rahm emanuel, had asked that we consider something less than the full affordable care act. why not do a bill that will cover the parents of children who are covered under the state children's health insurance program? that would add some people to the rolls, it would be making some progress, the president wouldn't have failed at health
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reform, he would have gotten something done. the president was considering that, considering whether he should push for a vote. >> he came back at the end of the meeting and said, what do you think? i said, what i think it comes down to, mr. president, i was thinking of a clint eastwood movie, i said, mr. president, do you feel lucky? >> president obama went over to the resolute desk, looked out the window, and said, so, phil, where are we? and phil looked around at the rest of us and we shrugged our shoulders and he said, sir, we're in the oval office. president obama said, yes, and phil, what's my name? now phil is really confused. he says, sir, your name is president obama. >> without missing a beat he said, my name is barack hussein obama, i'm president of the united states, i get up every day and feel lucky. let's get this done and get to work. i was being a little bit of a
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smart aleck. his response was priceless. >> the man called the lion of the senate, ted kennedy of massachusetts. >> senator ted kennedy, a member of one of america's most powerful and captivating political families, dies after a year-long battle with brain cancer. >> dead tonight. >> when ted kennedy died, you knew it would be one of those moments that united official washington in mourning. this was someone most people would agree was one of the greatest legislators who ever lived. >> he was a product of an age when the joy and nobility of politics prevented differences of party and platform and philosophy from becoming barriers to cooperation and mutual respect. a time when adversaries still saw each other as patriots. >> the president was deeply saddened by senator kennedy's
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death. it was a lot of a mentor and a friend and someone who will be willing to support him early on when a lot of others weren't. >> so with the death of senator kennedy, immediately a democrat was appointed to temporarily fill that seat. so the president still had his super majority in place. however, a special election was coming down the pike in january that could change everything. that super majority was in true question. not just unpredictable relapses. all these other things too. it can all add up. kesimpta is a once-monthly at-home injection... that may help you put these rms challenges in their place. kesimpta was proven superior at reducing the rate of relapses, active lesions, and slowing disability progression vs aubagio. don't take kesimpta if you have hepatitis b, and tell your doctor if you have had it, as it could come back. kesimpta can cause serious side effects, including infections.
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reform. i don't really want to leave it up to the insurance companies to fix it. >> we still had a path forward to pass a bill. but it really depended on the president going and explaining, convincing the country that this was going to make our health care system better. >> the president of the united states. >> at that point it was clear there was almost uniform republican opposition. but this was his opportunity to go. >> the time for bickering is over. the time for games has passed. now is the season for action. now is when we must bring the best ideas of both parties together. >> because we were going to have to do this, it was clear at that point, by just democratic votes, and we had 60 democratic senators, and we needed 60 votes on the senate floor, we didn't
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have any margin of error. >> there are also those who claim our reform efforts would insure illegal immigrants. this too is false. the reforms, the reforms i am proposing would not apply to those who are here illegally. >> you lie! >> it's not true. >> it was stunning because it was so out of the circle of any experience that any of us had ever had. of course my first reaction was to just go down there and throw him out. but that would be a victory for him. >> i thought that was inappropriate. i thought it was disrespectful of the individual and the office. >> of all the people you would have expected from the house republican conference to yell "you lie" at president barack obama, joe wilson of south carolina would not have been the likeliest nominee by a long shot. >> i particularly didn't like it because the fellow who did it
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was sitting right behind me and when the president looked to see who did it, i think he was looking at me thinking i had done it. but when the president addresses the congress, that's his opportunity to speak and in the name of civility, there should be respect. >> black america saw a president of whom all of us were extremely proud, being treated as if he was not president, as if he was just an interloper, as if he had broken into the white house and was occupying the building. >> you lie! you lie! >> for the right, wilson did become something of a folk hero. suddenly people from all over the u.s. were contributing to his campaign. money was really, really pouring in. >> it was a big indication to me that things are going to get worse. that's an indicator of how deeply hateful some people in the country, even some people in the congress, were with respect to the president. and clear to me that there's
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going to be deep divisions and this would be very difficult to heal. >> i had people who said to me, why didn't president obama respond to that? any time you react and you get taken off message, then you're losing the reason why you're there. you can't afford yourself the luxury of indulging your emotions. you just have to keep them in check. and how he managed to do that every day, i don't know. >> three weeks later, the house passed a bill on the floor. and then we moved into the senate. >> what do we want? >> single payer. >> when do we want it? >> now. >> the nurses are here because we see a need on a shift by shift basis for health reform. >> it has to be done for the protection of our country's future overall. >> i will not accept the status quo. not this time. not now. minnesota, we are closer to
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reform than we've ever been before. but this is the hard part. >> when the health care bill went to the senate floor, it was the second longest debate that the senate had had in 50 years. it went from thanksgiving to christmas eve. >> can you hear us now? >> it's just the reality. no bill except one in the previous 50 years had been on the senate floor that long. >> this bill will provide real reform for our nation's flawed health care system. >> the first thing we do is address affordability. >> democrats in the senate will not give up on this dream of bipartisanship. they think, i know these republicans, we can sit down with them over beers. they still think the old rules of washington apply. >> and i've got a diagnosis and it's legislative malpractice. >> to the american people concerned about this being a done deal, it is not. >> it must be opposed.
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>> we were still trying to reach out to some republicans to see if we could convince them. >> the yeas are 60. the yeas are 39. hr 35 as amended, the patient protection and affordable care act, is passed. >> an historic vote, a first for the senate on christmas eve since the late 1800s, bringing health care reform one step closer to reality. senate democrats pushed through their version of the bill against unanimous opposition from republicans. democrats took their victory lap and republicans warmed up for another round in the fight. >> this fight isn't over. in fact this fight is long from over. my colleagues and i will work to stop this bill from becoming law. >> we had passed a bill out of the house and we had passed a bill out of the senate. when the house passes a bill and the senate passes a bill, it goes to something called a conference committee. the conference committee resolves differences between the two bills.
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i used to say something to the president as we were going through the process which is, he was trying to climb a mountain no one had successfully climbed before. that day of passing the senate bill got us much closer to the summit. we weren't done. now we had to come down the mountain. we had passed the house, we had passed the senate, now we had to get back safely, which was trying to get a bill which could pass both places. strength and e. whoo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, now introducing ensure complete! with 30 grams of protein. ensure complete! this is dr. arnold t. petsworth, he's the owner of petsworth vetworld. business was steady, but then an influx of new four-legged friends changed everything. dr. petsworth welcomed these new patients. the only problem? more appointments meant he needed more space. that's when dr. petsworth turned to his american express business card, which offers spending potential that's built for his changing business needs.
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massachusetts has spoken. when there is trouble in massachusetts, rest assured there is trouble everywhere. people do not want the trillion dollar health care plan that is being forced on the american people. >> republicans suddenly inspired by the words senator-elect, scott brown. he won by five points. that has both parties saying, if it can happen here, what's next for the president and the party? >> with the election of a republican u.s. senator scott brown, it robbed the democrats of that super majority of the senate. >> scott brown was going to oppose health care reform. and it became clear the only path forward was for the house to pass the senate bill that had been on the senate floor for a month and take that without changes, which is house wasn't going to want to do.
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>> she could not pass the senate bill. those were pretty dark days. we were discussing how we would go forward, and it just became clear to me that he shouldn't go forward. without republican votes, it's going to hurt him politically, and that was more important to me than passing the bill. by then, all the negative advertising and all the negativity about it had really started to bring down the popularity of doing anything. it just looked like it was not going to pass, and it if it failed, that would be a disaster for him. the president said, i want to bring everyone together one more time. i want to try one more time to explain what we're trying to do, to talk about the problems and see if we can get support. >> the last meeting he had in february of 2010 was a bipartisan meeting at the warehouse, which was televised. he brought the leadership to sit down together and make one last
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effort. the summit is a little bit of a gambit by obama. it is a way for obama to show the country he's willing to listen to both parties. he brings both parties together and says let's brainstorm our plans. >> we just can't afford this. >> it seemed clear that the republicans at the meeting, with a few exceptions, seemed adamantly against what we were trying to do. >> the question that i'm going to ask myself and i ask of all of you is is there enough serious effort that in a month's time or a few week's time or six weeks' time we could actually resolve something? and if we can't, then i think we have to go ahead and make decisions. and then this's what elections are for. >> that's when the president
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decided he would take the vote. >> my staff will tell you i curse like a sailor behind closed doors. i have a competitor streak and a sense of determination of wanting to get done what needs to get done. >> he understood the challenges were and he understood what the opportunities were. we made a decision to succeed. the press would say to me, it doesn't look like you are going to pass this. what are you going to do? we believe this is a challenge of our generation. >> the president spent most of saturday and the rest of sunday calling individual members, thanking them for their votes, encouraging them. he was deeply, deeply invested in putting his own personal stamp on it. . >> good morning sunday showdown after a final push. >> after all the debate and all the bickers, we are hours away
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from a vote on health care reform. >> tensions are high. i have spoken with a couple of democrats. >> i have learned about this, which is you have to be there when the votes are going on. when you are the vote counter, you have to be there. yes, i went up on the senate side, up constitution avenue. and there were protesters there. >> pass the bill! pass the bill! >> kill the bill! kill the bill! >> i was in the house chamber, overlooking the house chamber. >> can you say it was done openly? with transparency and accountability? without back room deals struck behind closed doors hidden from the people? hell no you can't. >> in the spirit of history and past history, a victory.
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give health care a chance. >> the president's idea was to get everybody into the room to watch the vote. the president and i had spent all day going through the vote count again, so it was still a lot of tension in the room because we weren't there yet. >> a sufficient number, members will record their votes by electronic device. it is a 15 minute vote. >> it seemed like it took five hours. every increment of time, every 30 seconds seemed like an eternity. >> on this vote the yeahs are 219. the nahs the 212. the motion is adopted. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table.
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>> we moved heaven and earth to pass that bill. >> it was a high moment to saver, no question. >> in any presidency, there are things you have to manage and then there is the mark that you try to make. and we had to manage the financial crisis. but health care was affirmative. health care was we are creating something and leaving behind something that wasn't there before. >> this is something that for 100 years presidents have been trying to do and coming up short. and this president working with nancy pelosi and harry reid and rank and file members all came together to do something that no one would predict they would have been able to do. >> phil called me and said, get back down to the white house. come back down here. the president wants to see you. i went out on the independence
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side toward the house, and there were a lot of people there who seemed to just have gathered and it was very emotional. so i got back down to the white house. i opened the door of the roosevelt room and it's uproarous in there. >> the party is upstairs. >> president obama invited a small group of us up to the residence. and it was a combination of the people who really helped get the health care bill done, but then he wanted people like me who had been there in 2007 and 2008 to be there for this moment. >> mrs. obama was out of town, which is probably how he got away with doing something to spontaneous. he went around and thanked every person. >> raising toasts and celebrating and looking with awe on this amazing view. this was about 11:00 at night. the trueman balcony is the curvy part of the white house that looks over the south lawn.
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you can see the jefferson memorial in the distance. >> i remember just seeing this incredible relaxation that he had that i hadn't seen in a long time. like his shoulders finally relaxing. >> i asked him how he felt that night compared to election night. he said to me, there is no comparison. election night was just all about getting to this night. >> one great achievement of barack obama is just being barack obama and winning the presidency. the second was when he became president, there was not an almost universal consensus that there should be universal access to health care. when he left, there was. that's a big achievement. >> i remember when i came up to him and shook his hand and he poked me in the chest like, you know, an athlete that just won a game and said, remember, don't bet against me.
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we understood he had to walk a tight rope. >> daddy was a kenyan. makes him an illegal president. >> clearly you can question my policies without questioning my faith. or for that matter, my citizenship. i'm jonathan. and welcome to the msnbc special "pride of the white house." tonight is a celebration of being visible. for lgbtq people, visibility has been a cornerstone for the fight. there is incredible power in being seen and heard. and president biden has lifted up lgbtq voices like no other white house. building an administration that,
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