Obama On Economic Crisis, Transition
Also Discusses National Security, Iraq, And His Cabinet In 60 Minutes Interview
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Play CBS Video Video Obama And The Presidency President-elect Barack Obama speaks with Steve Kroft about his thoughts and goals as our nation's next Commander-in-Chief.
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Video The Personal Transition The Obamas will soon be the youngest first family to move into the White House since the Kennedys nearly 50 years ago. Steve Kroft speaks with Barack and Michelle Obama about their personal transition.
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Video A Father's Promise President-elect Barack Obama spoke with Steve Kroft about a special promise he made 2 years ago to his young daughters.
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President-elect Barack Obama (CBS)
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Photo Essay Accepting The Mantle President-elect Barack Obama addresses the nation and the world after his victory.
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Interactive Election Day 2008 Images, results and reaction from the historic election.
Mr. Obama: You know, I have actually. There's a new book out about FDR's first 100 days and what you see in FDR that I hope my team can-- emulate, is not always getting it right, but projecting a sense of confidence, and a willingness to try things. And experiment in order to get people working again.
And I think that's what the American people expect. You know, they're not expecting miracles. I think if you talk to the average person right now that they would say, 'Well, look, you know well, we're having a tough time right now. We've had tough times before.' 'And you know, we don't expect a new president can snap his fingers and suddenly everything is gonna be okay. But what we do expect is that the guy is gonna be straight with us. We do expect that he's gonna be working really hard for us.'
'We do expect that he's gonna be thinking about ordinary Americans and not just the wealthy and the powerful. And we do expect that. if something doesn't work that they're gonna try something else until they find something that does.' And, you know, that's the kind of common sense approach that I want to take when I take office.
Kroft: There's been talk on Capitol Hill and a number of Democratic congressmen have proposed programs that are part of sort of a new New Deal. The possibility of reviving agencies like the Home Ownership Loan Corporation.
Mr. Obama: Two points I'd make on this. Number one, although there are some parallels to the problems that we're seeing now and what we say back in the '30s, no period is exactly the same. For us to simply recreate what existed back in the '30s in the 21st century, I think would be missing the boat. We've gotta come up with solutions that are true to our times and true to this moment. And that's gonna be our job. I think the basic principle that government has a role to play in kick starting an economy that has ground to a halt is sound.
I think our basic principle that this is a free market system and that that has worked for us, that it creates innovation and risk taking, I think that's a principle that we've gotta hold to as well. But what I don't wanna do is get bottled up in a lot of ideology and is this conservative or liberal. My interest is finding something that works.
And whether it's coming from FDR or it's coming from Ronald Reagan, if the idea is right for the times then we're gonna apply it. And things that don't work we're gonna get rid of.
Kroft: Are you gonna make a lot of speeches? Are you gonna talk a lot to the American people on television and radio?
Mr. Obama: You know, I'm not sure that the American people are looking for a lot of speeches. I think what they're looking for is action. But one of the things that I do think is important is to be able to explain to the American people what you're doing, and why you're doing it. That is something that I think every great president has been able to do. From FDR to Lincoln to John Kennedy to Eisenhower. I mean, I think that they were people who were able to say 'Here's the direction we're going. Here's why I think it's important. Here are the possible dangers or challenges. But ultimately, you know, this is gonna lead us to a better America.' And I want to make sure that I can recreate a bond of trust between the presidency and the public that I think has been lost.
The President-elect and Mrs. Obama have already been on a tour of their new home. In the next portion of the interview, they talk about the challenges and the excitement of moving into the most famous address in the world.
Produced by L. Franklin Devine, Michael Radutzky and Andy Court
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- I found Steve Kroft to be unprofessional in his interview with President Obama in one instance, his response to the president's breaking into laughter when talking about bailing out the auto companies and its unpopularity. He appeared to grow angry in response and, insultingly, asked the President if he were "punch drunk." I am a professional social worker now retired, with nearly 20 years' experience as an investigator for Child Protective Services in my home state of Texas. In that capacity I have interviewed literally thousands of people, children and adults, and never once found insulting the subject of the interview to be a productive interview technique. Mr. Kroft, I think, needs a refresher course in appropriate, non-arrogant, interviewing techniques. Perhaps his superiors can suggest some to him. I found President Obama's response to that one question to be rather odd, but otherwise harmless and found the bulk of the interview to be very informative. Mr. Kroft owes President Obama an apology for his rudeness.
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- Who is Obama''s eminence grise?
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- Steve Kroft, CBS News did not ask Obama how $150,000,000.00 donation from UAW to Obama%u2019s election
helped the big 3 auto industries to avoid their bankruptcy: The executives of 3 big auto industries have been
mismanaging their extreme resources last 30 years just like Obama had been taking
advantage of the honorable Federal Student Loan System till he decided to run for the presidency!
Neither Steve Kroft, CBS News did ask Obama how Obama%u2019s life time taking
advantage of the honorable Federal Student Loan System helped the executives of Fannie
Mae & Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns and AIG to avoid their taking advantage
of the Washington for the duration of their organizations!
Nor Steve Kroft, CBS News did remind Obama how %u201CThe drop hollows the stone,
not by its force, but by its frequency%u201D. - Reply to this comment
- Kill the bear market, invest in the future of energy, and help president-elect Obama push the Pickens Plan through congress!
We need American Energy Independence Now! - Reply to this comment
- i see mr. change is filling his cabinet with the same tired garbage that have destroyed our country. with a citizenry stupid and gullible enough to think he represented change we have no hope. have fun eating your ipods and flat screen tv''''s you idiots.
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Posted by jizzumjim at 10:00 AM : Nov 19, 2008
+ report abuse
Sorry, but the team that he is putting together came from the Clinton administration which is one of the better admins we had. It is also said that he is the most organized president-elect in history. Whether you agree or not, be it lack of experience or whatever he''s backing himself with the best professionals in the fields necessary to get this country back on track. - Reply to this comment
- People are more sick of what goes on in urban areas then they truly are racist. For example, In almost all urban school districts more money is spent per head on each child then in their nearby suburbs. The country has spent trillions on poverty and yet nothing seems to improve.
I submit that many people you think are racists are primarily just sick to death of the Urban areas in the country and the continued problems they have. I know I am.
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Posted by CPelzar at 03:52 PM : Nov 17, 2008
They may be getting more money per head in the urban schools, but they are not putting the money back into those schools. A lot of schools here in California are overcrowded and some don''t have enough books or desks to go around. It is ridiculous. Yeah, somebody is reaping the benefits, but it''s not the kids. - Reply to this comment
- Okay, for one, we have had nothing but white presidents and our world is not better for it. Obama is going to bring this country together under all Americans. He is going to change the way that this country deals with all Americans. And for those of you who want to talk about your forefathers and their vision for the U.S., their vision did not include all Americans, only white Americans. If Christianity was part of that vision, black people would not have been slaves. Let Obama get in the White House first. All of you who feel the need to accept what Al Qaeda has to say about him are the ones who do not want him to succeed. The GOP and its followers can overlook the mess that their white president has put us in, yet they have nothing but negativity for a black man, an American who hasn''t even began his term yet.
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- Flobby2,
It is not, as you say, "entirely inaccurate" to call Barack our first black President. Even if you consider him to be bi-racial (half-black, half-white), he is still part black. So, how could it be "entirely inaccurate" to say that he is our first black President? It would only be "entirely inaccuate" if he was not black at all!
Anyway, I find it interesting that people like you want to now try to distinguish between people that are "totally black (both parents are black)" and people who are "half black (one parent is black and the other parent is white)"! Before now (before Barack won the Presidency), most people considered anyone who is half-black and half-white to be "black". Now, all of a sudden, people want to make this "bi-racial" distinction!
He says that his race is "black"! And, that is good enough for me! Because, like Barack said, "Racist people don''t look at a bi-racial person on the street and say, "There goes a bi-racial person, they say, there goes a black person"! I agree with Barack! Why is it when it is looking at black people (including bi-racial people who are part-black) who have done something negative, people consider them to be totally black, but if a black person who is bi-racial has done something positive, they are consiered to be bi-racial? - Reply to this comment
- When millions of Americans as well as billions of people world-wide woke up the morning after Barack Obama was elected President, they probably expected the dawn of a new age. Sorry to disappoint all you Obama-kool-aid drinkers, but America''s enemies still hate us and do so regardless who occupies the White House.
This morning our friends from Al-Qaida posted a message on militant websites aimed at persuading Arabs and Muslims to not believe that Obama''s election will change U.S. policies. While I have sounded the alarm bell that an Obama Presidency will weaken America and be detrimental to the State of Israel, my argument that our enemies hate us because of our freedom and tolerance, regardless of our leadership and policies, stands proven.
If Islamofacists had any goal besides destroying America and the Western World, they surely would have embraced Obama''s opposition to the war, determination to remove our troops in Iraq and his sympathy for the Palestinians. Instead they decide to insult him with racial epithets, calling him a "House Slave" in Arabic and referring to him as a "House Negro" in the video subtitles.
NOTHING CHANGES, BUT YOUR AGE. - Reply to this comment
- jizzumjim: I concur. A sad country with their head so far up their sorry A-- it is almost funny.
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- Kill the bear market, invest in the future of energy, and help president-elect Obama push the Pickens Plan through congress!
We need American Energy Independence Now! - Reply to this comment
- (continued from previous post)
Well we all are witnessing the results of those misguided policies now. America no longer produces value-added goods, but imports them from abroad. The increasingly larger trade deficit means that wealth, along with jobs, is being continually drained out of the country. But how did we still manage to get by for so long? By continually borrowing and adding to the national debt.
The ONLY solution that works, that nobody dares mention, and that some immediately deride, is to PROTECT America''s industries. Other nations do it for theirs. It''s time for America to do the same, once again. It''s not just a matter of economics; it''s a matter of national security. - Reply to this comment
- The U.S. economic downturn can be directly traced back to globalization and free-trade policies. Prior to that, America was a self-sufficient, self-sustaining nation that produces ALL of its goods and exports a lot of it. Americans'' wages were multiples of those of other countries. Tariffs were used to prevent the "dumping" of cheap foreign products designed to damage the domestic manufacturing sector.
With the advent of globalization, what used to be called "dumping" became legal, decimating the domestic manufacturers and forcing them to outsource and move plants to other countries in order to survive. The American worker is being asked to "compete" against those in other countries working for a few dollars a day, with little or no labor laws and regulations. Guess what? There was no competition.
Proponents of globalization promised that new industries would emerge to replace old ones, and that new "innovations" would keep the American worker competitive. Well, that didn''t happen. They neglected to explain what those new industries might be, and even if they existed, why corporations wouldn''t just go ahead and have them produced in other countries anyway, since labor is still so much cheaper.
(continued) - Reply to this comment
- I am told by a reliable source that if Hillary Clinton is nominated to head Foggy Bottom, a strong experienced CEO is under consideration to be the Deputy Secretary of State. One name mentioned is Robert J Murray, currently head of the Center for Naval Analyses, a federally funded research thinktank. He was with Harvard University before and was Under Secretary of the Navy in the Carter administartion. He is said to be close to John Podesta and others in the Center for American Progress. Murray is considered a good people person with superb managerial skills.
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- To Steve Kroft,
I watched the 60 Minutes interview with Pres-Elect Obama - loved him but, you not so much!
I thought you were intentionally rude to ask if the dog & the mother-in-law were going to be moving into the White House! Luckily, Pres-Elect Obama put you in your place.
Hopefully, the last time Pres-Elect Obama grants you an interview!!
YesWeDid!!! - Reply to this comment
- I felt the interview showed the Obamas as real people. I enjoyed the part where they talked about his one bedroom Washington aprtment, he had as Senator. It was described as being lower than what his aides had. Or the car he took her out in that had a hole where you could watch the road. I had such a car when I was young. I really felt connected to them.
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- Steve Kroft skillfully opened the window to our soon-to-be First Family -- for all of us to see that Barack and Michelle Obama are smart, mature and caring. What great role models they are as committed spouses, loving parents, respectful in-laws, common sense leaders -- and of course, engaged and polished interviewees. I was the most touched by Barack''s awareness of what his mother-in-law was experiencing on election night as the results came in. Instead of being all caught up in his own celebration of knowing he was becoming the 44th president of the United States, he was aware of what it meant to his mother-in-law, who grew up in segregated Chicago, to now have her daughter become the First Lady of the United States. It wasn''t about him; it was about Mrs. Robinson and her daughter, Michelle Robinson Obama. Barack Obama is one sensitive, conscious, egoless man. Jane Iddings, blogger, BarackObamaRealMaturity.com and GrowUpNow.info
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- Like the interstate highway system...we should build a national passenger rail system. I don''t mean Amtrak but a dedicated set of rails used only for passenger trains. The federal government could build and maintain the tracks and signals and private rail companies could staff and operate the trains. Passenger Rail is better for the enviroment, is more reliable during storms and crisis, and would create alot of new jobs.
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- Well... lets see....
The People of the United States make the following decisions in undeniable majorities:
Democrats increase their lead in the House.
Democrats increase their lead in the Senate.
A new Democratic, liberal, half-black president is chosen.
Sounds to me like....
Rush Limbaugh, Hannity, Coulter and the other fascists are wrong and failed.
The Religious Reich is wrong and failed.
Republicans are wrong and failed.
Neocons are wrong and failed.
Hate is wrong and failed.
Poor bitter neocons, whining about their failure, day after day after day.
That about wraps it up. See you in four years - losers. - Reply to this comment
- This country is in deep trouble on so many levels, we need intelligent, pragmatic leadership to get us out of this quagmire. I am inspired and ecstatic about his approach. It''s a sign of his strength and confidence that he''s already reaching across party lines to put together the most effective team possible. As the holiday season approaches, let''s join Senator John McCain in not only congratulating President-elect Obama, but offering him our earnest effort to find ways to come together to address the many problems plaguing this troubled nation. Our collective enemy is this economy, poverty, poor education, the lack of health-care and, internatlionally, Al Qaeda, not our fellow Americans! Let''s unite to find the middle ground now essential to restore America''s dignity.
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