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November 16, 2009 7:42 AM

Schieffer on Palin: No Future in Politics

(AP Photo/Al Grillo)
Before Sarah Palin's highly-anticipated book, "Going Rogue," goes on sale this week, it has already generated controversy, skepticism and blowback.

"This is Sarah Palin's turn to get even, as it were," said CBS News chief Washington correspondent and host of "Face the Nation" Bob Schieffer.

"She came under this intense criticism all during the campaign and now she's giving her version of why she didn't succeed as a candidate."

But Schieffer, speaking on "The Early Show" Monday, said he does not think her strategy will work. "It's kind of like a baseball player going into a slump and blaming the manager or blaming the bat boy or blaming the fans or something. You know, it makes for provocative reading, I think she'll sell a lot of books, but I don't think it's going to help re-establish her as a political candidate."

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Tags:
sarah palin ,
going rogue ,
GOP ,
republican ,
bob schieffer ,
early show ,
harry smith
Topics:
Sarah Palin
November 3, 2009 7:45 AM

Schieffer: Hard Right Driving the GOP Train

While some analysts may look at today's off-year elections as a measure of President Obama's ability to influence voters and push through his agenda, CBS News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer believes the real significance of the outcomes of today's races will be a measure of divisions within the Republican Party.

He says todays races offer "a snapshot of where the Republican Party is right now. The Republican Party right now is still split. And I think right now it's the conservatives who kind of have the juice."

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Tags:
Bob Schieffer ,
Republicans ,
Virginia Governor ,
New Jersey Governor ,
NY-23
Topics:
2009 Elections
October 9, 2009 9:40 AM

Schieffer: Obama's Nobel Win May Widen Political Chasm

Count "Face the Nation" host Bob Schieffer among those shocked by President Barack Obama's surprise win of the Nobel Peace Prize.


"My first reaction was 'What?' I don't think anybody expected this," Schieffer told "Early Show" co-anchor Maggie Rodriguez Friday.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee cited Mr. Obama's "extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples" as the basis for the award, but Schieffer thinks it might have a lot to do with Mr. Obama's predecessor.

"President Bush was very unpopular in Europe and it is almost as if this is more of a comment on the previous administration than it is on the new one."

Schieffer said the prize may also hurt the president domestically. In the first nine months of Mr. Obama's term, his political foes have criticized the president's conciliatory tone in international forums.

"You have to wonder, is this going to widen the partisan divide rather than bring people together."

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Tags:
Barack Obama ,
Nobel Peace Prize ,
Bob Schieffer
Topics:
Obama
September 29, 2009 7:35 AM

Schieffer: Obama and the 2016 Olympics Fray

(AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
The tactic worked for Tony Blair and Vladimir Putin: a leader making a high-profile bid to host an Olympic Games. Now President Barack Obama is throwing his weight towards Chicago's bid to host the 2016 Summer Games.

But given all that is on the president's plate — health care reform, Iran's nuclear program, the Afghan battle front, climate change legislation, and a struggling economy — is Mr. Obama in danger of spreading himself too thin by spending time on wooing the Olympiad to the shores of Lake Michigan?

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Tags:
Bob Schieffer ,
Obama ,
Chicago ,
Olympics 2016 ,
IOC ,
Olympic Bid
Topics:
Barack Obama
September 10, 2009 12:15 AM

Was Obama Clear on the Public Option?

In his prime time address to a joint session of Congress, President Obama offered support for the public option, but not as strongly as some liberal supporters may have hoped for.

In discussing the public option, Mr. Obama began by saying this: "An additional step we can take to keep insurance companies honest is by making a not-for-profit public option available in the insurance exchange."

Mr. Obama also acknowledged opposition to the public option and tried to dispel myths about it. He said it would only be an option for those who don't have insurance, that no one would be forced to choose it and that it would have to be "self-sufficient" via funding from premiums.

"By avoiding some of the overhead that gets eaten up at private companies by profits and excessive administrative costs and executive salaries, it could provide a good deal for consumers, and would also keep pressure on private insurers to keep their policies affordable and treat their customers better, the same way public colleges and universities provide additional choice and competition to students without in any way inhibiting a vibrant system of private colleges and universities," he added.

The president also pointed out that polls, such as ones conducted by CBS News, show public support for it.

But then the president started to more directly engage each side of the debate over the public option.

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Tags:
Barack Obama ,
Congress ,
Bob Schieffer
Topics:
Health Care
September 7, 2009 9:06 AM

Schieffer: Do-or-Die Week on Health Reform

(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The coming week may represent a tipping point for the Obama administration's moving forward its health care agenda on its own terms.

As the president prepares for a major address to Congress Wednesday in support of his reform plans, President Obama has faced stiff challenges, from the raucous public debates at town hall meetings to Republican (and some Democratic) legislators critical of government control over health care coverage.

When asked on CBS' "The Early Show" about the president's prospects, CBS News Chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer said that the administration has to reclaim the issue of health care from its opponents.

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Tags:
early show ,
obama ,
health care reform ,
harry smith ,
bob schieffer
Topics:
Health Care
September 4, 2009 8:17 PM

Schieffer on Obama's School Speech

President Barack Obama plans to make a televised speech to America's school children next Tuesday about the importance of education and staying in school. But some critics believe the president will use that speech to promote his political agenda and some school officials said today they will not let students watch it. In Fort Worth, Texas, about a third of schools will not show it. Albuquerque, N.M., schools will let students opt out of watching and in Green Bay, Wis., they'll record the speech and let teachers decide later if it's appropriate.

CBS News correspondent Jeff Glor talked with CBS News chief Washington correspondent and host of "Face the Nation" Bob Schieffer about the issue.

Glor: We should mention other presidents, including Ronald Reagan and the first president Bush had delivered similar speeches to students. Why is this speech in particular causing such a controversy?

Schieffer: Well, it is really stirred up a lot of people out there. I think some of it is genuine. I think there are people now who are frustrated, they're worried about the economy, they're worried about their jobs. But in today's world, the world of the Internet, when one person is frustrated, another person who shares that frustration soon finds out about it and they connect up. And then when you have these radio talk show hosts who fan the flames of these things, you have these instant firestorms of protests that blow up, as this one has blown up.

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Tags:
barack obama ,
bob schieffer ,
health care ,
school
Topics:
Barack Obama
September 4, 2009 1:12 PM

Unplugged: Elmo's Special Invitation for Bob Schieffer


CBS News' Bob Schieffer has interviewed Washington power players for decades...but today on "Washington Unplugged" he got a special invitation from Sesame Street's furry red puppet Elmo.

Schieffer admitted that because he is a "cynical Washington reporter" he came to the interview with a "secret agenda."

After showing a picture of a young Walter Cronkite with puppet Charlemagne the Lion, Schieffer asked Elmo, "could you come and be my co-anchor? I think it would be great for the ratings."

"Only if Mr. Bob comes to Sesame Street too," Elmo slipped in. It was an offer Schieffer could not resist. "It's a deal," he said.

The Sesame Street celebrity was in Washington this week to join the Department of Health and Human Services in teaching school children how to avoid the H1N1 virus, as well as to promote a PBS program which helps children understand how to sacrifice in tough economic times. (The prime time program, "Families Stand Together: Feeling Secure in Tough Times," airs September 9th on PBS.)

Watch the interview above. And click here to watch for the rest of today's show, which includes interviews with former Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge and Politico's Mike Allen. "Washington Unplugged" appears live on CBSNews.com each weekday at 12:30 p.m. ET. Click here to check out previous episodes.
Tags:
Elmo ,
Bob Schieffer ,
Washington Unplugged
Topics:
Washington Unplugged
September 3, 2009 9:34 AM

Schieffer: Obama "Has to Get Specific"

President Obama is going to try to take back control of the health care debate next Wednesday night with a major address to a joint session of Congress. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer was on "The Early Show" this morning to explain why the president feels he had to give the speech and what he hopes to accomplish.

"Here's what's going on. When Hillary Clinton was the first lady under her husband, Bill Clinton, she designed with some experts a plan for universal health care coverage, they did it in secret, they gave it to the Congress, and it dropped like a stone. Congress wanted nothing to do with it," Schieffer said. "It may well be that the Obama people learned the lessons of that all too well. So the president did not get specific. He just laid down general principles about what he said he wanted to see. But Congress never really got details on what he was prepared to go to the mat for."

Schieffer said Mr. Obama now "has to get specific" and tell Congress "exactly what he's for and what he's prepared to back them on."

"When you're asking the Congress to vote for something that probably is going to include tax increases of one kind or another, they have to know, is the president, especially the ones in their own party… going to be with them on that to the end? Because no member of Congress wants to make a controversial vote like that only to find out later that the limb they were on was sawed off behind them by the president himself," he added.

Above you can watch the full analysis from Schieffer, along with a report from CBS News senior White House correspondent Bill Plante, on "The Early Show."

Liberal Groups Make Final Push for Public Option

CBSNews.com Special Report: Health Care
Tags:
Barack Obama ,
Bob Schieffer
Topics:
Health Care
August 28, 2009 3:04 PM

Unplugged: Politics of Massachusetts' Senate Seat

On "Washington Unplugged" Friday, partisan pundits debated whether Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, a Democrat, should be allowed to appoint an interim senator to replace Ted Kennedy after the law was changed in 2004 to keep then governor Mitt Romney, a Republican, from replacing John Kerry if he won the presidency.

As Americans mourn the death of Kennedy, Republicans have argued that the state Democrats are being hypocritical - changing the law according to party politics.

Democratic strategist Jennifer Palmieri admitted she "think[s] its a little but embarrassing for the Democrats."

She then said that Massachusetts voters "probably want" a representative during key Senate votes this Fall.

Doug Heye, a Republican strategist admitted that Kennedy's plea to amend the law and allow Patrick to appoint an interim senator was likely going to happen.

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Tags:
Washington Unplugged ,
Bob Schieffer ,
Ted Kennedy
Topics:
Washington Unplugged

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