FDCH e-Media
Thursday, January 22,
2004; 10:30 PM
The seven Democratic presidential candidates
debate in Goffstown, New Hampshire Thursday. Gen.
Wesley Clark
, Howard Dean, Sen. John Edwards
(N.C.), Sen. John Kerry (Mass.), Sen. Joseph Leiberman (Conn.), Rep. Dennis
Kucinich (Ohio), and the Rev. Al Sharpton participated in the debate. Moderators
were Brit Hume of Fox News, Peter Jennings of ABC News, Tom Griffith of WMUR,
and John Distaso of The Union Leader. The transcript follows.
HUME:Good evening, and welcome to Koonz Auditorium here at St. Anselm
College in Manchester, New Hampshire.
The seven remaining Democratic
presidential candidates are gathered here for their final debate before next
Tuesday's New Hampshire primary.
Let's meet the candidates:
former Governor Howard Dean of Vermont, retired General Wesley Clark of
Arkansas, the Reverend Al Sharpton of New York, Senator John Kerry of
Massachusetts, Senator John Edwards of North Carolina, Senator Joseph Lieberman
of Connecticut and Congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio.
Welcome to you all.
The candidates' positions on
this stage, by the way, were determined by a random drawing. The candidates,
during this debate, will have one minute each for each answer. Any rebuttal or
follow-up will be 30 seconds.
The candidates will have lights
that will help them keep track of their time. And if an answer should go over,
the candidates, and indeed all of us, will hear this sound.
We do ask the audience to hold
applause during the course of the questions and answers.
Now let's introduce my
colleagues: Tom Griffith, the principal news anchor of WMUR TV Channel 9 here in
Manchester; John DiStaso, political reporter of The Union Leader here in
Manchester; and from ABC News, anchor and senior editor of "World News
Tonight" Peter Jennings, who has the first questions.
Peter?
JENNINGS: Thank you, Brit.
I hope we don't confuse you,
gentlemen. Brit's going to moderate the first hour; I'm going to moderate the
second. And by luck of the draw, I get the first flight of questions to Senator
Lieberman, to Governor Dean and to John Kerry.
Governor Dean, I'll come to you
in just a second, but I'm going to start, if I may, with Senator Kerry.
Senator, Democrats everywhere
tell us that they want to nominate a man who will not be beaten by President
Bush using the Republican weapon of taxes. You know that President Bush will be
relentless on this subject. You know that it is the Republicans' argument of
choice. It works for Republicans.
In your career, you voted to
raise billions of dollars in taxes. You've advocated spending billions more in
this particular campaign. So I would like you at the outset to put yourself in a
moment, on a stage like this, if you're the nominee sometime during the fall.
And if you are the nominee, what will you say exactly, precisely, if at that
time President Bush says, "Senator Kerry is going to raise your taxes and I
am not"?
KERRY: That's a fight I look forward to, because if George W. Bush wants to stand
there beside me and defend raising taxes for people who earn more than $200,000
a year, which are the only people who might be argued will have a tax increase
by rolling back the Bush tax cut that they rushed through, instead of giving all
of America health care and education so we truly leave no child behind, that's a
fight we deserve to have in this country. That's a fight we will win.
I am going to protect the
middle class. And in the course of my career, Peter, I have voted for countless
numbers of tax cuts.
KERRY: When I arrived in the United States Senate, the highest marginal
rate was 72 percent. We took it down to 28 percent under Ronald Reagan. It then
went back up somewhat. I voted for cutting the capital gains tax, I voted for
tax incentives for businesses.
But this president has created
an economy that feeds the special interests and the powerful and the corporate
power, and he is not helped the average worker in America to advance their
cause. I will.
JENNINGS: Thank you, sir.
Governor Dean, I'm going to ask
you the same question. It happened, of course, to Governor Dukakis, to Walter
Mondale and to Al Gore. And you are supporting more tax increases than Senator
Kerry.
But I do also, in fairness,
want to give you a choice here, if you'd like to use some of the time to talk
about -- or maybe all the time, your choice -- to talk about what some people
think was your overly enthusiastic speech to you supporters the other night,
which many people actually think has hurt your candidacy...
DEAN: Well, Peter, you may notice that my voice is a little hoarse.
It's not because I was whooping and hollering at my third- place finish in Iowa;
it's because I have cold.
We did have a little fun in
Iowa. I thought I owed it to the 3,500 kids that came out and worked for
us.
And, sure, I would have liked
to have been a little bit -- done a little better. But I congratulate John Kerry
and John Edwards on great campaigns. I think they ran a great campaign.
Let me just take a second to
talk about this tax stuff.
I'm going to take a different
position than everybody. I think we ought to get rid of the whole Bush tax cut,
and here's why: There was no middle-class tax cut.
Sixty percent of us got $304.
Has your property tax gone up more than $304 because the president cut cops on
the beat, refused to fund special education, refused to fund No Child Left
Behind? How about your college tuition? Has that gone up more that $304 because
the president cut 84,000 kids off Pell Grants in order to pay for the tax cuts
for people like Ken Lay?
Your health care, has that gone
up because the president cut 500,000 kids off health care?
There was no middle-class tax
cut in this country. Somebody has to stand up and say, we cannot have
everything. We can't have tax cuts, pay for health care, pay for No Child Left
Behind and pay for an adequate defense.
I believe we ought to have
balanced budgets. I've done it 12 times. That is the real issue in this
campaign. The future health of this country depends on a balanced budget. And
we've got to start telling the truth and stop making promises.
JENNINGS:Thank you, Governor.
(APPLAUSE)
Senator Lieberman, you've
warned for years that this image of being the party of tax increases has hurt
the party badly and helps Democrats lose elections. But you voted for increasing
taxes yourself. And while you've argued for cutting some in this particular
campaign, you've also advocated increasing others. Audition on taxes, if you
wish.
But I'll also give you a
choice, as I did Governor Dean, perhaps you'd also like to comment on the
gentleman from Massachusetts. Would Senator Kerry's answer on taxes be effective
if he is challenged by President Bush in debate this fall?
LIEBERMAN: Here is the way I'd like to start this, Peter. I saw a
wonderful article recently that said that in a private conversation, President
Bush said to someone that the Democrat he thought would give him the toughest
fight for reelection was Joe Lieberman. Incidentally, this is an opinion on
which I agree with President Bush.
(LAUGHTER)
And I think the reason is that
the Republicans can't run their normal playbook on me that they try to run on
Democratic candidates. They can't say I flip-flop because I don't. They can't
say I'm weak on defense because I'm not. They can't say I'm weak on values
because I'm not. They can't say I'm a big taxer and a big spender.
In this campaign, I am the only
candidate up here on the stage that has come out for genuine tax reform, not
only to protect the middle-class tax cuts that middle-class families did get in
the last three years, that many of us fought for, but to apply, to carry out, to
pass a tax cut for 98 percent of the income tax payers and to pay for it by
raising taxes on the 2 percent.
That may make some of the
higher-income people unhappy, but it's the right thing to do for the middle
class and for our economy.
HUME: Tom, you're next.
GRIFFITH: I have two candidates, Congressman Kucinich and General
Clark.
I'd like to start with you,
General Clark, if I could.
Everybody in the campaign is
talking about credentials, what they've done, as an indicator of what they'll
do. And you make the case of the value of your military experience. But your
Democratic Party credentials in this race do matter to many within the
party.
The nominee, as Peter
mentioned, will come under harsh criticism from the Bush administration on
everything from where they stood yesterday about the war, today about the war,
tomorrow about the war; yesterday about taxes, today about taxes and tomorrow
about taxes.
So can you be an effective
leader, with regard to the platform of this party?
CLARK: Well, Tom, I voted for Bill Clinton and Al Gore. When I got out of the
military, I looked at both parties. I'm pro-choice, pro-affirmative action,
pro-environment, pro-labor. I was either going to be the loneliest Republican in
America or I was going to be a happy Democrat.
(LAUGHTER)
And there are people who are
worried about Democratic Party credentials. I've got to tell them that. But I'm
a Democrat of conviction. My wife and I spent our entire time in the uniform
taking care of people.
And that's what the Democratic
Party does. And that's what I want to do as president.
And I'm in this party now, and
I'll bring a lot of other people into this party, too. And that's what we need
to do to win in November.
GRIFFITH: So, do you look -- as a quick follow-up -- do you look, then,
at your lack of experience within the party itself as an asset?
CLARK:Well, I've got a lot
of experience in leadership. I've never run for elective office before, and in
the military, most of us were never members of a political party. But I think
what matters in this party is the clarity of your ideas, the strength of your
convictions and your ability to communicate.
The Democratic Party is a party
of ideas. It's a party as broad as a Montana sky. We welcome everybody into this
party, and we care about people. That's why I'm a Democrat. That's why I want to
be president: to help people.
GRIFFITH: Thank you.
Congressman Kucinich, you are
the candidate on the stage that has a time certain by which you want to withdraw
troops from Iraq. You've said essentially that within 90 days, you'll remove
American troops, seek a U.N. force to replace them.
What if there's no cooperation
from the U.N.? Do you pack your bags and leave Iraq at this point?
KUCINICH: No. Actually, the plan that is predicated on the United
Nations being presented with an entirely different direction. And that different
direction would be that the United States would disavow any interest in the
oil.
Ask the U.N. to handle the oil
assets of Iraq on behalf of the Iraqi people, until the Iraqi people are
self-governing. Ask the U.N. to handle the contracts until the Iraqi people are
self-governing.
The United States should
renounce any interest in privatization of the Iraq economy. And we should ask
the U.N. to help construct a cause of governance in Iraq with a new constitution
and elections.
That approach, plus to fund a
U.N. peacekeeping mission; in addition to that, to provide repairs for what we
destroyed in Iraq, plus reparations for the families of innocent civilian
noncombatants -- all that constitutes a plan which would enable the United
States to go to the U.N. and say, "Look, agree with this plan, send in U.N.
peacekeepers," and 90 days later, we'll have our troops home.
I do stand here saying that I
believe sincerely that we should bring in U.N. peacekeepers and bring our troops
home. And I have the plan to do that.
GRIFFITH: Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: John, you're next.
DISTASO: My questions are for Senator Edwards and Reverend
Sharpton.
Senator Edwards, after voting
to authorize the president to go to war in Iraq in 2002, you voted last fall
against an $87 billion expenditure to support the troops there and aid the
anti-terrorism effort.
These votes may appear to some
to be inconsistent, and a reaction even perhaps to the political winds of the
movement. Why aren't they inconsistent? How are they consistent?
EDWARDS: Because I said from the very beginning, before the first resolution was ever
voted on in the Congress, that in order for this effort to be successful it was
absolutely critical that when we reached this stage that it be international,
that it not be an American operation, that it not be an American occupation. And
so long as it was that, we'd see the problems we've seen right now.
Everyone on this stage has been
critical of the way George Bush has conducted this phase of the operation. But
at the point where we had to stand up and say yes or no, we had to stand up and
vote and support that vote, I thought it would be a mistake for me to say to the
president, "What you're doing is right, I support it, go forward, here's
your blank check, come back next year and ask for more money."
He needed to change course. We
needed to have the United Nations in charge of the civilian authority. We needed
NATO present to help provide security there, at least along the Saudi Arabian
and the Iranian border so we could concentrate on the Sunni triangle.
And actually, I have to say
there are two of us on this stage, Senator Kerry and myself, who both voted
against it. And I know that both of us felt we needed to say loud and clear to
President Bush that what he was doing was wrong and we thought he needed to
change course.
DISTASO: So was it a protest vote, or was it a vote of substance?
And had it failed, what do you
believe the scene would be like in Iraq today?
EDWARDS: It was not a protest vote. I voted exactly the way I thought I should have
voted.
And not only that, had I been
the deciding vote, I would have voted exactly the same way. Because what would
have happened, had that occurred, is the president would have immediately come
back to the Congress with a plan, changing course, so that he could get the
approval he needed.
And I thought it was critically
important for us to say to this president, "What you're doing is wrong. You
have to change course."
It's all well and good to
criticize him. That's just words. We came to the point where we had to stand up
and take responsibility. I took responsibility.
HUME: Just to follow up quickly there, how do you know the president would have
come back? And how do you know that whatever he asked for would've passed had
you voted no when your vote was decisive?
EDWARDS: Because I know -- Brit, because I know that the president, nor us, would
have ever left the troops over there without the support that they needed. None
of us would have allowed that to happen.
But it was critical that we say
to the -- if we had said yes to this vote -- if I can just finish this -- if we
had said yes to this, it would have been tantamount to saying, "Here's your
blank check, go forward. Come back next year, we'll give you another blank
check. You can continue this policy. And all of us will stand on stages and
criticize you, but when it comes time for when we have to put our rear end on
the line and take responsibility, we won't take that
responsibility."
EDWARDS: I took responsibility. I think it was the right thing to do.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: Reverend Sharpton, your Iraq policy calls for immediate withdrawal of U.S.
troops. And as a human rights advocate, is there anywhere in the world today
where you would send troops, or use military force, to combat
government-sponsored killing, genocide or oppression? In effect, what is the
Sharpton doctrine of foreign policy?
SHARPTON: The Sharpton doctrine of foreign policy would be to support
emerging democratic nations, and those nations that are underdeveloped, with
real trade and aid.
There are billions of people
around the world that need clean water systems, clean sanitation systems. We
don't need to only talk about a military presence. We need to talk about a
humanitarian presence, a development presence. And I think that that would aid
our country in developing the intelligence that would protect Americans.
What I've said is that we need
to come out of Iraq and submit to the United Nations and go forward in trying to
project to the world that we're their friends rather than their cop. And I think
that that would be the policy.
As I've traveled all over the
world, from the Caribbean to Africa to Europe to the Middle East, people need
our trade and aid. They know we're a superpower. The question is: Can we be a
super-help in the time of need? If we prove to be, we would have those people as
our allies as we go after bin Laden rather than try to go to Mars before we
settle the problem on Earth.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: That concludes round one.
Tom, you start round
two.
GRIFFITH: Senator Kerry, in a speech at Drake University, you said, in
your first 100 days you would move to increase our armed forces by as much as
40,000 troops. You said there was a dire need for two full divisions.
I'm the parent of two teenage
sons. We're patriots. People are wondering right now about voluntary versus
draft. And as president, how do you hope to lure and attract quality people into
the military? And as a follow-up, where do you stand on the issue of the
draft?
KERRY: We don't need a draft now and I wouldn't be in favor of it under the current
circumstances.
But, look, the first place you
start to attract people into the military is to have a president who can prove
to America that that president will be responsible about how that president
deploys the military.
All across this country there
are families right now, all of us have talked to them, who are suffering greatly
because the Guards and Reserves have been called up. They are
overextended.
The troops of the United States
of America are overextended. Their deployments are too long. The families are
hurting at home because they lose money from the private sector when they're
called up and they get paid less in the military and nobody makes it up to
them.
The fact is that if we're going
to maintain this level of commitment on a global basis, and for the moment we
have to because of what's happened, we need an additional two divisions. One's a
combat division and one is a support division. Now, that's the responsible thing
to do.
I've also said responsibly,
that's temporary, because I intend to be a president who goes back to the United
Nations, rejoins the community of nations, brings other boots on the ground to
help us in the world and reduces the overall need for deployment of American
forces in the globe.
forces in the globe.
KERRY: And I mean North Korea, Germany and the rest of the world, where we can
begin to set up a new architecture of participation of other countries.
GRIFFITH: Thank you.
Senator Lieberman, I hope
you'll allow me to take liberty with my overly stuffed e-mail box.
LIEBERMAN: Go right ahead.
GRIFFITH: OK.
LIEBERMAN: You have that right under the Constitution.
(LAUGHTER)
GRIFFITH: This one came to me and has repeated to come to me from
rockthevote.com.
We hear about health care
coverage issues involving older voters, particularly prescription drugs, but
young people also have serious challenges getting adequate health
coverage.
How would your plan improve
health insurance coverage for this new generation?
LIEBERMAN: Yes, a very important question. Let me say that there is a
scandalous fact -- really, a morally scandalous fact -- which is that 43 million
Americans don't have health insurance, 2 million more than when George Bush
became president.
I must say, as I go around New
Hampshire, I've learned a lot. People tell me that their number-one concern --
middle-class families who have health insurance, how are they going to pay for
it? And this goes for young, middle-aged and older.
I'm proposing to create a
national health insurance pool from which -- like the one that members of
Congress get our insurance from. And we would say this: If you don't have
insurance now, you'll be able to get it, probably free, if you're among the
low-income working poor. If you're a child, you will be covered by insurance at
birth. If you are fired from your work or lose your job, you will not lose your
health insurance.
MediKids is part of my program.
Every child born in America will become a member of MediKids, and it will cover
them from birth through 25. Why 25? Because young adults have a hard time
affording health insurance, and a lot of them think they're not going to get
sick, but they do, and we need to cover them.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: Congressman Kucinich, let me get very local with you for a
minute, if I can. We here in New Hampshire, of course, some of our school
districts are having trouble meeting the testing standards of No Child Left
Behind, which apparently you did vote for, you were in favor of, I believe. Is
that correct?
Our education commissioner
recently said that we can't really settle on what is a very narrow and strict
determination of the student's progress. What would you do, at this point, with
No Child Left Behind? Would you throw it out? And if you would, what would you
replace it with?
KUCINICH: The answer to your question is, yes, I would.
And what I would replace it
with is a new educational structure where the focus would be on helping to bring
forth the creativity of our children, in stressing arts and language, music; to
invite the participation of educational philosophers and psychologists and
administrators and teachers and parents and children; to take a new focus on our
education, to stop this incessant direction of trying to make our nation of
test-takers, of putting the pressure on teachers to teach to the test, and then
school districts depending on the results of those tests for their
funding.
No Child Left Behind has not
worked out the way that anyone thought it would. And what has happened is, it's
become an unfunded mandate. It has become a misdirection of the way education
ought to be in America.
I would have a universal
pre-kindergarten program where children can go to school beginning at age 3, a
fully funded elementary and secondary education act, and free college tuition
for all America's young people.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: John, you're next.
DISTASO: Governor Dean, last December you were quoted as saying that you would not
have hesitated to attack Iraq this year, quote, "had the United Nations
given us permission and asked us to be part of a multilateral
force."
Given President Bush's
reference to "no permission slips" the other night in the State of the
Union, do you now regret using that word?
DEAN: I would not have used the word "permission," nor is that what I
meant. You know, my words are not always precise, but my meaning is very, very
clear.
Iraq was not an imminent threat
to the United States. I disagreed with Senator Lieberman, Senator Edwards and
Senator Kerry.
We had successfully contained
Iraq for 12 years with no-fly zones. They had virtually no air force to speak
of. It turned out they did not have the weapons of mass destruction that people
thought they did, myself included. It turned out that much of what the president
told us was not so.
I believe that Saddam Hussein's
removal from power is good. But I also believe that the way to have done it was
to do it through the United Nations, which is why I opposed the president's war
in Iraq from the beginning.
Which just brings me to one
other point.
You know, I'm not a perfect
person. I think a lot of people have had a lot of fun at my expense over the
Iowa hooting and hollering, and that's justified. But one thing I can tell you
is that I'm not kidding about what I say.
The things that I do are things
I believe in. I think it's important that the president of the United States be
willing to stand up for what's right and not stand up for what's popular.
I did it with No Child Left
Behind. That was a mistake a year ago, not just now that everybody's suffering
with it. I did it in Iraq. And I did it when I stood up for civil unions for gay
and lesbian people my home state when it wasn't popular. And I'm willing to do
it again as president.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: General Clark, earlier this month you said that if elected, there will be no
more 9/11s in the United States. Then you scaled back, saying no one can
guarantee anything in life. Some might say that leaves a little bit of an air of
inconsistency in your positions. What exactly at this point are you guaranteeing
along those lines?
CLARK: What I'm saying is I believe President Bush must be held
accountable.
Before 9/11, he did not do
everything he could have done to keep this country safe. After 9/11, he took us
to a war we didn't have to fight and Osama bin Laden and Al Qaida is still going
strong. We were at terrorist condition orange.
As president of the United
States, my top priority will be to keep America safe. We're going to go after
the terrorist networks. We're going to go after Osama bin Laden. We are not
going to live in fear in this country. And we'll use all the resources of the
United States -- international law, diplomacy, allies, economics and military
force, if necessary -- to keep this country safe.
DISTASO: General, a top priority -- sure, that's everyone's top priority. That's a
far cry, some might say, from a guarantee. So...
CLARK: I never used the word "guarantee." I never said that,
John.
DISTASO: What did you say?
CLARK: What I said was that the president had been saying that
the attack at 9/11 could not have been prevented, and that further attacks were
inevitable.
I consider the statement that
the attack at 9/11 could not have been prevented as an excuse to cover the fact
that this administration didn't do everything they could have done.
CLARK: And I consider their statement that further attacks on the United
States are inevitable as an excuse to cover for the fact that they are today not
doing everything they could do to keep America safe. And that's wrong, that's
why I'm running and that's what I'll fix.
HUME: Peter, you're next.
JENNINGS: I'd like to continue in this vein a little, if I may.
Senator Edwards, many people, I
think, believe that the greatest security threat to the United States in the
21st century is the possible confrontation between the West and Islam.
Now, I know and take for
granted, having heard you before, that you respect Islam. But could you take a
minute to tell us what you know about the practice of Islam that would reassure
Muslims throughout the world who will be listening to you that President Edwards
understands their religion and how you might use that knowledge to avoid a
confrontation, which, as Tom alluded earlier, might indeed end up sending sons
and daughters from New Hampshire to war.
EDWARDS: Well, I have been in these parts of the world. I have been in Pakistan, met
with President Musharraf, been in Afghanistan, met with then interim chairman --
interim head of the government Karzai. I have met with other Islamic leaders
around the world, discussed with them the problems that their country and their
people face.
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I would never claim to be an
expert on Islam. I am not. But I do believe that Islam, as in a lot of other
faiths that we as a nation embrace and lift up, that I have shown respect for
faiths that are different than mine my entire life. I think I do understand the
tragedy of the day-to-day lives of people who live in Arab countries, who live
lives of hopelessness and despair.
I think
that contributes to the animosity that they feel toward the United
States.
And part of our ongoing vision
-- my ongoing vision for America includes getting at the root causes of that
animosity toward the United States, which means being able to communicate, not
just with the leadership, for example, in Saudi Arabia, but being able to
communicate directly with the people...
JENNINGS: Do you think, Senator...
EDWARDS: ... to express...
JENNINGS: Do you think that we suffer and will suffer at the policy
level because we do not know enough about the practice of Islam?
EDWARDS: I think we have a responsibility when we deal with the
leadership of these countries. Our relationships, Peter, have been at the
leadership level. And we see the results of that. We have ongoing relationship
with the Saudi royals, with President Musharraf, with Chairman Karzai. We have
relationships with the leaders of these Islamic countries.
The problem is, we have no
relationship with the people. And not only do we have no relationship with the
people, it's absolutely clear that they feel great animosity toward the United
States. We need to, first, be able to communicate directly with the
people.
Second, find opportunities. For
example, President Musharraf said to me when I met with him: They desperately
needed a public school system as an alternative to the religious schools, where
their kids are taught to hate Americans.
We need to take advantage of
the opportunities available to us and our allies, to reach out, not just to the
leaders of these countries for our own purposes, but also to develop a
relationship for the people themselves so that they understand what Americans
care about and that we actually care about the peace and prosperity of the
entire world.
JENNINGS: Reverend Sharpton, I'd like to ask you a question about
domestic policy, if you don't mind.
If during your term as
president, if you become the nominee, and you have the opportunity to nominate
someone to be chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, what kind of person would
you consider for the job? You can name someone in particular, if you have
someone in mind.
And maybe just take a minute or
so to give us a little bit about your views on monetary policy.
SHARPTON: Well, first of all, let me say this. I wanted to say to
Governor Dean, don't be hard on yourself about hooting and hollering. If I had
spent the money you did and got 18 percent, I'd still be in Iowa hooting and
hollering.
(LAUGHTER)
(APPLAUSE)
So, don't worry about it,
Howard.
(LAUGHTER)
DEAN: Thanks, Reverend.
SHARPTON: I think, first of all, we must have a person at the Monetary
Fund that is concerned about growth of all, not setting standards that would, in
my judgment, protect some and not elevate those that cannot, in my view, expand
and come to the levels of development and the levels of where we need to
be.
I think part of my problem with
how we're operating at this point is that the IMF and the policies that are
emanating there do not lead to the expansion that is necessary for our country
and our global village to rise to levels that underdeveloped countries and those
businesses in this country can have the development policies necessary.
JENNINGS: Forgive me, Reverend Sharpton, but the question was actually
about the Federal Reserve Board.
SHARPTON: I thought you said IMF, I'm sorry.
JENNINGS: No, I'm sorry, sir. And what you'd be looking for in a
chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.
SHARPTON: Oh, in the Federal Reserve Board, I would be looking for
someone that would set standards in this country, in terms of our banking, our
-- in how government regulates the Federal Reserve as we see it under Greenspan,
that we would not be protecting the big businesses; we would not be protecting
banking interests in a way that would not, in my judgment, lead toward mass
employment, mass development and mass production.
I think that -- would I replace
Greenspan, probably. Do I have a name? No.
HUME: Thank you, Reverend Sharpton. Thanks very much.
We've got to take a brief break
here, but we will be back with more questions for the seven Democratic
candidates. Stay tuned.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
HUME: And welcome back to St. Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire, where
the seven Democratic candidates are debating for the last time before the New
Hampshire primary.
We're on our third round of
questions, and we begin with John DiStaso.
John?
DISTASO: Senator Kerry, if you were in the Oval Office, how would you feel and how
would you view a returning war veteran who tossed his medals away?
KERRY: It would depend on why he did it.
DISTASO: In protest.
KERRY: If I were Richard -- well, given what we now know about Richard Nixon and
what he did think about it, he was deeply disturbed by the veterans' movement
that was a movement of conscience.
And I could not be more proud
of the fact that when I came back from that war, having learned what I learned,
that I led thousands of veterans to Washington, we camped on the Mall underneath
the Congress, underneath Richard Nixon's visibility. He tried to take us to the
Supreme Court of the United States. He did. He tried to kick us off. And we
stood our ground and said to him, "Mr. President, you sent us 8,000 miles
away to fight, die and sleep in the jungles of Vietnam. We've earned the right
to sleep on this Mall and talk to our senators and congressmen."
(APPLAUSE)
I can pledge this to the
American people: I will never conduct a war or start a war because we want to;
the United States of America should only go to war because we have to. And if
you live by that guidance, you'll never have veterans throwing away their medals
or standing up in protest.
And while we're at it, this
president is breaking faith with veterans all across the country. They've cut
the VA budget by $1.8 billion. There are 40,000 veterans waiting months to see a
doctor for the first time. Whole categories have been eliminated from
application to the VA.
And I'm not going to listen to
Tom DeLay or the president or anybody else lecture the Democratic Party about
patriotism when the first act of patriotism is keeping faith with people who
wore the uniform of our country.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: Senator Lieberman, back to what Senator Edwards said earlier about the blank
check and the $87 billion. You voted for it. Is this a blank check? At what
point will you say no in the future?
LIEBERMAN: John, it is not a blank check. And I'll say with the
withdrawal from this race of our good friend, the great American, Dick Gephardt,
I am the only person on this stage who has unwaveringly supported the removal of
Saddam Hussein and our troops who are there carrying out that mission, which,
yes, has made us a lot safer than we would be with Saddam in power instead of in
prison.
(APPLAUSE)
I want to tell you a story,
John. In Nashua, a few weeks ago, I met a gentleman in a hotel, came over to me,
I think he worked there, big burly guy with a crewcut. And he said,
"Senator Lieberman, I'm going to vote for you for president, and I want you
to know why. I have a son. He is a Marine. He is going to be deployed to Iraq in
a month. I trust my son's life with you as commander in chief."
Well, that stopped me in my
tracks. I was honored by it. Told me the awesome responsibility that I have as
commander in chief. I am ready for that responsibility.
But I think he understood that
I would never send America's sons and daughters into war unless it was the last
resort. And once there, as I did in this case, I would support them 100 percent
until they came home safely and in peace.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: Senator, at some point I would presume there will be another request for
another appropriation. What then?
LIEBERMAN: Well, we'll examine the request to make sure that it is
necessary. We'll certainly try to cut out any gifts to Halliburton again under
the money. Right?
(APPLAUSE)
But when it comes -- when it
comes to supporting our troops in battle, I will never say no. Period. They are
our best and brightest. They are our heroes. Generations have fought to protect
the freedom that we all are enjoying and exercising in this campaign for the
presidency. We owe them our lives and our liberties, and they deserve our
unwavering support. That's the kind of commander in chief I will be.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: Congressman Kucinich, at what point in your administration will there be a
closure on the deficit, given what appears to be an extraordinary spending
program that you have in mind?
KUCINICH: Well, first of all, we have to acknowledge that this
administration has created the deficit with tax cuts to the rich; with a war
that was unnecessary, that will soon be $200 billion and could run over a half a
trillion dollars; with an expanded Pentagon budget. They're driving a deficit,
and they're driving a trade deficit.
Let me tell you one thing I
intend to do. I intend to create a universal, single-payer, not-for-profit
health care system. By the way, we're already paying for that; we're just not
getting it.
I intend to create a universal
pre-kindergarten program, not for profit, that would be run by the public
schools, that would be funded by a 15 percent reduction in the Pentagon.
I intend to create universal
college education, funded by putting the tax cuts, that Bush has given, back to
college students so they could go to college tuition-free.
We need to take the trajectory
of the deficit down slowly, but the one thing I won't do is cut domestic
programs.
DISTASO: Do you have a target date?
KUCINICH: The target date is going to be judged by how much of a rut
the president gets us into. I mean, the fact of the matter is, that we have to
get out of Iraq, and we have to stop this massive Pentagon expansion. And the
president, at the State of the Union address, just said he wants to lock in the
tax cut.
He's going in the wrong way.
And I dare say, that what the strategy of his administration is, is just to wipe
out government's purpose for any social and economic justice at all. And I'm
going to take the country in an opposite direction than he's taking it.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: Peter, you're next.
JENNINGS: I get General Clark and Senator Edwards this time.
General Clark, a lot of people
say they don't you well, so this is really a simple question about knowing a man
by his friends. The other day you had a rally here, and one of the men who stood
up to endorse you is the controversial filmmaker Michael Moore. You said you
were delighted with him.
At one point, Mr. Moore said,
in front of you, that President Bush -- he's saying he'd like to see you, the
general, and President Bush, who he called a "deserter."
Now, that's a reckless charge
not supported by the facts. And I was curious to know why you didn't contradict
him, and whether or not you think it would've been a better example of ethical
behavior to have done so.
CLARK: Well, I think Michael Moore has the right to say whatever he feels
about this.
I don't know whether this is
supported by the facts or not. I've never looked at it. I've seen this charge
bandied about a lot.
But to me it wasn't material.
This election is going to be about the future, Peter. And what we have to do is
pull this country together. And I am delighted to have the support of a man like
Michael Moore, of a great American leader like Senator George McGovern, and of
people from Texas like Charlie Stenholm and former Secretary of the Navy John
Dalton.
We've got support from across
the breadth of the Democratic Party, because I believe this party is united in
wanting to change the leadership in Washington. We're going to run an election
campaign that's about the future. We're going to hold the president accountable
for what he did in office and failed to do, and we're going to compare who's got
the best vision for America.
JENNINGS: Let me ask you something you mentioned, then, because since
this question and answer in which you and Mr. Moore was involved in, you've had
a chance to look at the facts.
Do you still feel comfortable
with the fact that someone should be standing up in your presence and calling
the president of the United States a deserter?
CLARK: To be honest with you, I did not look at the facts, Peter. You know,
that's Michael Moore's opinion. He's entitled to say that. I've seen -- he's not
the only person who's said that. I've not followed up on those facts. And
frankly, it's not relevant to me and why I'm in this campaign.
JENNINGS: OK, thank you, sir.
Senator Edwards, President
Bush, as you know, is worried. He said it again in the State of the Union
address the other night that the Defense of Marriage Act is not strong enough,
as he says, to protect the institution of marriage.
You were not in the Senate in
1996 when it passed overwhelmingly. Senator Kerry was one of only 14 senators
who voted against it. I'd like to know from you whether or not you think he was
right or wrong, and why?
EDWARDS: I think he was right. I think he was right because what happened with the
Defense of Marriage Act is it took away the power of states, like Vermont, to be
able to do what they chose to do about civil unions, about these kinds of
marriage issues.
These are issues that should be
left -- Massachusetts, for example, has just made a decision, the supreme court
at least has made a decision, that embraces the notion of gay marriage.
I think these are decisions
that the states should have the power to make. And the Defense of Marriage Act,
as I understand it -- you're right, I wasn't there when it was passed -- but as
I understand it, it would have taken away that power. And I think that's wrong.
That power should not be taken away from the states.
JENNINGS: Do you believe that other states, for example, should be
obliged to honor and recognize the civil union which Governor Dean signed?
Should other states be obliged to recognize what happens in another
state?
EDWARDS: I think it's a decision that should be made on a state- by-state basis. I
think each state should be able to make its own decision about what they
embrace.
Now, if I can take just a
minute -- since you've asked me a lot of process questions, can I talk about
what I believe...
JENNINGS: Let's talk to our moderator.
EDWARDS: ... for just a moment, if you don't mind?
Here's what I believe: I
believe it is the responsibility of the president of the United States to move
this country forward on this important issue.
And there is so much work to be
done to treat gays and lesbians and gay and lesbian couples with the respect
that they're entitled to. They deserve, in my judgment, partnership benefits.
They deserve to be treater fairly when it comes to adoption and
immigration.
We should examine -- whoever
the president of the United States is; I believe it will be me -- should examine
with our military leadership the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy that
resulted in a number of linguists who we desperately needed being dismissed from
the military.
HUME: Senator?
EDWARDS: There are clearly steps that should be taken by the president, in some cases
in conjunction with the Congress...
(CROSSTALK)
HUME: I just want to follow up with on the Defense of Marriage Act, which of
course is the law of the land.
EDWARDS: Yes.
HUME: Does not the Defense of Marriage Act specifically say that the court rulings
in one state, which might, for example, recognize a gay marriage, may not be
imposed on anther state? In other words, doesn't the Defense of Marriage go to
the very position which you yourself take?
EDWARDS: No, the Defense of Marriage -- first of all, I wasn't in the Congress, I
don't claim to be an expert on this. But as I understand the Defense of Marriage
Act, it would take away the power of some states to choose whether they would
recognize or not recognize gay marriages. That's my understanding of it.
HUME: John, you're next.
Tom, I'm sorry. Forgive me,
you're next.
GRIFFITH: It's an opportune time to -- I've got Governor Dean and
Reverend Sharpton.
And, Governor Dean, I'm going
to let you step in on this discussion here, if you'd like to.
But my real question for you
is, and maybe you can hit this first: We took a recent survey indicated, of
everything out there, New Hampshire voters most cite health care as the most
important factor that they're looking at when they look at the seven of you and
decide who they are going to vote for.
I'll give you an opportunity to
talk just a minute about what your plan is and how it's different from everyone
else's. Or if you'd like to step in on this Defense of Marriage Act first,
you're...
DEAN: It's a complicated, complicated issue. We chose not to do gay marriage. We
chose to do civil unions. I think that position, actually, is very similar to
Dick Cheney's, who thinks every state ought to be able to do what they
want.
Let me talk about health
care.
The advantage I have in health
care, besides being a doctor, is that I've actually done what a lot of the folks
are talking about. We have health insurance for everybody under 18, 99 percent;
everybody under 150 percent of poverty. All our working poor people have health
insurance.
A third of our seniors and
disabled people have prescription benefits. We didn't wait until George Bush got
his bill passed, which gave $200 billion of our money to the drug companies and
the insurance companies.
Now, what I want to do for this
country is just expand what we did in Vermont. We can do that and balance
budgets at the same time, but we can't do that and balance budgets at the same
and promise everybody a middle-class tax cut and fund special education.
We can't play the game
President Bush is. In the State of the Union, the president promised another $1
trillion tax cut. Where does he think he's going to get the money on top of the
$500 billion deficit?
We can do these things, but we
can't do them without repealing every dime of the Bush tax cuts. Then we can put
in health insurance. Then we can fund special education. Then we can fund No
Child Left Behind.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: Thank you.
Reverend Sharpton, two weeks
ago in Iowa, in the Black-Brown Debate, you questioned Governor Dean's lack of a
black Cabinet member as governor of Vermont. Here in New Hampshire, we do not
have a large amount of minorities either.
What would you do to -- beyond
affirmative action, what would you do to get more minorities in leadership
positions within government?
SHARPTON: Well, let me say something about the Defense of Marriage Act.
I am unilaterally opposed to any civil or human right being left to states'
rights. That is a dangerous precedent.
(APPLAUSE)
I think the federal government
has the obligation to protect all citizens on a federal level.
And if we start going back to
states' rights, we're going back to pre-Civil War days, and I think that that,
in its nature, is wrong.
(APPLAUSE)
In terms of my concern about
minorities being placed in high positions, it must be a goal of inclusiveness.
And I think the reason I questioned Governor Dean is he said that that's what he
wanted to represent. I think that we must strive toward making sure --
government must make sure it is inclusive of everyone and it reflects a nation
that is inclusive of everyone, even when there are small populations.
Because diversity is good for
everyone, and people need to know that they can work at all levels of government
and the private sector and not be limited because of race, because of sex or
because of orientation.
That ought to be a goal. You
ought to seek it. You ought not act like it's going to just happen automatically
or naturally.
HUME: Got a new round coming.
Peter, you start.
JENNINGS: OK.
Actually, I think John starts,
right?
HUME: This is round four. Peter, you're up.
JENNINGS: Either way. I apologize.
I then come, I think, to
Governor Dean and to Senator Kerry and to Senator Lieberman again.
At the beginning, I asked some
of you how you would defend yourselves against a Republican attack on taxes. The
Democrats are the party of higher taxes.
They're also going to come at
you in a big way on so-called "social values," not on economic values,
but on social values. The president made these issues, as you well know, a big
part of his State of the Union address the other night.
Governor Dean, let me ask you
this: Republicans already characterize you as not sharing mainstream values. And
some Democrats are, I'm sure you know, worried about this.
Show Democrats tonight how you
would push back.
DEAN: Well, let's talk first about money.
The president of the United
States can't balance a budget. We've not had one Republican president in 34
years balance the budget. You can't trust right-wing Republicans with your
money. You ought to hire somebody who has balanced a budget. I'm much more
conservative with money than George Bush is.
(APPLAUSE)
Secondly, let's look at issues
like guns. Now, that gets me in trouble among my own party. But I come from a
very rural state. I probably don't have as a pro-gun control position as some
other folks in the Democratic Party.
I believe we ought to have the
assault weapons ban renewed. I believe we ought to have background checks, both
for purchasing guns and also at gun shows. But after that, I think states ought
to make their own laws, because what you need in New York City or what you may
want in California is not the same thing that you may want in Montana.
Finally, I'd challenge this
president on values any day. When a president of the United States uses the word
"quota," which is a race- coded word designed to appeal to people's
fears they're going to lose their job to a member of a minority community, that
president has played the race card, and that president deserves a one-way bus
ticket back to Crawford, Texas.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Thank you, sir.
Senator Kerry, you're also from
New England, from the state where the president believes that activist judges
are threatening the basic sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman.
The Republicans will certainly
remind people or make them know that you were lieutenant governor to Michael
Dukakis. The Republican National Committee chairman, I believe, will make a
speech tomorrow in which he will say that you are more liberal than Teddy
Kennedy.
Show Democrats how you push
back.
KERRY: I look forward to that fight, and I particularly want to have that debate
with this president.
I am a veteran. I fought in a
war. I've been a prosecutor. I've sent people to jail for the rest of their
life. I have, as a lieutenant governor, helped to fight to create a national
plan on acid rain to protect our rivers and lakes and streams for the
future.
As a senator, I've stood up for
years and fought for fairness. I've also voted for welfare reform. I am a gun
owner and a hunter since I was a young man. I think that my education reform --
the other significant efforts to try to make the workplace fair in America are
as vital to people in the South and the Southwest and the West and the Midwest
of this country as anywhere else.
I look forward to standing up
and holding George Bush accountable for pushing seniors off of Medicare into
HMOs, for prohibiting Medicare from even negotiating a bulk purchase price, from
turning an energy bill into a bonanza for his friends in the oil industry to the
tune of $50 billion.
The workplace of America,
Peter, has never been as unfair for the average American as it is today. And
there are more ways to describe that than I have in 60 seconds. But over the
course of the next months, Americans will come to understand there's a way to
make America fundamentally fair and live up to our promise to all of our
citizens.
Page 3 of 5
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JENNINGS: Thank you, sir.
(APPLAUSE)
Senator Lieberman, as you've
heard, the question was about social values, and you have expressed your concern
in the past that your party is, in fact, too liberal to win the votes at the
center in a general election. So I ask you for some assistance here.
Do you think that these two men
have given answers on social values which will -- or which would successfully
inoculate the party against such charges?
LIEBERMAN: Peter, I've spent too much time the last several weeks here
in New Hampshire saying the choice is up to the voters. I'm going to let the
voters cast that judgment on Howard Dean and John Kerry.
I will say for myself what I
have said from the beginning: that for most Americans, including myself and I
would guess all of us here on the stage, life is about trying to do the right
thing. And often, for most Americans, our faith, our religions, the values that
we get, the sense of right and wrong that we get from our faith are what helps
us decide what to do in public life and in private life.
So long as Democrats are
hesitant to talk the language of values and show respect for people of faith, we
close ourselves off from a great majority of the American people.
So I'm pleased that we in this
campaign have started to talk about values. Let's not let George Bush and the
Republicans claim they have some kind of monopoly on values or faith-based
values. They don't.
When they desecrate the
environment, as this administration has, that is desecrating the Earth that God
has created. When they give away our national treasury to people who don't need
it in tax cuts because they're so wealthy, they don't have the money to help our
children who are poor, our elderly with drug benefits. Those are bad values and
we ought to speak to that.
JENNINGS: I want to try just one more time, Senator, forgive me. You've
have said the party is hesitant. Do you believe that Governor Dean and Senator
Kerry have been hesitant, or would be hesitant, to take on George Bush
successfully on the question of social values?
LIEBERMAN: Peter, let me put it this way: This is a time to be
affirmative. I'd say, "Nice try."
But this is a time...
(LAUGHTER)
(APPLAUSE)
This is a time -- we're making
our closing arguments to the people of New Hampshire who will have the say next
Tuesday.
I'm going to talk about myself.
I'm going to stand up and fight for values. I said earlier one of the reasons
the Republicans don't want to run against me is because they can't say I'm soft
on values. They can't say I don't respect people of faith. They can't say I
don't want to support faith-based organizations when they help make this a
better, more decent country.
JENNING: Thank you, sir.
LIEBERMAN: Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: Tom, you're next.
GRIFFITH: General Clark, Patriot Act, come under an awful lot of
criticism, as you well know. Many say it erodes our personal liberties, while,
of course, it's clear that we all want a secure country. How would your
administration revisit the Patriot Act and strike a balance between national
security and personal liberties?
CLARK: Well, I'm very concerned about
the Patriot Act. It was passed in haste. It's very long. It's got dozens and
dozens and dozens of changes.
What we would do is suspend all
the portions of the Patriot Act that have to do with search and seizure:
sneak-and-peek searches; library records; and so on.
If they want to do a wiretap,
they can do it the old-fashioned way, go to a judge with probable cause.
And then, bring the whole act
back into the Congress. Lay it out. Ask former Attorney General John Ashcroft to
come and testify on his use and abuse of the Patriot Act.
(LAUGHTER)
Just lay it out. What
provisions were used, for what, for what good? Why couldn't it have been done
another way?
And then we're going to put
together the right kind of authorities for law enforcement to keep us
safe.
But, Tom, we cannot win the war
on terror by giving up the very freedoms we're fighting to protect.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH Congressman Kucinich, I have a question from Sheryl Zettner
(ph). She's in New Hampshire. This is what she says.
She says, "Why did you cut
a deal to send voters to the Edwards camp if you didn't meet the 15 percent
threshold in Iowa?" She's angry. She says, "Edwards supported the war
and the Patriot Act."
KUCINICH: Well...
GRIFFITH: Before you continue...
KUCINICH: OK.
GRIFFITH: ... is your party divided over the war?
KUCINICH: Of course it is. Of course it is. I mean, I took the position
of organizing 126 Democrats who voted against the Iraq war resolution, and I
happen to think it was the right position.
Today we're faced with over 500
casualties, a cost of over $200 billion. And it could rise -- the casualties
could go into thousands and the cost could go over half a trillion -- if we stay
there for years, as a number of people on this stage intend to see
happen.
Well, let me tell you
something. There is a difference of opinion in our party, and I stand strong and
proud in saying that it's time that we get the U.N. peacekeepers in and bring
our troops home. And I've offered a plan to do that, I mentioned earlier.
Now, with respect to what
happened in Iowa, let me state this: that if I was looking for someone to pair
up with under the Iowa caucus system based on who I agreed with, I wouldn't have
had anyone to agree with...
(LAUGHTER)
... because the fact of the
matter is, I've had a really great difference of opinion, having been the only
one on this stage who voted against the war and the Patriot Act.
But John Edwards and I are
friends. And one thing we agreed on in Iowa is that we both wanted more
delegates. That's what we agreed on.
(LAUGHTER)
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: I have no follow-up, to be honest. Thank you.
HUME: John, you're next.
DISTASO: Senator Edwards, checking the Internet, the pro-gun ownership group, such as
the North Carolina Rifle and Pistol Association, don't have glowy words about
you. That might be a popular position here in a Democratic primary, but you also
want to carry the South if you were to get into a general election.
So, could you specify for us,
please, exactly what additional federal gun control measures you will propose as
president?
EDWARDS: What I believe is that -- and by the way, I would point out to you at the
outset of this question: Remember, I didn't get to the Senate by accident. I
actually defeated an incumbent Republican senator who was part of the Jesse
Helm's political machine in North Carolina, the result of which is I'm now the
senior senator from North Carolina instead of Jesse Helms, which is a very good
thing for this country. And that didn't happen by accident.
(APPLAUSE)
I grew up in the rural South. I
know deep inside what people care about. From the time I was growing up,
everyone around me hunted, everyone had guns. I respect and believe in people's
Second Amendment rights.
That does not, however, mean
that somebody needs an AK-47 to hunt. It does not mean that somebody who's been
convicted of a violent crime should be able to walk out of prison, walk across
the street and buy a gun. It does not mean that we shouldn't take every step
that we can take to keep guns safe and keep guns out of the hands of
kids.
So, my belief is, first, I
defend people's Second Amendment rights, but I don't think it's without
limit.
EDWARDS: I think there are limits on those rights, and particularly when the concerns
and rights and interests of the American people are at stake.
DISTASO: Well, I'd ask you to keep going and tell us what federal gun control
measures you would propose, in addition to what's on the...
EDWARDS: You mean in addition to what we have?
DISTASO: Yes, if any.
EDWARDS: I think we should extend the Brady Bill. I think the Brady Bill is, around
now, set to expire. I think it should be extended.
I think that we need to close
forever the gun-show loophole so that we don't have problems that I just
described, of people who've been convicted of violent crimes walking out of
prison, being able to walk across the street and buy a gun.
I think it does make sense to
have trigger locks for the purpose of keeping guns safe so that we don't have
6-year-old children accidentally killing other 6-year-old children.
So I think there are reasonable
things we can do. But I start from the place that we have to begin -- we have to
protect people's Second Amendment rights. I have lived with this my entire life.
And as I said earlier, I believe I understand what people are concerned
about.
DISTASO: Reverend Sharpton, we haven't seen too much of you here in New Hampshire.
The state only has about 9,000 African-Americans in a population of 1.2
million.
I know you've said your
constituencies go far beyond African- Americans. Why, then, haven't you
campaigned more in New Hampshire, a state where Reverend Jackson did very well
in the 1980s?
SHARPTON: Well, first of all, let me say something, I want to address a
question Peter asked.
I don't agree that we need to
start backing away, become more Republican to beat the Republicans. I think the
problem is we need to start going forward and stop letting them establish the
premise of the debate. That's what's wrong with the party.
Second of all...
(APPLAUSE)
... I'm very happy to hear my
friend and brother, Congressman Kucinich, helps people that won
delegates.
I won delegates in South
Carolina, Missouri and Delaware.
(LAUGHTER)
And I want you to give me the
same courtesy you gave John in Iowa.
(LAUGHTER)
In terms of campaigning here,
everyone campaigned based on their strategy and ability. I've come here several
times. Reverend Jackson did do well here in the '80s, but he never made double
digits here. So let's not overestimate what he did. Never got, I think, over 8
percent.
I think, though, that I wanted
to come. I came. I will continue to come even afterward, because I think it's
important you campaign everywhere. I wish everyone had campaigned in Washington
D.C., where I did...
(APPLAUSE)
... because I think it's
important we be inclusive of everyone even if we feel we're not going to get the
kind of vote we would want.
HUME: Reverend Sharpton, thanks very much.
We've got to take another brief
break here. And when we come back, Peter Jennings will assume the role of
moderator. I'll join the questioners.
I might note that extended
portions of this program, this debate, will be seen later tonight on the ABC
News program "Nightline."
Stay with us. We'll be right
back.
(APPLAUSE)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
JENNINGS: Welcome back to the last debate before the New Hampshire
primary.
Gentlemen, the timekeeper has
asked me to suggest that you listen even more attentively to the bell than you
have on occasion, although I think we generally agree you have been pretty
good.
Tom Griffith?
GRIFFITH: Senator Kerry, I want to begin with you, something very local
to the New England region, the use of MTBE in gasoline here in the Northeast, as
you know.
It's been very controversial
because of its link to water pollution. Here in New Hampshire, our governor,
Jeanne Shaheen, petitioned the EPA to let us out of that requirement some years
ago, and still no answer from the feds on it.
If decisions aren't made soon,
they're going to have to add ethanol, I guess, which is a very costly thing that
could create gas price increases and generally hurt our New England
economy.
What do you propose in the
balancing act between the environment and the economy, as it pertains to
MTBE?
KERRY: It needs to be banned, taken out. And the companies that have put it in need
to be held responsible for it.
I visited with Lisa and Randy
Denuccio. They live in Salem. They live right beside a lake in Salem. Their kids
no longer use the water there to make lemonade. Their kids no longer shower
using that water. They're scared of it. It's polluted with MTBE, as are one-
sixth of the lakes of New Hampshire.
Now, Tom DeLay and his friends
in Congress have been busy protecting those companies from their responsibility,
trying to give them liability immunity for what they've done.
This is the worst environmental
administration that I've ever seen in all my time in public life. They're going
backward on clean air, backward on clean water, backward on forest
policy.
And we deserve a president of
the United States who is going to stand up to those powerful interests, as I
have. I led the fight to stop Gingrich from destroying the Clean Air and Clean
Water Act. I led the fight to stop them drilling in the Arctic Wildlife
Refuge.
KERRY: And as president, I will balance between jobs and the economy, but I'm not
going to give people a phony choice that says, "It's either the jobs or the
economy." Cleaning up the environment is jobs. And we're going to create
500,000 of them for Americans in the first years.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: OK, thank you.
Senator Lieberman, on the issue
of -- we're right now looking to go out to Canadian drug sources in order to
lower our state costs. You've (ph) announced plans to import prescription drugs,
to look at it closely, in order to save the state money.
Is this something -- on this
topic, would you encourage state governors to do this? Or would you seek some
other methodology to try to keep drug prices down? Should we be going to Canada
for...
LIEBERMAN: Yes, unfortunately, we should.
And I view this is as a kind of
Boston Tea Party of the 21st century. I never attack the drug companies for what
they produce. The pharmaceuticals that they produce keep us alive and
well.
But the pricing is unfair. And
it is particularly unfair that Canada slaps price controls on, other developed
rich nations in Europe do the same, and Uncle Sam and our citizens have to pay
the full cost of research, marketing, administration of the drug
companies.
There's only way that this is
going to begin to turn around, and it is if we begin to allow the legal
importation of drugs from Canada. That's the way we can speak with our money to
the drug companies to treat us more fairly.
I'd say one other thing. In the
so-called drug benefit bill, Medicare, which I voted against, there was actually
a restrictive clause put in by the special interests to stop this from
happening; and even more outrageous, a prohibition on Medicare negotiating the
lowest possible prices with drug companies for prescription drugs for the
elderly.
JENNINGS: In the meantime, Senator...
LIEBERMAN: Now, give me a break, how can you justify that?
JENNINGS: In the meantime, Senator -- forgive me for interrupting -- in
the meantime, the government moved today against another Canadian drug company.
Are you not encouraging, as sympathetic as one is to seniors, are you not
encouraging governors and communities to break the law?
LIEBERMAN: I think we have to make it legal. That's what I'm
saying.
I would -- and I voted for this
in the Senate. I would allow the safe importation of drugs, which means to have
some basic standards to make sure -- but when you're bringing in a prescription
drug with a brand name that effectively is the same drug as people are paying so
much money for here in the United States, that's going to send a message to the
drug companies: Treat American consumers fairly.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Tom?
GRIFFITH: I'm back over to Congressman Kucinich.
And I hope that you'll allow me
to dig deep again into my e-mail bag for your next question.
KUCINICH: It's great to communicate with the mass public. That's what
this election's about.
GRIFFITH: Roger Stevenson of Stratham wrote me with great concern that
there hasn't been enough discussion on the environment.
What is the most important
environmental issue facing the nation?
And you only have one
minute.
KUCINICH: Thank you.
(LAUGHTER)
As president of the United
States I would lead this country on a new energy initiative. In the same way
that President John F. Kennedy decided to bring the academic and spiritual
resource of this country to have the United States reach the moon someday, I
intend to have a very infinitely interesting journey to planet Earth.
And that journey will be about
sustainable and renewable energy.
By the year 2010, I'll call
upon Americans to assist in creating a program, not only of conservation, but of
moving to renewable energy, away from oil, nuclear and coal, and towards wind
and solar and geothermal, green hydrogen and biomass.
We're talking about saving our
planet here. We have to understand even here in New Hampshire how trees are
affected and the, you know, maple syrup is affected as a product here. We have
to recognize that the economy of this region has been hurt by environmental
policies which dirty the air and the water. I'm going to change that.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Congressman.
(APPLAUSE)
John DiStaso, you have Governor
Dean and General Clark.
DISTASO: Yes.
Governor, I know this is a very
happy debate, as Senator Lieberman said, but there are some things that have
been said. Last week, for instance, you said the three senators' decision to
support the 2002 Iraq resolution, quote, "calls into question their
judgment and ability to sort out complicated issues regarding the most crucial
decision any president has to make," in a conference call with New
Hampshire reporters.
That's a harsh indictment. And
I'm wondering today do you still feel that way.
DEAN: I do. We were presented with a series of facts. I came to a different
conclusion than the senators did on those facts. My conclusion was that there
was no Al Qaida in Iraq, as the president intimated. My conclusion was that Iraq
was not about to acquire nuclear weapons, as the president intimated, and as the
British intelligence reports reported the opposite of. My conclusion was that
we'd successfully contained Saddam Hussein.
People have questioned my
foreign policy experience, and the retort that I make is, that with patience and
judgment, I was able to sort out, in fact, the idea that the president was not
being candid with the American people when he asked that the resolution be
improved.
I would not have supported that
resolution. I said so in Keene on September 20, 2002. So we do have a difference
of opinion.
We have a difference of opinion
on No Child Left Behind. I would not have supported that, and said so early on.
There are differences between us.
I've said -- just to get back
to Joe's more cheerful appraisal -- I have said that whoever wins up here, I
will vigorously support, and I absolutely intend to do so. But that does not
mean there are not substantive differences between the candidates here.
DISTASO: Don't you think that disagreeing and calling into question one's judgment
and ability to sort out complicated issues are a little bit different
scale?
DEAN: Someone earlier made a remark about losing 500 soldiers and 2,200 wounded.
Those soldiers were sent there by the vote of Senator Lieberman and Senator
Kerry and Senator Edwards. That is a fact. And I think that's a very serious
matter. And it is a matter upon which we differ.
DISTASO: I saw Senator Lieberman's hand up.
LIEBERMAN: Might I have the opportunity to rebut?
JENNINGS: Very briefly, Senator.
LIEBERMAN: Yes. Well, very briefly, we made the right decision.
I didn't need George Bush to
convince me that Saddam Hussein was a threat to the United States of America.
John McCain and I wrote the law that made it national policy to change the
regime in Baghdad.
(APPLAUSE)
This man was a homicidal
maniac, killed hundreds of thousands of people, did have weapons of mass
destruction in the '90s, used them against the Kurdish Iraqis and the Iranians,
admitted to the United Nations he had enough chemical and biological to kill
millions of people, supported terrorism, tried to assassinate former President
Bush.
I repeat: We are safer with
Saddam Hussein in prison than in power.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: John?
DISTASO: General Clark, you've already discussed your concerns about the Patriot Act
and support for civil liberties and privacy rights. But as a lobbyist for Acxiom
Corp, you helped secure a federal contract for the system known as CAPPS II, a
passenger- screening program which has been criticized by the ACLU for violating
people's rights to privacy.
How does CAPPS II, which I know
many air-traveler advocacy groups are concerned about, not do that, not step
over the line? Or does it, now that it's about to be in place?
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CLARK: Well, I don't know about CAPPS II because I have not seen the program,
and I don't think many of the people who are worried about it have.
Here's what I believe. I
believe that we need to use all of the tools and tradecraft at our disposal to
help keep this country safe. And we need to do so in a way that doesn't violate
people's privacy.
And when I was consulting with
Acxiom -- and I was on the board of the company, and I did take them around and
introduce them to various members of the United States government, the Defense
Department and so forth, because their technology will improve our
security.
But I was insistence that we do
so with a firm grip on the privacy issues. Had I still been on that board when
all this was going through, I would have insisted that ACLU and others be
brought in to pre-approve CAPPS II. Whether that was done or not, I have no
idea.
But there's nothing intrinsic
in the system that we're using that can't be made fully compatible with all of
the privacy concerns.
JENNINGS: Thank you, sir.
Brit?
HUME: Senator Edwards, the Iowa results suggests that a great many people have
taken a look at you and seen a new face and amiable personality, a couple of
adorable kids, and viewed you with considerable approval.
I wonder, though, if some
people don't also look at you and say, "Well, he's served part of one term
in the U.S. Senate; he's not going to come back for another if he doesn't get
the presidency," and wondered if, while you may be very promising and
attractive in their ideas, it may be a little early for the White House for
you?
EDWARDS: Well, actually, Brit, I think 32 percent of Iowans
decided it was not too early...
(LAUGHTER)
... that they wanted me to be
their president.
(APPLAUSE)
And I think the reason for that
is people are hungry for change. They're hungry for change in America. They're
hungry for change in Washington, D.C. And the truth is, the truth is, that I'm
somebody who's been in Washington long enough to see what's wrong with it and
how it needs to be changed.
You asked a few minutes to Joe
Lieberman -- or Joe was asked a few minutes ago about the prescription drug bill
and what should be done. Here's a perfect example of what goes on in Washington
every day: The lobbyists and these powerful lobbies for the drug company,
they're taking the democracy away from the American people. Their lobbyists, who
make huge campaign contributions, they're lobbying the Congress every day.
There's a revolving door between the government and lobbyists.
We need to do a whole group of
things to restore the power in this democracy to the American people so that
these insiders are not continuing to run this government.
And what I would do is ban
their contributions. I would shine a bright light on their activities so we, in
fact, know what they're doing.
And third, I would make them
tell us everything they're doing: Who they're lobbying for; who they're
lobbying; the money they're spending; who they're trying to influence.
Those are the things that we
need to do to bring real change to this country.
JENNINGS: Is there anything intrinsically wrong, sir, with being a
lobbyist?
EDWARDS: I can't hear you.
JENNINGS: Is there anything intrinsically wrong with being a
lobbyist?
EDWARDS: No. There's something wrong with the impact that Washington lobbyists are
having on our system of government.
JENNINGS: Time.
EDWARDS: Because -- since you asked me, may I say one other word about that?
Because if you watch what
happens there every single day, they are influencing legislation. The power of
the American people to have their representatives decide only in the interests
of the American people has been taken away. And it happens over and over and
over.
Which is why I have laid out a
very clear set of proposals: banning contributions from Washington lobbyists.
I've never taken any money from Washington lobbyists, but no one should be able
to take money from them...
JENNINGS: Thank you, Senator.
EDWARDS: ... and, second, making sure we know what they're doing.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Senator.
Sorry, Brit.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: Reverend Sharpton, there are signs now that the Earth may be crumbling under
the feet of the regime in Iran. There is real dissent in that country. There is
a protest now against the fact that a number of candidates have been told they
cannot run for election there.
As president, how would you
deal with the situation in Iran?
SHARPTON: I think that one of the problems that we see in Iran, in
terms of the movement toward open elections, toward a clear repression there, is
something that we must be concerned about.
But I do not, in any way, shape
or form, support a military intervention. I would try as best I could as
president to use the power of diplomacy, the power of our trade and business
with Iran, and our ability to communicate with all sides. And I would support
the U.N. to try to bring about some kind of stabilized order there and some kind
of dialogue.
I think that we have an
obligation to try to support democracy anywhere we can in the world. But I think
that we've got to do it by supporting the United Nations and not undercutting it
by going around it or by going in a way that would undermine the ability to
bring these matters into some order.
And I think that was the reason
the United Nations was put forward in the first place. I think the fact that we
don't pay our dues, the fact that we ourselves go around the U.N. when we want
undermines the ability of the U.N. to be used in situations like Iraq.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Reverend Sharpton.
John DiStaso, you start the
next round.
DISTASO: Yes, for Senator Kerry.
Senator, wealthy Americans
aren't all millionaires. Some of them are small-business people who have worked
hard and been successful and making perhaps $200,000. And there are some that I
know that are concerned that if they receive a tax hike that they are going to
have to -- the effect is going to be on their business, scale back, layoffs,
perhaps even close down.
What are you going to do for
them who are maybe employing a fair number of other people?
KERRY: Well, as a senator for years I have fought for small businesses. I've
actually been chairman of the Small Business Committee. And I think one of the
reasons, to go back to Peter's question, that the Republicans are going to begin
advertising tomorrow to try to attack me and sort of label me is because they
know my record. They know I present the strongest challenge to George W.
Bush.
I'm the only other candidate,
besides Governor Dean, who is outside of the caps. If I win the nomination, I'll
have the ability to raise an extraordinary amount of money and answer them
back.
Today I was endorsed by Fritz
Hollings in South Carolina. I have the endorsement of General Steve Cheney, the
former commandant of the Marine Corps, in South Carolina, the former statewide
candidate for attorney general, the minority leader of the House, the minority
leader of the Senate, Senator Max Cleland in Georgia, because I'm talking common
sense to Americans.
And common sense is that you
need to help small business across this country.
They just cut today the
manufacturing extension program for New Hampshire that has helped $35 million of
additional money come to small businesses in this state. The Republicans cut it
today.
I'm in favor of tax reductions
for small business, and I have a health care plan that will reduce the burden
for all Americans, business and those who get their health care in the workplace
today.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Senator.
KERRY: That's why they're frightened. And that's why I'm going to win.
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: Senator Lieberman, I'm going to ask you a parochial question, one that
hasn't come up here yet. It may not be the one that you would enjoy.
Going back to 1996 and '99, you
and former Senator Slade Gorton proposed a bill to have regional primaries,
revolving regional primaries throughout the state, which could've prompted an
end to the New Hampshire primary.
How much of a mistake was that,
now that you've literally lived here?
(LAUGHTER)
Or, given the fact -- I don't
want to bring up horse races here, your standing in the polls -- is that now a
pretty good idea after all?
LIEBERMAN: I've gotten older and wiser, John.
(LAUGHTER)
You know, this New Hampshire
primary looks pretty good to me now. It's why I chose to start here. My wife and
family and I have taken an apartment in Manchester. We've spent a lot of time
talking to people here. I think they've come to understand that I have a record
of 30 years that they can rely on to know who I am.
And what's more important, I
know who I am. I've stood up to special interests. I've put the people first.
I'm independent-minded, as the people of New Hampshire are. That's why I'm
confident about what's going to happen next Tuesday.
The Democratic National
Committee did something very good with the presidential selection process. They
protected the so-called window for Iowa and New Hampshire historically, but then
opened up this process to seven other states, from South Carolina to New Mexico,
Arizona, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Delaware and Missouri.
(LAUGHTER)
Did I get them all?
(APPLAUSE)
And that's going to let a lot
of people around America have a say early about who the Democratic nominee will
be.
JENNINGS: Senator, we're geographically sensitive.
LIEBERMAN: Good.
JENNINGS: Can I ask all of you to put up your hand who would also agree
next time to start in Iowa?
DEAN: We would agree to start in Iowa?
JENNINGS: To start in Iowa.
(CROSSTALK)
(LAUGHTER)
(APPLAUSE)
DISTASO: I would like to follow up by asking Senator Lieberman -- I can't ask
everyone at once -- to pledge now to use your power as president, as the nominee
or as senator, to actively oppose any efforts in the future -- and they're going
to come -- to boot New Hampshire out of its first-in-the-nation place.
LIEBERMAN: John, let me...
DISTASO: Anybody that could take that opportunity to do that...
LIEBERMAN: Let me say two things. One, because I'll be the incumbent
president, I look forward to going to Iowa to the caucuses four years from
now.
Secondly, I will pledge to the
death to protect...
(LAUGHTER)
... the New Hampshire primary,
so help me God.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Let it never be said that any of you pander.
(LAUGHTER)
Mr. Hume?
HUME: General Clark, Governor Dean has said that you're a good guy but he thinks
you're a Republican. Now, we're told you did vote for several Republican
presidents -- President Nixon, President Reagan -- said good things about the
first President Bush and even about this President Bush.
You said, in an article
published in The Times of London back in April as the war ended, quote,
"Liberation is at hand. Liberation, the powerful balm that justifies
painful sacrifice, erases lingering doubt and reinforces bold
actions."
As to the president, you wrote,
quote, "President Bush and Tony Blair should be proud of their resolve in
the face of so much doubt."
Given those statements, given
your votes, I think it is not unreasonable to ask you when you first noticed
that you were a Democrat.
(LAUGHTER)
(APPLAUSE)
CLARK: Well, actually, actually, Brit, actually, I did vote for Al Gore in
2000 and for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996.
But when I was in the military,
I was not a member of any party. I was an independent, and that's the way it is
done in the state of Arkansas.
And when I got out, I looked at
both parties. And I'm a fair- minded person. And when the president of the
United States does two things that I agree with -- one of them attacking the
Taliban in Iraq, and the other is not quitting in the use of military force in
the middle of a dust storm -- then I'm going to say so.
And when I'm president, I hope
that Republicans will praise me when I do things right.
But...
HUME: Well, that's...
CLARK: Can I just finish my statement?
HUME: Please.
CLARK: I'm running for president because I don't like the direction George
Bush is taking the country in. I am a Democrat, and I want to turn this country
around and set it going in the right direction.
I want to put a strong basis of
values back into this Democratic Party and take George Bush head-on. Because
family values is our issue in the Democratic Party; it is not the Republicans'
issue.
HUME: Could not a reader be justified in concluding, from this piece that you
wrote for the Times of London in April, that you did indeed support this war and
was pleased by its outcome and, as you said the first time when asked the
question, probably would have voted to support it?
CLARK: No, that's not true. In fact, if you look at the whole article, what
you'll see is that the article lays out a whole series of tasks that have to be
done later on.
And it's written in a foreign
publication. I'm not going to take U.S. policy and my differences with the
administration directly into a foreign publication.
But I made it clear in the
article -- and I think you've got it there. If you read it on down, you'll see
that I say this doesn't mean -- they've got to focus now on the peacekeeping,
the occupation, the provision of order.
There's a whole series of tasks
that I laid out for them to do that, in fact, they were incapable of
doing.
I did not support this war. I
would not have voted for the resolution. But once American soldiers are on the
battlefield, then I want them to be successful and I want them to come home
safely.
JENNINGS: Thank you, General.
(APPLAUSE)
Brit?
HUME: Senator Edwards, the Democratic national chairman, Terry McAuliffe, said
yesterday, I believe, that the president, by bringing up his possible support of
a constitutional amendment on marriage, was preparing to introduce bigotry into
the Constitution.
Do you agree with that?
EDWARDS: I'm completely opposed to the constitutional amendment. I think it's wrong
and unnecessary.
I wonder if I could just step
back for a minute. There's been an enormous amount of discussion in the first
hour, hour-and-a-half of this debate, about us, about ourselves. You know, if we
could just take a minute and talk about what's actually happening in the
country.
For example, there's been no
discussion about 35 million Americans who live in poverty every single day.
Millions of Americans who work full-time for minimum wage and live in
poverty.
We have, in a country of our
wealth -- if you'll let me finish -- in a country of our wealth and prosperity,
we have children going to bed hungry. We have children who don't have the
clothes to keep them warm.
And I understand that maybe on
some poll, that may not be a big issue, but the truth is, it's important. This
is what -- we should talk about it and do something about it, because it's
wrong.
And we need -- we, the
Democratic presidential candidates, we have a responsibility, I believe, a moral
responsibility, to do something about 35 million Americans living in
poverty.
And the only thing I'm
suggesting, we need to spend some time, more time in this debate talking about
the issues. Instead of talking about ourselves, why don't we talk about them?
Why don't we talk about the voters and the things that affect their lives?
That's what we ought to be doing.
HUME: Well, Senator, I don't think anyone would dispute that...
(APPLAUSE)
... that abortion remains a
potent issue in our national life, and the chairman...
EDWARDS: Thirty five million Americans living in poverty is also an important
issue.
HUME: I wouldn't dispute that for a moment. But the chairman of your party has
accused the president of the United States of bigotry, and I would just like to
know if you agree that bigotry is in play here?
EDWARDS: It's not the word I'd use, but I think the president is dead wrong, dead
wrong on this issue.
HUME: Thank you, sir.
JENNINGS: Senator, I inadvertently robbed John DiStaso of a question to
Congressman Kucinich.
JENNINGS: I hereby restore it.
DISTASO: OK, thank you.
Congressman, I understand the
principle behind your call for the United States to withdraw from NAFTA and the
WTO. But under this bilateral trade situation, how do you force progressive
trade conditions?
JENNINGS: Do you have a feeling he's ready for you?
DISTASO: Yes. I did have that feeling all along.
(LAUGHTER)
Well, what would it be,
sanctions, withholding exports of some countries? And what about the consumers
here who you've admitted will face much higher prices?
KUCINICH: This graph is about the loss of New Hampshire jobs because of
NAFTA and the WTO. Twenty-two thousand jobs can be directly traced to NAFTA and
the WTO, jobs that were good paying jobs in this state that were lost. This
other graph is about the loss of 3 million American manufacturing jobs because
of NAFTA and the WTO.
As president of the United
States, I intend to have a trade structure which supports manufacturing in this
country -- steel, automotive, aerospace, textiles, shipping. I intend to have a
manufacturing policy which stops the hemorrhaging not only of manufacturing
jobs, but high-tech jobs as well.
As president of the United
States, my first act in office, understanding how NAFTA and the WTO have
severely hurt the state's economy, my first act in office will be to cancel
NAFTA and the WTO and return to bilateral trade conditioned on workers' rights,
human rights and environmental quality principles.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Congressman, I apologize that we didn't see the graphs a
whole lot better than we did on radio.
(LAUGHTER)
KUCINICH: Well, excuse me, Peter, on radio I was showing it to Howard
Dean, and I'm glad that Howard had a chance to see it.
JENNINGS: Are they at your Web sites, here?
KUCINICH: Pardon?
JENNINGS: Are they at your Web site?
KUCINICH: This information comes from the National Association of
Manufacturers.
JENNINGS: Good.
KUCINICH: I'm sure it's on their Web site.
JENNINGS: Good, thanks. Thank you very much.
KUCINICH: And this information comes from a briefing paper from the
Economic Policy Institute. It was given to me by a group of New Hampshire -- by
the people of New Hampshire, who are working under the fair trade for New
Hampshire. And I'm supporting their efforts.
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And frankly, I wish that every
candidate on this stage would join me in saying that you would agree to cancel
NAFTA and the WTO, in light of what it's cost New Hampshire.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Tom Griffith?
Anybody want to take him up on
that?
GRIFFITH: Governor Howard Dean, I have a cousin in the audience who is
from New Jersey, and a long-time loyal Democrat. And she called me a few times
and said, "Who do you like? What are they saying?" And all along the
time, I said to her -- I'd give her my input. When I mentioned anything about
the three New Englanders that are on the stage, she would say, "We don't
need any more Northeasterners on the ticket."
Now, with that question, lay
out some of the red states and blue states, and what red states you would pick
up as the nominee that we didn't -- that the Democrats did not pick up in the
year 2000?
JENNINGS: Does anybody need a description of red and blue states
anymore?
(LAUGHTER)
Red states were Republican in
the last election. Blue states were Democrat, OK.
DEAN: We've got to talk about jobs in order to do that. You know what a red state
that's very vulnerable and eligible for us is? South Carolina. They've lost
enormous numbers of steel jobs and textile jobs, exactly the kind of thing that
Dennis was talking about, because of WTO and NAFTA.
Now, I'm not going to get rid
of WTO and NAFTA. We've globalized multinational rights for corporations. We
have not globalized labor and environmental rights, and we need to do that if
trade's ever going to work fairly.
So we're going to have
opportunities in places like Arizona, Montana, Colorado, Ohio, West Virginia and
even in the South.
(LAUGHTER)
And you know why? Because
they're going to do what you just did to John Edwards. You're going to keep
asking him about gay marriage, and John Edwards is absolutely right. This isn't
about gay marriage; this is about jobs. This isn't about race; this is about
education because everybody needs a good education no matter what color you
are.
This is not about the things
that divide us. If we're going to ever win another election again in some of
these states, we have to talk about education, health care and jobs. We cannot
fight the Republicans on their ground; we're going to fight them on our
grounds.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: For Reverend Sharpton...
JENNINGS: Right.
GRIFFITH: ... you speak about being against the death penalty. Do you
agree? You disagree with the death penalty in the capital murder of a police
officer?
SHARPTON: I disagree with the use of the death penalty because it has
been proven too many times to have been discriminatory in the way it has been
applied. It has not been proven to be a deterrent against crime.
And I do not think because it
has been proven wrong that we have the right to take lives if we can't give
lives, and we can't give them.
Let me say this quickly,
because I want to add to two of the answers of two my colleagues here.
One, I agree with John Edwards
about increasing help for businesses. I've called for a two-year deferment of
small businesses so we can get more businesses on.
But I think that one of the
things we have not talked a lot about tonight, too, is education. I think that
we cannot let the Republicans talk about values only in terms of personal
morality without dealing with broad social immorality.
So they say, if you have a
nice, well-knit family, and the well- knit family stays together, you have good
values, while they take day care from the kids, employment from the father and
the rights from the mother.
No, good values helps not only
keep a family, but feed a family, employ a family, give education to a
family.
We can't let them interpret the
debate that way. We could have won South Carolina last time if we talked more
about that. We had more people that didn't vote than we lost the election by, in
South Carolina.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Brit Hume.
HUME: Governor Dean, I don't mean to take you back to the moment of excitement the
other night in Des Moines, but I did want to ask you a question based
on...
DEAN: My voice is just barely recovering now. Please don't.
HUME: I can tell.
(LAUGHTER)
But I do want to ask you a
question about something you were quoted as saying about that issue today, which
was that you said that wear your emotions on your -- that you lead with your
heart, not with your head. Is that a quality people want in a president?
DEAN: Well, if you look at my record as governor, we balanced budgets. Every child
in my state has health care. We do early intervention in kids, following up 91
percent of all our kids and supporting the kids that are in trouble, supporting
their families so they have a better chance of going to college than they do of
going to prison.
Now, what I can offer the
American people is somebody who believes in social justice tempered by being a
fiscal conservative, tempered by wanting budgets to be manageable.
The greatest injustice you can
do in this country is to have an unbalanced budget for a long period of
time.
I think the president's
unbalancing of this budget is deliberate. Half-a-trillion dollar deficit as far
as the eye can see means more cuts in programs for kids, more cuts in education,
more cuts in college.
So, yes, I lead with my heart.
I say what I believe.
I think it's time that somebody
in this party stood up for what we believe in and wasn't so careful about what
they were saying. If we're willing to say anything we have to say to get
elected, then we're going to lose. We have to say what we believe, whether it's
popular or not.
HUME: But what you do mean by not with your head. Isn't there a temperament issue
that people may be alarmed about that?
DEAN: Well, I'm sure there's a lot of people who are alarmed because they've been
alarmed by all kinds of folks who've criticized some of the things I've
said.
But I truly believe that we
absolutely have to stand up for bedrock Democratic principles. Al Sharpton
talked about it a couple of minutes ago. We're not going to beat George Bush by
trying to be like him.
What we're really trying to do
here is not just change presidents. What we're really trying to do here is steer
the country back to a time when we were all in it together. This president has
divided us.
What I say, what we say in my
campaign, when we say we want our country back, we want our country back for all
of us. And you have to get out there and lead with your heart and lay it all out
for the American people, because that doesn't happen very often in Washington,
D.C.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: Thank you, Governor.
Senator Kerry, Governor Dean
has said of you, and I believe also of Senator Edwards, that you cast votes that
you knew were wrong on the war for political reasons. How do you answer that
charge?
KERRY: Well, I stood up to the people of Massachusetts and the country.
Those are the people I answer
to. And I answered by saying that there was a right way to hold Saddam Hussein
accountable and there was a wrong way.
The right way was what the
president promised, to go to the United Nations, to respect the building of an
international coalition in truth, to exhaust the remedies of inspections and
literally to only go to war as a last result.
Now, I've fought all my life
for peace. I fought against the war in Vietnam when I came home. I fought
against Ronald Reagan's illegal war in Central America. I fought with John
McCain to make peace in Vietnam. I fought to hold the Khmer Rouge accountable in
Cambodia. And on and on.
If anybody in New Hampshire
believes that John Kerry would have in fact gone to war the way George Bush did,
they shouldn't vote for me. But if they know that I would have stood up and
exhausted the remedies and done what was necessary to hold them accountable but
lived up to the values and principles of our country, then I'm the person to be
president who actually can make America more secure without breaching
relationships across this planet.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: But Senator, you have said of that vote on the resolution that authorized
the president at his discretion to use military force against Saddam Hussein
that it was a vote to threaten the use of force.
KERRY: Well, Brit...
HUME: Let me just finish the question.
KERRY: Sure.
HUME: And you now are saying it was a vote to hold Saddam Hussein accountable. In
fact it was, was it not, a vote to permit the president to use force at his
discretion.
KERRY: As a last resort was the promise of a president. And I wrote in the New York
Times at that time, I said the United States of America should never go to war
because it wants to. It should only go to war because it has to. And that means
building legitimacy and consent of the America people, Brit.
Look, I know there is a test as
a commander in chief as to when you send young Americans off to war, because I
know what happens when you lose that consent.
And you got to be able to look
in the eyes of a family and say you exhausted every possibility and you only
sent their son or daughter to die because you had no other choice.
I believe George Bush failed
that test in Iraq. I said so at the time, and that's what I believe
happened.
JENNINGS: Thank you very much.
KERRY: There is the right way to do it and wrong way to do it. He chose the wrong
way. And he's run the most arrogant, inept, reckless and ideological foreign
policy in the modern history of our country.
(APPLAUSE)
HUME: Senator Lieberman, you voted the same way. You have also objected to the way
the president has handled things. And yet you went ahead and voted for the $87
billion, which Senator Kerry and Senator Edwards did not.
How do you answer what they
have to say here?
LIEBERMAN: What was the question at the end?
HUME: The question is, you took different votes here.
LIEBERMAN: Yes, no, I know. At the end, what was your...
HUME: Well, how do you respond to what they're saying about the...
LIEBERMAN: Oh, right, right. Brit, you're absolutely right. I have
criticized the president for overstating some of the arguments about why we went
to war. I've said I was shocked that the administration wasn't better prepared
to take advantage of the military victory.
But I repeat again: This was a
just war.
Look, when I voted for the
resolution in the fall of 2002, I had no illusions. I knew it would be an
unpopular vote in parts of the Democratic Party and my race for the
presidency.
But I did it because I put my
hand on a Bible and took an oath to protect the security of the United States.
And I believed that Saddam Hussein was a clear and present danger and threat to
the security of the United States, the people of Iraq and the stability of the
world.
I've said before that, at
times, in its policy, the Bush administration has given a bad name to a just
war.
But a just war it was. And
again, we are safer as a people with Saddam Hussein in prison, not in
power.
Now we have an extraordinary
opportunity in the war against terrorism to build an Iraq, a democratizing,
modernizing country in the middle of the Arab and Islamic worlds, which will
send a message to the majority in the Islamic world that there is a better way
than the hatred and death that Al Qaida presents to them.
It is, if you'll forgive me,
the American -- the democratic way. That's what we have an opportunity to do
now.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Senators.
(APPLAUSE)
(AUDIENCE BOOING)
I think you all know we have
about -- we have only about 15 minutes left, so we're going to take another
break, and we'll be right back.
LIEBERMAN: I told you it wasn't popular in all sections of the
Democratic Party.
(LAUGHTER)
But you got to do what you
think is right for your country.
(APPLAUSE)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
JENNINGS: Welcome back to the last 10 minutes, approximately, of the
last debate before the primary.
Brit, you wanted to make one
point.
HUME: I believe I said that Governor Dean had said that Senators Kerry and
Lieberman cast -- Kerry, excuse me, and Edwards cast those votes knowing that
they were wrong. The governor has assured me he did not say that. I stand
corrected.
JENNINGS: Good.
Tom?
GRIFFITH: For General Clark, General Clark, the 30-year anniversary of
Roe v. Wade today, as you know.
One in three Granite Staters
call themselves Catholic, and you converted to Catholicism during the Vietnam
War. You apparently now attend a Presbyterian Church, and I believe you were
raised a Baptist.
(LAUGHTER)
Can you qualify your pro-choice
-- however, in one interview I read, you still consider yourself a Catholic.
Now, can you clarify your pro-choice position on abortion and describe how you
reconcile that with Catholic doctrine?
CLARK: I reconcile it with my own
beliefs. And I do believe in the right of conscience. And I support a woman's
right to choose protected by law.
I fought for human rights in
Bosnia. I fought for human rights in Kosovo. And I will fight for human rights
in the United States of America.
And no one is going to take
away a woman's right to choose when I'm president of the United States. It's
that simple.
(APPLAUSE)
GRIFFITH: Can you clarify how you reconcile that with Catholic
doctrine?
CLARK: I understand what the Catholic doctrine is. But I have freedom of
conscience. And I believe what I believe. I believe that the right to choose is
a right that should be protected by law.
I believe the decision about
issues like this are the issues that have to be worked between a woman and her
family, her god, her doctor. And as much as I respect the opinion of the
Catholic Church, in this case, I don't support it. It's that simple.
JENNINGS: General, I don't want to take up too much time, but the press
has been trying very hard today to ask you to explain whether or not you believe
a woman has the right to choose until the end, basically even in the eighth and
ninth month. What is your clear and simple answer to that?
CLARK: I believe in the established law, Roe v. Wade and Casey.
JENNINGS: And would you like quickly to tell the audience what that
provides for...
CLARK: What it says is essentially that a woman has a right to choose,
pre-viability and after viability, which is determined by a doctor, then that a
woman's right to choose can be constrained by the states, but that the health of
the mother must be protected. And she has the right to consult with her doctor
on that.
DISTASO: Congressman Kucinich, unfunded special needs mandates here in New Hampshire
are brutal on our local school districts. Tell us what you would have in mind in
the education sphere for unfunded special education?
KUCINICH: Well, we have to keep in mind that the education cuts that
have occurred because of the Bush administration in New Hampshire include
$800,000 cut for Pell Grants, $1.1 million for educating children in rural
schools, $400,000 for teacher quality training grants, $233,000 for safe and
drug-free school grants.
The federal government has all
kinds of mandates, but the problem is, is in funding them.
And as many people have learned
across this country, with respect to the No Child Left Behind Act, that we spoke
of earlier, the administration in the last budget provided for -- they provided
$21 billion dollars when there were $32 billion in needs. And what they're doing
is putting pressures on school districts all over the country.
When you create a program, you
should fully fund it. And what I will do as president is to make education one
of the top national priorities by a fully funded pre-kindergarten program for
all children ages 3, 4 and 5, by a fully funded Elementary and Secondary
Education Act, and by a fully funded program for tuition free at all public
colleges and universities.
JENNINGS: John DiStaso.
DISTASO: Senator Edwards, I'd just like to get a better picture of your view on
fighting Al Qaida. What are you going to send to Afghanistan, in terms of
sending troops to Afghanistan, what are you going to do that the current
administration is not doing in terms of trying to track down and shut down Al
Qaida?
EDWARDS: Well, it's bigger than Al Qaida, John. It's also the whole issue of
terrorism and how we fight terrorism.
There are two questions. One
is: What should we do abroad, outside our borders?
DISTASO: That's what I'm asking.
EDWARDS: Can I include in my answer also what we should be doing here at home?
Abroad, the most critical
element that's missing from this administration, if you -- I'm on the Senate
Intelligence Committee -- if you look at the map of where these terrorist
organizations are, where they operate, the most critical thing that's missing
from this administration is a working relationship with many of the countries in
which these groups operate.
Without the cooperation of
those countries -- this is a place where working with our allies is not
abstract. It has a direct impact on our ability to protect the American
people.
There are also lots of things
that should be done here at home that aren't being done. Better job of
protecting our ports, a critical issue here in the state of New Hampshire.
Better job of protecting our nuclear facilities and our chemical plants.
EDWARDS: If you ask most people in New Hampshire, "What would you do differently
today than you would have done on September 11th if a terrorist attack
occurs," they have no idea.
Well, the reason is, we don't
have a comprehensive warning system in place. We don't have a comprehensive
response system in place.
There are a whole group of
things that we need to do, both at home and abroad, to try to keep the American
people safe and to effectively fight this war on terror.
JENNINGS: Thank you, Senator.
DISTASO: Reverend Sharpton, would you add anything to that? How are you -- what, in
addition to those measures, are you going to do to try to prevent future
9/11s?
SHARPTON: I think what we must do is build better alliances around the
world. I think that, as I have traveled around the Middle East and Africa in
particular, the Sudan, Kenya and other places, we have not had the kind of
relationships in the world community that would lead to having the intelligence
that would protect the American people.
I don't care how much military
strength we have, if we don't have the information, if we don't have people that
are inclined to be supportive of our security, we will still be at risk.
And I think that what I would
concentrate on -- I agree that we need to have better security at nuclear
plants, that we need to have better security at ports. We also need to rebuild
ports and create jobs, because the ports are almost in disrepair.
But I think we also must
concentrate on our intelligence and our ability to make allies around parts of
the world that could help us more than anyone because they have access to the
information that is being used by terrorists groups.
JENNINGS: We are pushing the envelope in terms of time.
Brit, I think we've got time
for one more question. You started this off. Why don't you finish it?
HUME: Well, let me ask a question to Senator Kerry.
Senator, there was a recent
survey, recent poll, found that 95 percent of Americans said they were either
very or rather happy.
A news story today said that a
key measure of future economic activity -- that being the index of leading
economic indicators -- rose in December to its highest level ever. This
following a quarter in which the economy grew at a very rapid 8 percent.
Are you concerned at all, sir,
that this bleak portrait that those running for president, including yourself,
paint of the country may not resemble the country people, by the millions, are
experiencing?
KERRY: Well, first of all, Bret, I'm not painting a bleak portrait. I'm painting
the portrait of the challenge to Americans. And there's no question in my mind
that when challenged, Americans rise to the challenge.
But the president is talking
about a very different world from the world that every single one of us as
candidates have seen across this country.
While profits went up 46
percent for companies, wages for workers went up three pennies. This is a Wall
Street Republican recovery, it's not an American worker recovery.
And we deserve a president who
understands what's really happening to people all across the country. The
outsourcing of jobs: One-fifth of the manufacturing jobs in New Hampshire have
been lost. Countless numbers of people can't get insurance.
The president has no plan, not
only to give them insurance, but to lower the cost of insurance for $163 million
Americans who get them.
I have that plan. I will put
America back to work.
I hope we have a great economy
next year because there's plenty to talk about: about the environment, about
children, about education, higher education, about our role in the world.
This country is being led in a
radically wrong direction by this president. And as we mount this campaign,
Americans will join up and vote for change.
(APPLAUSE)
JENNINGS: Senator Kerry, maybe in that one last phrase, you've spoken
for all of your fellow candidates in this last debate before the primary next
week.
We thank you all very much
indeed.
We'd like to extend also a
very, very heartfelt vote of thanks to the people of St. Anselm, the college
here, who've been so kind to all of us. I'm sure you concur with that.
Thank you very much for joining
us. On behalf of my colleagues, good night.
(APPLAUSE)
END
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