November 2, 2010 8:22 PM

Clinton: Don't Know Where Tea Party Stands

(CBS)  Former U.S. President Bill Clinton told CBS' "Face the Nation" Sunday that one thing bothering him about the Tea Party movement is that he can't figure out where they stand on issues.

"Do they want to repeal the financial oversight bill? Do they want to repeal rather than reform the health care thing? Do they really want to repeal the student loan reform bill when we've fallen from first to 12th in the world in people with college degrees and it's really important to the economy?" Clinton said.

"It's hard to know where they stand on these specific issues.

Clinton also said he's not sure if the Tea Party movement is "going to be a good thing for Democrats."

"The Tea Party insurrection, if you will, that you see in these Republican primaries reflects the feeling of a lot of Americans that they're getting the shaft," Clinton told CBS chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer.

Christine O'Donnell, the Sarah Palin-backed Tea Party darling, shocked the Republican party when she won the primary Tuesday in Delaware's Senate race. O'Donnell was set to appear on Sunday's Face the Nation but cancelled Saturday, saying she had scheduling conflicts.

O'Donnell Cancels "Face the Nation" Appearance
Christine O'Donnell: "I Dabbled Into Witchcraft"
Palin on GOP Leaders: "They're Not Likin' This"
Christine O'Donnell: A New Voice for Conservatives?
Christine O'Donnell Wins, and the GOP Loses
Christine O'Donnell: Attacks on My Finances Insult Voters
O'Donnell's Tempest in a Tea Party Pot

The cancellation followed the broadcast Friday night of "Real Time With Bill Maher," in which the comedian played an old clip of O'Donnell saying she once dabbled in witchcraft.

"I dabbled into witchcraft. I hung around people who were doing these things. I'm not making this stuff up. I know what they told me they do," O'Donnell said on the show.

"One of my first dates with a witch was on a Satanic altar, and I didn't know it. I mean, there's little blood there and stuff like that," O'Donnell said. "We went to a movie and then had a midnight picnic on a Satanic altar."

Schieffer said he emailed the campaign and asked if the clip was the reason that she decided to cancel the appearance. "We got back an email that said no, that is not the reason, we weren't aware that he had released this tape until yesterday afternoon," Schieffer said. "As for dabbling in witch craft, whatever that is, her campaign spokesman said campaigns about what she did as a teen is hardly a worry to her or the people of Delaware."

"I've had a few voodoo dolls or two of some of the candidates I wanted to strangle, to stick needles in, in the course of a very long career but never witchcraft," Republican strategist Ed Rollins said.

"Not many people knew who she was prior to last week. This is kind of the first impressions people are going to get. Right now this campaign is about her. Unless she gets her ship righted, no matter how strong the Tea Party is or how much move for change, at the end of the day people in Delaware, a small state, are going to focus on her, her past statements, what she is saying now. And this is not a good start," Rollins said.

But Michael Gerson, a columnist for The Washington Post, said the witchcraft comments might not really cause problems for O'Donnell.

"I think though that her strongest supporters are not necessarily going to be turned off by this. She talks about having a religious conversion in college, which forgives a multitude of sins for many of her strongest supporters," Gerson said.

Gerson said the episode adds an aura of oddness to O'Donnell, but Rollins thinks the Tea Party should be taken seriously. "They have created a movement. They basically have become a very significant force. I think Republicans have to deal with them. And they should deal with them in a positive way. They should listen to them," Rollins said.

The former president, whose Clinton Global Initiative conference of world leaders is meeting this week, outlined another aspect of the Tea Party movement that bothered him.

"According to the profiles and the studies that have been done, it's being bankrolled by people who want to weaken the government so that there will be even more unaccounted-for private concentration of power," Clinton said.

One of the profiles he's referring is New Yorker writer Jane Mayer's look at David and Charles Koch, billionaire brothers and lifelong libertarians who own Koch Industries. Mayer presents evidence that the Kochs have quietly given more than $100 million to right-wing causes, and have deep financial ties with the Tea Party movement.

Clinton said the Tea Party's wins show Americans' resentment. Banks and other institutions and companies that were responsible for the financial meltdown are prosperous once again, but ordinary people are not better off, he said.

"I don't know where they stand, but I get why they're popular," Clinton said.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 28 Comments
by Retired321 September 26, 2010 11:31 AM EDT
Neither legacy politicians nor symbionic media get it. The Tea Party is a movement not a third political party. It is about restoring "We the People" as the focus of government, not the Democrat nor the Republican agenda. It is about elected officials representing the will of the people from the districts or states elected. It is not about what the President wants. It is about restoring the money removed from Social Security, military acess to free health and dental care as promised - not Tricare, and a balanced federak budget. How hard is this to understand?
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by KochIndustries September 20, 2010 2:14 PM EDT
The story quoted here is missing some facts from Koch Industries. Please visit www.kochfacts.com to learn more.
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by AnonymousIV September 19, 2010 11:35 PM EDT
I like you Bill Clinton, to be impeached and remain in office is awesome. By the way, you signed my military retirement papers. I'll cherish it forever.
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by AnonymousIV September 19, 2010 11:23 PM EDT
People need to understand the political left is about being human, not using others for money.
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by rwsmith29456 September 19, 2010 10:59 PM EDT
I'm not a Tea Partyer but if you don't know where the T.P. stands you should ask the T.P., not Hilary Clinton.
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by AnonymousIV September 19, 2010 10:41 PM EDT
Sarah Palin, I'm sick of you using my abortion as your political stance. Let's talk you awhile. How many Kotex did you use with each of your 5 children? Did they cut you down there or did the children just slip out? Did you breastfeed or bottle feed? Did you use drugs or was each child natural? How many days did nurses cater to you with each child? Any stitches at all? Were forceps used? Did you save the cord for future use in case of illness. What color were the hair eyes and how much did they weigh? Or is all that none of my business?
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by ProsperityBeginsIn2012 September 19, 2010 10:54 PM EDT
If you're anonymous then how did she knows it was you?
And your unusual over the top interests with her is very creepy.
by rwsmith29456 September 19, 2010 11:02 PM EDT
I think 'Anonymus' has some internal anger issues that need to be resolved.
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by jgg000101 September 19, 2010 10:30 PM EDT
hey bill, you'll see them standing on line at the voting booths.
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by saturn05 September 19, 2010 11:43 PM EDT
Heaven help us!
by rykatspop September 19, 2010 8:52 PM EDT
The master of spin speaks again. It's all a farce on the American voter. Why? How many ads have we seen with Billy and Georgie paling around to raise money for some international crisis? Like a couple of old friends. The phony baloney PR tells everyone very clearly that the elite among us live very differently from the rest of us. That's what WE need to figure out and change!

I watched one of those NBC Dateline shows about a young guy getting carjacked and murdered (bullet in the back of the head) by a couple of teen punks. They found his rotting body in a burnt out house of Detroit. The real shocker?!! the segment showed hundreds of blocks of thousands of homes abandoned, burned to cinders by drug dealers and gangs. Detroit is worse than some third world nations we toss away billions of dollars to.

My point? Neither party cares about Americans when you the enormous squalor and rot occurring in major cities across America. We are being played for fools. Our political parties and leaders have abandoned us, ignored their obligations to keep America(ns) prosperous! Clinton and Bush are a part of what is wrong in America today. We are in trouble people when our priorities stray far from home. It's more than just the economy and some nut job being elected to the house--even though she has some weird outlook about masturbation, sex, whatever. Jesus, we are waaaay off the mark.

The Detroit segment makes me forget all about Palin and Pelosi. They are just a part of the joke being played on all of us.
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by saturn05 September 19, 2010 7:45 PM EDT
Know one can tell what the Tea Part stands for because they stand for nothing. They talk in circles and they want back America. Well they never had it, so how can they get it back. They kind of remind me of a kindler, gentler KKK. The Tea Party knows how not to use the offensive language, but they give me the willies just like the KKK did. They want what is best for their group and no one else and we are taking America back. Back from who exactly?
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by tsigili September 19, 2010 7:08 PM EDT
The wealthy want smaller government. Under Obama, the only job growth in this country has been in government. That leads to dictatorship, and the Dems have been behaving in a very dictatorial manner.
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