TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: We turn
now to the Democratic debate held last night
in Nevada, where Senators Barack Obama,
Hillary Clinton and John Edwards sparred for
two hours on MSNBC. Missing from the stage
was Ohio Congressmember Dennis Kucinich, who
lost a last-minute legal fight with NBC over
his inclusion in the debate.
Kucinich had sued the
network after it disinvited him from
participating. On January 9th, NBC told
Kucinich he had met the criteria for the
debate. Then, less than two days later, NBC
changed the criteria and declared Kucinich
no longer qualified. On Monday, a Nevada
judge ordered NBC to include Kucinich, but
then NBC appealed the ruling and actively
fought to keep him off the stage. On Tuesday
night, less than an hour before the debate,
the Nevada Supreme Court sided with NBC.
In court filings, NBC
painted itself as the victim. Attorneys for
the network wrote, “Mr. Kucinich’s claim is
nothing more than an illegitimate private
cause of action designed to impose an equal
access requirement that entirely undermines
the wide journalistic freedoms enjoyed by
news organizations under the First
Amendment.” Attorneys for General Electric’s
NBC also argued, “A television station does
not have to grant unlimited access to a
candidate debate. If anyone’s First
Amendment rights are being infringed, they
are MSNBC’s.”
In his lawsuit, Kucinich
argued NBC—yes, owned by General
Electric—illegally shut him out of the
debate because of his views. The lawsuit
states, “The exclusion of Kucinich
undermines the purposes of the Federal
Communications Act and is a blatant
violation of the Act because of the media’s
obligation to operate in the public
interest… NBC revised its criteria to
specifically exclude the diverse and
anti-war voice of Kucinich and his
grass-roots supporters.” The lawsuit went on
to say, "The debate is not a true
presidential primary debate without
including all credible candidates, but
instead is effectively an endorsement of the
candidates selected by NBC.”
Well, today, Congressmember
Dennis Kucinich will join us. He’ll join us
from Washington. We decided to give him a
chance to take part in last night’s debate,
in our own way. We’ll play excerpts of that
debate and give the Ohio congressman and
presidential candidate a chance to answer
the questions he would have faced last night
had he not been barred. This is the debate
NBC and General Electric didn’t want you to
hear.
Before we go to that debate,
though, Dennis Kucinich is pulling up to the
studio in Washington. We had planned to have
him in studio in Las Vegas, where he was
going to be campaigning over the next few
days. But instead, last night, at the last
minute, he took a redeye back to Washington,
D.C., because he had just been alerted—well,
Congressman Kucinich, welcome to
Democracy Now! Alerted of what? Alerted
to what?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
There will be a defense authorization bill
on the floor today under a suspension of the
rules, which means that it’s considered to
be noncontroversial. And my feeling is that
it’s probably a confirmation of President
Bush’s concerns and ameliorated by a
Democratic congress. So I’m going to be
there to challenge the bill, to speak on it,
and to call for a vote and hopefully keep
alive the issue of a contest over our
defense spending policies.
AMY GOODMAN: Just to
understand what you’re saying, you’re saying
that last night, what, around midnight, you
got a message that—this is the Democrats,
not the Republicans, who are in charge of
Congress—
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Right.
AMY GOODMAN: —were
going to be taking on the defense
authorization bill, voting for it, but not
putting it on the record—it wasn’t a vote
count, you don’t think?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, it would—you know, when something is
put on a suspension calendar, it’s
essentially something that’s considered to
be noncontroversial. The Democratic
leadership has been trying to work out some
of the differences that they had with
President Bush over the last—since Congress
had adjourned for the holidays. And so, this
bill, I was told, is the product of the
negotiations between the Democrats and the
White House. What I hope to do, assuming
that it’s what was described to me, is to
challenge the bill and some of the issues in
defense authorization that were not brought
up in the previous debate.
AMY GOODMAN: What
would it mean if you call for a vote count?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, it means that people have to, you
know, take a stand. And I missed the last
vote, because my brother passed away and I
had rushed home, but this is a continuation
of that debate. There was a small number of
Democrats who voted against the bill to
begin with. And now we’re looking to—what
I’m looking to do is to pick up the debate
and to look at some of the areas of the
defense authorization bill that perhaps had
not been explored through this debate
over—or through opening up a debate on what
is really something that was—I think people
are planning just to move it through without
much comment.
AMY GOODMAN: You’re
just about to come to the studio, and so
we’ll be having you join in the debate you
were excluded from last night. But before
you do, as you pull up right near the
Capitol in Washington, D.C., explain your
lawsuit and what happened at the last minute
last night as the case made its way through
the courts of Las Vegas.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
NBC, GE, maintained—well, they—you know, we
were invited and as a result of meeting
criteria of being in the top four in a
national poll. This was before Bill
Richardson dropped out. And when I met the
criteria, NBC then announced they had
changed the criteria so it would only be the
top three that would be invited.
We challenged that as a
contract, and attorneys in Nevada won a case
before a superior court judge, who said that
NBC had an obligation to provide me with a
place in the debate, and if they did not, he
would stop the debate from happening.
NBC—and when that account
was journalized, NBC then immediately
contacted the Supreme Court, and a hearing
was held. I was told it was an extraordinary
hearing of all seven members of the Supreme
Court, who—three of whom were in Carson
City, Nevada and were teleconferenced in,
and they heard a presentation by NBC’s
attorneys, who maintained that the debate
was essentially a private matter and that
no—you know, really little discussion on
their part of any public interest came up.
They alluded that, alternatively, this was a
matter that should have been brought before
the FCC, not a contract matter, and then, in
the same breath, said that cable networks
aren’t [inaudible] to the FCC.
So we’ve—you know, we’re in
a conundrum here about what the public’s
rights are, because this goes far beyond my
humble candidacy. It goes right to the
question of democratic governance, whether a
broadcast network can choose who the
candidates will be based on their narrow
concerns, because they’ve contributed—GE,
NBC and Raytheon, another one of GE’s
property, have all contributed substantially
to Democratic candidates who were in the
debate. And the fact of the matter is, with
GE building nuclear power plants, they have
a vested interest in Yucca Mountain in
Nevada being kept open; with GE being
involved with Raytheon, another defense
contractor, they have an interest in war
continuing. So NBC ends up being their
propaganda arm to be able to advance their
economic interests.
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, in the court
filings, NBC painted itself as the victim.
It said, “Mr. Kucinich’s claim is nothing
more than an illegitimate private cause of
action designed to impose an equal access
requirement that entirely undermines the
wide journalistic freedoms enjoyed by news
organizations under the First Amendment.”
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, you know, the double [inaudible] here
is apparent. First of all, they’re, you
know, broadcast licensees. NBC operates its
network under the FCC Act of 1934,
supposedly to function in the public
interest, convenience and necessity. They do
not do that. And some of the law they were
citing related more to newspapers, which
have a broad First Amendment protection, and
newspapers, of course, are not licensed. You
know, broadcast licensees have an altogether
different responsibility. But they were
claiming that they were shielded from that
by a congressional action which exempts
cable companies from FCC purview. So, you
know, this is one of those things that my
attorneys are going to take up with the FCC,
certainly, but you haven’t heard the last of
legal action on our behalf here with respect
to NBC.
I think that what they’re
trying to do is stack a presidential
election using their broadcast media power,
and they’re doing it to further the
interests of their own parent corporation,
General Electric. And this is something that
I am not going to stop challenging, because
this is really important to issues of
democratic governance, what kind of country
we’re going to have, because the
corporations are really in a position where
they’re using the broadcast media to rig
presidential elections by determining who’s
viable based on who gets coverage; in the
advent of an election, who goes on the news
shows and who is getting their contributions
from their executives. This is a real
serious matter. So I’m—
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, had you understood
you would be included in this debate? What
was promised last week?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
I was. You know, of course it was my
understanding I was going to be included in
the debate. And here’s—but, you know, Amy—
AMY GOODMAN: They
said the top four candidates? Is that what
they said last week? And then Richardson
pulled out?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Yeah, that’s right.
AMY GOODMAN: And so,
you then became number four?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
I imagine if Richardson hadn’t pulled out
and had been in fourth place, this wouldn’t
have been an issue. You know, there’s an
underlying question here, as well, and that
is that: What right does the media have to
establish the criteria as to who should be
able to be in a debate in the first place,
especially when they have corporate
interests that could be affected by various
candidates or appreciated by various
candidates? So, you know, this is a profound
issue of democratic governance, of our
presidential—the integrity of our
presidential selection process, and goes to
the heart of the need for real reforms in
the media.
We’re just pulling up right
now—
AMY GOODMAN: We’re
going to go to a break.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
—to the studio.
AMY GOODMAN: Then
we’re going to go to break. Congressmember
Kucinich will take his seat, well, in a
sense, at that debate last night in Las
Vegas. When we come back from break, we’re
going to play excerpts of the MSNBC debate
and hear what Dennis Kucinich has to say,
how he answers the questions as well. This
is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org,
the War and Peace Report, as we break the
sound barrier. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: We turn
now to the Las Vegas debate on MSNBC, the
debate moderator, Brian Williams, the anchor
and managing editor of NBC Nightly News.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Citigroup and Merrill Lynch have both
gone overseas, as some put it, hat in
hand, looking for $20 billion in
investment to stay afloat from, among
other things, the government of
Singapore, Korea, Japan, and the Saudi
Prince Alwaleed, the man—Rudolph
Giuliani turned his money back after
9/11. This is—strikes a lot of Americans
as just plain wrong.
At the end of our
report, we said this may end up in
Congress. What can be done? And does it
strike you as fundamentally wrong, that
much foreign ownership of these American
flagship brands?
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
Brian, I’m very concerned about
this. You know, about a month and a half
or so ago, I raised this concern,
because these are called sovereign
wealth funds. They are huge pools of
money, largely because of oil and
economic growth in Asia. And these funds
are controlled often by governmental
entities or individuals who are closely
connected to the governments in these
countries.
I think we’ve got to
know more about them. They need to be
more transparent. We need to have a lot
more control over what they do and how
they do it. I’d like to see the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund
begin to impose these rules, and I want
the United States Congress and the
Federal Reserve Board to ask these tough
questions.
But let’s look at how we
got here. We got here because, as I said
on Wall Street on December 5th, a lot of
our big financial institutions, you
know, made these bets on these subprime
mortgages. They helped to create this
meltdown that is happening, that is
costing millions of people who live in
homes that are being foreclosed on or
could be in the very near future because
the interest rates are going up. And
what they did was to take all these
subprime mortgages and conventional
mortgages, bundle them up and sell them
overseas to big investors. So, we’re
getting the worst of both worlds.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Senator Edwards, I neglected to point
out that one of the companies keeping
these giant American banks afloat is
Kuwait, a nation, an economy arguably
afloat itself today, as you know, thanks
to the blood, sweat and tears of
American soldiers. What would you do as
a remedy?
JOHN EDWARDS:
Well, the things that Senator Clinton
just spoke about are correct. We need
more transparency. We need to know
what’s actually happening. But the
fundamental problem is what’s happening
at the core of the American economy.
What’s happening to the economy in
America, if you look at it from
distance, is we have economic growth in
America—we still do—but almost the
entirety of that economic growth is with
the very wealthiest Americans and the
biggest multinational corporations.
You ask any middle class
family in America, and they will tell
you they do not feel financially secure.
They are worried about their job. They
are worried paying for healthcare.
They’re worried about how they’re going
to send their kids to college. They’re
worried about, in so many cases, here in
Nevada particularly, worried about their
home being foreclosed on.
I spoke a few minutes
ago about thousands of people coming to
Nevada every day to try to find the
promise of America, to try to find a
good job, a good home, to meet the great
moral test that all of us have as
Americans, which is to make certain that
our children have a better life than we
have. This is the great challenge that
we’re facing in this election.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Oh, Senator Obama, a rebuttal.
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
Well, not a rebuttal. I just want to
pick up on a couple things that have
been said. Number one, part of the
reason that Kuwait and others are able
to come in and purchase, or at least
bail out, some of our financial
institutions is because we don’t have an
energy policy. And we are sending close
to a billion dollars a day. And this
administration has consistently failed
to put forward a realistic plan that is
going to reduce our dependence on
foreign oil, is going to invest in solar
and wind and biodiesel. You look at a
state like Nevada; one thing I know is
folks have got a lot of sun here. And
yet, we have not seen any serious effort
on the part of this administration to
spur on the use of alternative fuels,
raise fuel efficiency standards on cars.
That would make a substantial difference
in our balance of payments, and that
would make a substantial difference in
terms of their capacity to purchase our
assets.
And the second thing I
just want to point out is that the
subprime lending mess, part of the
reason it happened was because we had an
administration that does not believe in
any kind of oversight. And we had the
mortgage industry spending $185 million
on lobbying to prevent provisions such
as the ones that I’ve proposed over a
year ago that would say, you know,
you’ve got to disclose properly what
kinds of loans you’re giving to people
on mortgages. You’ve got to disclose if
you’ve got a teaser rate and suddenly
their mortgage payments are going to
jack up and they can’t pay for them. And
one of the things that I intend to do as
president of the United States is
restore a sense of accountability and
regulatory oversight over the financial
markets. We have the best financial
markets in the world, but only if they
are transparent and accountable and
people trust them. And, increasingly, we
have not had those structures in place.
AMY GOODMAN: Thank you, Senators Obama, Clinton and
Edwards, as I join Brian Williams—I’m Amy
Goodman—to include the excluded
Congressmember Kucinich in this debate.
Congressmember Kucinich, you have ninety
seconds to answer this question.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, the issue of whether or not we have
foreign investment has been a longstanding
issue, and so it’s nothing new. But the
question is, what’s happening with Wall
Street, where they have a lack of liquidity,
because, you know, they’ve made some bad
investments, and beyond that, the subprime
lending scandal has really been something
that was pyramided out of the Fed’s lack of
oversight of banks and of the SEC’s lack of
oversight on hedge funds.
Now, hedge funds have
invested mightily in presidential
candidates. Senators Clinton, Obama and
Edwards raised substantial amounts of money
from those hedge funds that they now claim
they’re going to have a means of oversight.
We have to look at Senator Edwards’s record
itself. He worked for a year for the
Fortress hedge fund, earned a half-a-million
dollars, did not explain exactly what kind
of work he did. He apparently went to about
a half-a-dozen meetings, and he said that he
did this in order to learn about poverty.
Meanwhile, Fortress held in its portfolio
subprime loans, as well as Medicare
privatization, Humana, which more or less
have policies that would seem to be
antithetical to Senator Edwards’s publicly
stated positions on policy.
I think that it’s going to
be very important to have a president who is
able to challenge frontally the very
interests that have been able to escape
regulation through these hedge funds, who
will be able to protect private investors
who may have been brought into the initial
public offering of hedge funds, where the
transparency is still quite limited, and who
will be able to help rebuild the American
economy to the point of where we can have a
true housing program, where people can have
housing and gain access to credit. This
really goes to the heart of the role of the
Federal Reserve, and—
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, your time is up on
this question. In this part of the debate,
the candidates ask each other questions.
This is former Senator John Edwards.
JOHN EDWARDS:
This is about campaign finances. And let
me start it by saying the obvious, which
is, all three of us have raised a great
deal of money in this campaign. And so,
this is not preachy or holier than thou
in any possible way.
What we know is that all
three of us want to do something about
healthcare in this country. And we also
know that, until recently, Senator
Clinton had raised more money from drug
companies and insurance companies than
any candidate, Democrat or Republican,
until you passed her, Senator Obama,
recently to go to number one. My
question is, do you think these people
expect something for this money? Why do
they give it? Do they think that it’s
for good government? Why do they do it?
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
Well, let’s be clear, John. I just
want to make sure that we understand: I
don’t take money from federal lobbyists.
I don’t take money from PACs.
JOHN EDWARDS: As
I don’t, either.
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
As you don’t, either.
What happens is, is that
you’ve got—if you’ve got a mid-level
executive at a drug company or an
insurance company who is inspired by my
message of change, and they send me
money, then that’s recorded as money
from the drug or the insurance industry,
even though it’s not organized,
coordinated or in any way subject to the
problems that you see when lobbyists are
giving money.
But—and I’m proud of the
fact that I’ve raised more money from
small donors than anybody else and that
we’re getting $25, $50, $100 donations,
and we’ve done very well doing it that
way.
Now, what I’m also proud
of is the fact that in reducing special
interest lobbying, I, alone, of the
candidates here, have actually taken
away the power of lobbyists. Part of the
reason that you know who’s bundling
money for various candidates is because
of a law I passed this year, which says:
Lobbyists, if you are taking money from
anybody and putting it together and then
giving it to a member of Congress, that
has to be disclosed.
Ultimately, what I’d
like to see is a system of public
financing of campaigns, and I’m a
co-sponsor of the proposal that’s in the
Senate right now. That’s what we have to
fight for. In the meantime, what I’m
very proud of is to make sure that we
continue to make progress at the federal
level to push back the influence that
lobbyists have right now, and that’s
something that I’m going to continue to
work on.
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
I’ve introduced legislation that
clearly requires President Bush to come
to the United States Congress—it is not
enough, as he claims, to go to the Iraqi
parliament—but to come to the United
States Congress to get anything that
he’s trying to do, including permanent
bases, numbers of troops, all the other
commitments he’s talking about as he’s
traveling in that region. And I want to
ask Senator Obama if you will co-sponsor
my legislation to try to rein in
President Bush so that he doesn’t commit
this country to his policy in Iraq,
which both of us are committed to end.
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
Well, I think we can work on this,
Hillary, because I don’t think—you know,
we’ve got unity in the
Democratic Party, I hope, on this.
The notion that
President Bush could somehow tie the
hands of the next president, I think, is
contrary to how our democracy is
supposed to work and the voices of the
American people who spoke out in 2006
and I expect will speak out again in
2008.
I have opposed this war
consistently. I have put forward a plan
that will get our troops out by the end
of 2009. And we already saw today
reports that the Iraqi minister suggests
that we’re going to be in there at least
until 2018—2018, ten years, a
decade-long commitment.
Currently, we are
spending $9 billion to $10 billion a
month. And the notion is that we’re
going to sustain that at the same time
as we’re neglecting what we see
happening in Afghanistan right now,
where you have a luxury hotel in Kabul
that was blown up by militants, and the
situation continues to worsen.
My first job as
president of the United States is going
to be to call in the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and say, "You’ve got a new
mission, and that is to responsibly,
carefully, but deliberately start to
phase out our involvement there and to
make sure that we are putting the onus
on the Iraqi government to come together
and do what they need to do to arrive at
peace.”
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
If I could just interrupt here, before I
give you your question—would the other
two of you join in the 2009 pledge that
Senator Obama has made concerning the
withdrawal of American troops?
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
Oh, yes. I’m on record as saying
exactly that as soon as I become
president, we will start withdrawing
within sixty days. We will move as
carefully and responsibly as we can, one
to two brigades a month, I believe, and
we’ll have nearly all the troops out by
the end of the year, I hope.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Senator Edwards?
JOHN EDWARDS: I
think I’ve actually, among the three of
us, been the most aggressive and said
that I will have all combat troops out
in the first year that I’m president of
the United States. I will end combat
missions. And while I’m president, there
will be no permanent military bases in
Iraq.
TIM RUSSERT: In
September, we were in New Hampshire
together, and I asked the three of you
if you would pledge to have all troops
out of Iraq by the end of your first
term. All three of you said, you will
not take that pledge. I’m hearing
something much different tonight.
JOHN EDWARDS:
There’s nothing different. This is
nothing different.
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
No, no, no, no. There’s nothing
different, Tim. I want to make sure—no,
no. I think this is important, because
it was reported as if we were suggesting
that we would continue a war until 2013.
Your question was, could I guarantee all
troops would be out of Iraq? I have been
very specific in saying that we will not
have permanent bases there. I will end
the war, as we understand it, in combat
missions, but that we are going to have
to protect our embassy. We’re going to
have to protect our civilians. We’re
engaged in humanitarian activity there.
We are going to have to have some
presence that allows us to strike if
al-Qaeda is creating bases inside of
Iraq.
And so, I cannot
guarantee that we’re not going to have a
strategic interest that I have to carry
out as commander-in-chief to maintain
some troop presence there, but it is not
going to be engaged in war, and it will
not be the sort of permanent bases and
permanent military occupation that
George Bush seems to be intent on.
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
You know, Tim, it’s not only George
Bush. I just want to add here—
TIM RUSSERT: But
you both will have a presence?
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
Well, I think that what Barack said
is what John and I also meant at that
same time, because, obviously, we have
to be responsible, we have to protect
our embassy, we do need to make sure
that, you know, our strategic interests
are taken care of.
But it’s not only George
Bush. The Republican candidates running
for the presidency are saying things
that are very much in line with
President Bush. You know, Senator McCain
said the other day that we might have
troops there for a hundred years,
Barack. I mean, they have an entirely
different view than we do about what we
need to have happening as soon as we get
a Democrat elected president.
JOHN EDWARDS: Can
I—
TIM RUSSERT:
Thirty seconds for Senator Edwards.
JOHN EDWARDS: I
just want to say, it is dishonest to
suggest that you’re not going to have
troops there to protect the embassy.
That’s just not the truth. It may be
great political theater and political
rhetoric, but it’s not the truth.
There is, however, a
difference between us on this issue, and
I don’t think it’s subtle. The
difference is, I will have all combat
troops out in the first year that I’m
president, and there will be no further
combat missions, and there will be no
permanent military bases.
AMY GOODMAN: And now the voice excluded from this
debate on this key issue around war, we put
that question that Tim Russert put to you,
Congressmember Kucinich, as well as the
other candidates in New Hampshire, around
the withdrawal of troops.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
I’m the only person running for president
who not only voted against the war, but
voted 100% of the time against funding the
war. What you’ve heard here is a bunch of
nuancing. They’re all saying the same thing,
that they will keep troops in Iraq. The
troops will be kept there to protect an
embassy. The troops will be kept there for
counterinsurgency and for training the Iraqi
military.
Well, the fact of the matter
is, we must get out of Iraq. We must end the
occupation, close the bases, bring the
troops home. We don’t have a right to have
an embassy there, as we are an occupying
army. And any way that the United States
government would keep its foot in the door
of Iraq is a way that the war will continue,
because the occupation is fueling the
insurgency.
I’m the only one running who
had a plan that was introduced immediately
after the invasion that called for not only
an end to the occupation, closing of the
bases, bringing the troops home, but also a
parallel process of an international
security and peacekeeping force that would
move in as our troops leave. We cannot get
such a force until the United States
determines it will end the occupation. Once
we determine we will do that, we can move
and to have a rapprochement with Syria, as
well as opening diplomatic relations with
Iran for the first time in twenty-nine
years.
It’s vitally important that
we work to effect a program of
reconciliation between the Shiites, the
Sunnis and the Kurds; an honest
reconstruction program, where we get rid of
the crooked contractors and the mercenaries
who have compounded the American occupation.
In addition to that, we need to have a
program of reparations to the Iraqi people.
Over a million innocent Iraqis have been
killed. We must repair the breach. That
breach was a monetary one. It is a moral and
social one. We have a lot of work to do
there, and we’re going to have to do it not
by occupying, but by showing that we can
have a leader who’s compassionate enough to
recognize a moral and financial
responsibility to the Iraqi people.
We also have to make sure
that the Iraqi people have full control of
their oil. I’m the only one who’s running
who understood immediately that the Bush
program for reconciliation was in fact a
plan to privatize Iraq’s oil in order to
gain control over a $30 billion oil wealth.
I think that it is
manifestly clear that the only person
running for president who will bring our
troops home, who will get out of there
within three months from taking office, is
myself. And all the others have tried to
game this issue. They either voted for the
war, in the case of Senator Edwards and
Senator Clinton, or they voted to fund the
war, in the case of Senator Edwards, Senator
Clinton and Senator Obama, who, by the way,
campaigned in saying, well, he opposed the
war from the start, but then when he was
elected to the Senate, his voting record is
indistinguishable from Senator Clinton’s
with respect to funding the war. So you
can’t talk out of both sides of your mouth
on this thing. You’re either for getting out
of Iraq, or you’re not. If you’re for
getting out of Iraq, you don’t keep troops
there for any purpose whatsoever.
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, Senator Edwards put
his question to both people at the table, to
Senator Clinton, as well as Senator Obama,
saying, “Senator Clinton had raised more
money from drug companies and insurance
companies than any candidate, Democrat or
Republican, until you passed her, Senator
Obama, recently [to go] to number one.” And
he said, “My question is, do you think these
people expect something for this money? Why
do they give it? Do they think that it’s for
good government? Why do they do it?” Can you
answer that question and say what you would
have asked these candidates, had you been
sitting at the table, as well?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, I would have asked to John Edwards,
you point a finger at somebody else, you’re
pointing—are you not pointing three back at
yourself? The fact in the matter is, Senator
Edwards, who has made a—you know, quite a
gambit of being able to accuse the others of
taking special interest money, his campaign
was financed and given a big boost by
members of the Fortress hedge fund in
Washington—in New York. He would attack
Senator Clinton for having money from
Washington lobbyists, and he would be taking
money from New York hedge fund operators.
In addition to that, his
holdings in Fortress, his personal
holdings—he put a huge amount of his
personal investment into the Fortress hedge
fund. And in one of their portfolios is
Humana, which is leading the way to
privatizing of Medicare. Now, since, Senator
Edwards, you are advocating private
accounts, that people essentially be forced
to buy mandated private insurance, it seems
to me that would benefit Humana and increase
the value of their position in Fortress.
I think we need to have an
understanding here, that the larger issue is
public financing. All these people who are
running for president are good people, but
we have a system that—it’s a bad system. It
requires people to do the kinds of
pirouettes and gymnastics to make it appear
that they’re pure and chaste while their
opponents are not. The truth is that the
whole system is rotten and that only public
financing, a constitutional amendment which
would overturn Buckley v. Valeo, will
rescue our politics from private control.
Until then, we’re going to continue to see
our politics in America be as an auction,
where policy is sold to the highest bidder.
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressman Kucinich, we have to break. When
we come back, the question is on military
recruiting. Today, our listeners and viewers
are hearing and watching what the debate
would have looked and sounded like if
Congressmember Kucinich was a part of this
debate with the Democratic candidates
Clinton, Obama and Edwards. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: As we
break the sound barrier, including
Congressmember Dennis Kucinich in the
presidential—Democratic presidential debate
that took place last night in Las Vegas, we
now turn to a question asked by Tim Russert,
host of NBC’s Meet the Press.
TIM RUSSERT: The
volunteer army, many believe,
disproportionate in terms of poor and
minority who participate in our armed
forces. There’s a federal statute on the
books, which says that if a college or
university does not provide space for
military recruiters or provide a ROTC
program for its students, it can lose
its federal funding. Will you vigorously
enforce that statute?
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
Yes, I will. You know, I think that
the young men and women who voluntarily
join our all-volunteer military are
among the best of our country. I want to
do everything I can as president to make
sure that they get the resources and the
help that they deserve. I want a new
twenty-first century GI Bill of Rights,
so that our young veterans can get the
money to go to college and to buy a home
and start a business.
And I’ve worked very
hard on the Senate Armed Services
Committee to, you know, try to make up
for some of the negligence that we’ve
seen from the Bush administration. You
know, Tim, the Bush administration sends
mixed messages. They want to recruit and
retain these young people to serve our
country, and then they have the Pentagon
trying to take away the signing bonuses
when a soldier gets wounded and ends up
in the hospital, something that, you
know, I’m working with a Republican
senator to try to make sure never can
happen again.
So I think we should
recognize that national service of all
kinds is honorable, and it’s essential
to the future of our country. I want to
expand civilian national service. But I
think that everyone should make
available an opportunity for a young man
or woman to be in ROTC, to be able to
join the military, and I’m going to do
everything I can to support the men and
women in the military and their
families.
TIM RUSSERT: Of
the top ten rated schools, Harvard,
Yale, Columbia, Stanford, they do not
have ROTC programs on campus. Should
they?
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON:
Well, there are ways they can work
out fulfilling that obligation. But they
should certainly not do anything that
either undermines or disrespects the
young men and women who wish to pursue a
military career.
TIM RUSSERT:
Senator Obama, same question. Will you
vigorously enforce a statute which says
colleges must allow military recruiters
on campus and provide ROTC programs?
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
Yes. One of the striking things, as
you travel around the country, you go
into rural communities and you see how
disproportionately they are carrying the
load in this war in Iraq, as well as
Afghanistan. And it is not fair.
Now, the volunteer army,
I think, is a way for us to maintain
excellence. And if we [are deploying our
military wisely, then a voluntary army
is sufficient, although I would call for
an increase in our force structure,
particularly around the Army and the
Marines, because I think that we’ve got
to put an end to people going on three,
four, five tours of duty, and the strain
on families is enormous. I meet them
every day.
But I think that the
obligation to serve exists for
everybody, and
that’s why I’ve put forward a] national
service program that is tied to my
tuition credit for students who want to
go to college. You get $4,000 every year
to help you go to college. In return,
you have to engage in some form of
national service. Military service has
to be an option. We have to have
civilian options, as well, not just the
Peace Corps, but one of the things that
we need desperately are people who are
in our foreign service who are speaking
foreign languages, can be more effective
in a lot of the work that’s going to be
required that may not be hand-to-hand
combat but is going to be just as
critical in ensuring our long-term
safety and security.
TIM RUSSERT: This
statute’s been on the book for some
time, Senator. Will you vigorously
enforce the statute to cut off federal
funding to a school that does not
provide military recruiters and a ROTC
program?
JOHN EDWARDS:
Yes, I will.
AMY GOODMAN: Congressmember Kucinich, would you?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Absolutely not. Our society is being
militarized. And part of the problem is NBC,
which is a partner defense contractor
through the ownership of General Electric of
both NBC and Raytheon. So NBC is really
promoting war here.
The truth of the matter is
that we need to make it possible for our
young people, if they desire to go in the
military, they can go to a recruiter’s
office, instead of telling campuses that if
you don’t let recruiters on campus, you’re
going to lose your money. That, to me, is
antithetical to a democratic society.
We should be finding ways
for young people to be able to go to college
tuition-free, and I have such a proposal
that would enable every person, every young
person who wants to go to a two- or
four-year public college or university go
tuition-free, by the government spending
money into circulation.
We need to reorient our
society. These kind of questions really are
intent on continuing the militarization of
our society and of telling young people in a
very covert—well, actually in a very overt
way, “Well, here are your options for a
career in the military,” which is an
honorable career, of course, but at the same
time, in our society, young people are
finding not only are they having trouble
being able to afford a college education,
but once they get that degree, what are
their options after that? I mean, our
economy has been a mess.
AMY GOODMAN: I want
to turn now to my colleague, NBC’s Brian
Williams.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Let’s talk for a moment about Yucca
Mountain. As sure as there’s somebody at
a roulette table not far from here
convinced that they’re one bet away from
winning it all back, every person who
comes here running for president
promises to end the notion of storing
nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. And the
people of Nevada have found it’s easier
to promise to end it than it is to end
it. Anyone willing to pledge here
tonight, beginning with you Senator
Obama, to kill the notion of Yucca
Mountain?
SEN. BARACK OBAMA:
I will end the notion of Yucca
Mountain, because it has not been based
on the sort of sound science that can
assure the people of Nevada that they’re
going to be safe. And that, I think, was
a mistake.
Now, you hate to see
billions of dollars having already been
spent on a mistake, but what I don’t
want to do is spend additional billions
of dollars and potentially create a
situation that is not safe for the
people of Nevada. So I’ve already—I’ve
been clear from the start that Yucca, I
think, was a misconceived project. We
are going to have to figure out how are
we storing nuclear waste. And what I
want to do is to get the best experts
around the table and make a
determination. What are our options
based on the best science available? And
I think there’s a solution that can be
had that’s good for the country, but
also good for the people of Nevada.
BRIAN WILLIAMS:
Thirty seconds.
AMY GOODMAN: Congressmember Kucinich, I’ll give you
the thirty seconds.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, I mean, think about this. None of
these candidates are talking about phasing
out the nuclear industry, which is the
underlying issue. Senator Edwards voted for
Yucca Mountain, and now he’s opposed to it.
We have a condition here where we have to
have a carbon-free and nuclear-free energy
policy. And until that happens, we’re going
to keep seeing the nuclear industry trying
to find place to put their waste, and Yucca
Mountain is something that they’re working
on.
Furthermore, here we are
again. NBC, owned by General Electric.
General Electric, the largest
manufacturer—one of the largest
manufacturers of nuclear power plants in the
world, has a vested interest in seeing
places around the country where nuclear
waste can be deposited. They are not in any
position to accept a policy that would call
for a nuclear-free energy policy that phases
out nuclear plants. We have dozens of
nuclear plants that operating long past the
time of licensure, places like Vermont
Yankee, where there are serious issues
relating to the integrity of the plant
itself.
It’s time that America
recognizes we have to move towards wind and
solar and sustainable source of energy.
Certainly, we have to move away from oil,
coal and nuclear. And nuclear energy is the
one that presents the greatest challenge,
because there are hidden costs with storage.
Taxpayers will get stuck with the long-term
costs. Ratepayers are being stuck with
immediately increased electric rates. It’s
not cheap. It doesn’t help our industries.
And, you know, NBC and General Electric
ought to have a conversation with itself
about the best approach for energy for our
nation.
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, I want to thank you
very much for, well, letting us hear and
watch what it would be like to have you
included in this debate. I’m only sorry it
didn’t happen last night on MSNBC. But I’m
glad that we could make it possible today.
As we wrap up, though, I
wanted to ask you two quick questions. One
is, while we know the role MSNBC and General
Electric’s NBC played in preventing you from
being a part of the debate—the last minute,
filed an appeal and was able to exclude you,
despite a lower court’s injunction that the
debate could not go on without you—what role
did these candidates who were at the
table—Edwards, Clinton and Obama—play in
excluding you?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, you know, I think there’s a real
question about why Senators Clinton and
Edwards didn’t say anything about the
exclusion. Senator Obama did make a
statement.
And furthermore, if, as
MSNBC maintained in court, this is a private
matter, here you have Democratic
presidential candidates participating in a,
quote, “private debate” where the public
interest could be ransacked, because General
Electric is involved in all kinds of
interests that are quite diverse from the
public interest.
So this then becomes a much
larger question—much larger than, you know,
my candidacy—about who’s structuring these
debates? In whose interests are they being
conducted? What about the questions, the way
they’re framed? Why are they continuing to
promote war? Why are these defense
contractors involved, as in General
Electric’s case? And GE owns Raytheon, GE
owns NBC. Defense contracting goes up as war
continues.
AMY GOODMAN: I’m
going to interrupt you for one last
question. Why are you calling for a recount
in New Hampshire?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Well, because of the disparities in the
reports on the day of the election that
Obama was going to win by thirteen points,
Senator Clinton wins by three. I want to see
if there’s—if the count there was
legitimate. Either the polls were horribly
off, or the election machinery is flawed.
And we’ll find out.
AMY GOODMAN: Will the
recount happen?
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Oh, yeah. It’s underway right now. You know,
our campaign put up $25,000 yesterday to get
started, and it is in process right now.
We’ll be glad to report back to you. This
is, again, a matter of whether the American
people can have confidence in the results of
an election. This isn’t about me, because—
AMY GOODMAN: We’re
going to have to leave it there.
REP. DENNIS KUCINICH:
Right.
AMY GOODMAN:
Congressmember Kucinich, thank you for
joining us. I know you’re racing off to the
Hill to challenge the Defense Authorization
Act.