Bernie Sanders speaks to reporters at the White House after his meeting
with President Obama. At his side is his wife, Jane. (Photo: Kevin
Lamarque/Reuters)Days
before Iowa voters decide the first battle of the 2016 White House
race, Sen. Bernie Sanders emerged from a rare face-to-face meeting with
Barack Obama on Wednesday denying that the president was trying to tip
the Democratic primary scales in Hillary Clinton’s favor.Sanders,
speaking in front of the West Wing after his 45-minute Oval Office
visit, also talked up his chances in Iowa, New Hampshire, and beyond —
but played down the odds that he would upset Clinton in the Hawkeye
State the way Obama did eight years ago.“I’m
not saying we can do what Barack Obama did in 2008. I wish we could,
but I don’t think we can,” the Vermont senator said. “If there is a
large turnout, I think we win; if not I think we’re going to be
struggling.”Asked
whether he had asked the president for his endorsement, Sanders laughed
and replied: “Of course not.” He also disputed the widely held view
that Obama has tried to convince Democratic voters to support Clinton.What
the president has tried to do, what Vice President Biden has tried to
do, is to be as evenhanded as they could be,” he insisted. “And I know
there was some discussion the other day about a Politico interview in
which he was tipping the scale towards Secretary Clinton — I don’t
believe that at all.“I
think he and the vice president have tried to be fair and evenhanded in
the process, and I expect they will continue to be,” he said.Asked
whether Clinton has overplayed her ties to Obama, Sanders grinned and
replied: “I think the people of Iowa will make that decision in a few
days.”With
enough snow on the White House grounds to recall the senator’s home
state of Vermont, Sanders had arrived around 11:35, accompanied by two
aides and his wife. The foursome entered the West Wing through a side
door that is frequently used by powerful visitors and keeps them well
out of range of media questions.Obama’s
public schedule listed a meeting with Sanders at 11:45 a.m., followed
by lunch with Vice President Joe Biden at 12:30. The timing resembled
that of a blind date between two wary Washingtonians, who agree to have
coffee together but only with a firm time for the interlude to be over, a
frequently unsuccessful effort to limit any awkwardness at “goodbye.”
But White House aides later let reporters know that Sanders would likely
take questions.The meeting came days after Obama made clear in an interview with Politico that he viewed his former secretary of state,
Clinton, as his natural successor, while dismissing Sanders’ surprisingly strong campaign as “the bright, shiny object that people haven’t seen before.”His
remarks were widely seen as Obama putting his thumb on the Democratic
primary scales at a time when public opinion polls show the rough-edged
Vermont senator posing an increasingly real threat to Clinton’s campaign
in Iowa and leading her by double digits in New Hampshire.“Bernie
came in with the luxury of being a complete long shot and just letting
loose,” Obama told Politico. “I think Hillary came in with the both
privilege — and burden — of being perceived as the frontrunner. … You’re
always looking at the bright, shiny object that people haven’t seen
before — that’s a disadvantage to her.”At
the same time, Obama sketched out the political logic for his meeting
with Sanders. The president has long made it clear that his goal is to
unify the party after the primaries to make sure a Republican does not
win in November.“Here’s my view: That whoever the nominee is, is going to need the other person’s supporters,” he told Politico.Obama
regularly meets with Hillary Clinton at the White House, and their
respective staffs are in close communication, while the Sanders team has
comparatively been kept at arm’s length. But the meeting on Wednesday,
held at Sanders’ request, suggested an evolving view at 1600
Pennsylvania of the coming primary battle for the Democratic nomination —
a newly discovered need to cultivate him.Sanders
and Obama have been in Washington together 11 years — ever since the
latter took office as senator from Illinois. But the presidential
candidate who proclaims himself a socialist and the president whose
enemies insult him by calling him a socialist don’t appear to have much
of a political relationship and even less of a personal one.
No comments:
Post a Comment
publisher,advertisement,fun,cool,interesting,news,travelling,football