|
Edited on Mon Aug-29-05 06:58 AM by karynnj
Biden has been saying not enough troops were trained. On Yesterday's Stephanopolis show, Biden was visibly annoyed that he was asked to answer Hart (there was contempt in his voice when he said so.) His answer was that he has had a plan and referred to a Brookings speech. He then mentioned random things he was speaking out on. I don't think he mentioned permanent bases.
He did not mention any other Democrat - A great answer would have been one that blew away the question - the premise that the Democrats don't have a plan is bogus - Bush never articulated a plan, Kerry did. Since the election, no one Democrat speaks for the party, but many leaders have suggested plans.
What he could have said: Kerry articulated a 4 point plan last year that was designed so that we might be starting to leave now. He (Biden) and Clark were advisers to Kerry during the campaign and though both would have tweaked the plan a bit in different ways, the three men were more in agreement than not. As the situation worsened this year, each of the three has articulated a revised plan to deal with the greater problems. He could then mention, saying he disagreed, that Feingold was in basic agreement but felt the addition of target dates would create more pressure to succeed. Most importantly,he should have stated his plan's basic parts - listing the elements as simply as Kerry did - counting off 4 points.
An answer like this would: -Actually GIVE THE OUTLINES OF A PLAN - whining in a snippy way that Hart didn't read his Brookings speech, doesn't tell listeners the plan. -Counter right up front that the Democrats have no plan and turn it into demanding the press ask for a REPUBLICAN plan. -Emphasize that a large group of Democrats agree on more than they disagree on. If he's auditioning to be the candidate, crediting others is important. (A simple short comment, like those made by Kerry and Kennedy respectively when Russert tried to suggest they were in disagreement would work.)
Observations: - He was far less logical and clear than Kerry and being a straight talker was suppose to be his strong suit. - His egotism precluded complimenting the other Democrats. His disdain of Hart could have been replaced by mentioning that while Hart was one of the first to warn on terrorism in his Jan 2001 report, he was wrong that no one has articulated plans - maybe because they have gotten little press. -Personality - it came across to me as petulant that he was almost contemptuous of Hart not knowing or acknowledging the greatness of his Brookings speech. How arrogant. He and Hart both ran in 1988 - is there bad blood?
|