Gingrich: Clinton’s DNC speech ‘actually a condemnation’ of Obama– – What?
Former Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich on Sunday asserted that former President Bill Clinton’s Democratic National Convention speech highlighting Barack Obama’s accomplishments was “actually a condemnation” of the current president.
“I
actually thought parts of the Clinton speech were eerily anti-Obama,”
Gingrich told Candy Crowley during an interview on CNN. “I mean, here’s
Clinton saying, ‘I reformed welfare because I worked with Republicans,
you didn’t, Mr. Obama.’ Think about it. ‘I had the longest period of
economic growth in history, you didn’t, Mr. Obama. I got to four
balanced budgets by working with Republicans, you didn’t, Mr. Obama.’”
“You
can take his speech, spin it not very much, and it’s actually a
condemnation of the fact that Obama learned nothing — and Bob Woodward’s
new book indicates he learned nothing — out of the 2010 election,” the
former House Speaker explained, adding that Obama’s bounce in the polls
after the Democratic Convention was “80 percent Bill Clinton.”
“Clinton
is a very popular figure for a very practical reason: the economy
worked,” Gingrich noted. “You know, you look back on that and you think —
I think what it actually does is it shrinks Obama. I mean, you have a
real president and then you have this guy who’s a pretender.”
Watch this video from CNN’s State of the Union via Talking Points Memo, broadcast Sept. 9, 2012.
Read More: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/09/09/gingrich-cli...
- ken 2012/09/09 15:49:30
+1I agree. The first half of the speech he said many of the things his party expected him to say, but if you read between the lines, the second half of the speech was about the failure of this president to make any progress on the promises he made in the first campaign and his speeches since becoming president.reply















