Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obama. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Proof That Barack And Michelle Obama Have Always Been A Fantastic Looking Couple

Get ready for a presidential cute overload.






President Obama may have a country to run, but that doesn't mean he's above spreading some Valentine's Day love. (See how that rhymed?)

Obama posted this black and white photo of he and Michelle Obama to his Facebook with the message, "Hey, Michelle Obama: Happy Valentine's Day."























Source: @BarackObama











Awww!

As a related side note: This photo may be just the boost that faded jeans need to make their glorious comeback.

Watch President Obama’s Google+ Hangout Starting At 4:50pm ET

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President Obama will be holding a townhall follow-up to his State of the Union speech on Google+ at 4:50pm ET today. We’ll be covering the speech in separate posts. Readers are invited to watch the “Hangout” live in the YouTube video below:






Saturday, September 8, 2012

Fall's must-see political TV: Obama-Romney debates

WASHINGTON—Finally, the fall season offers the matchup sure to attract the biggest audience of the campaign: President Barack Obama goes one-on-one with Republican rival Mitt Romney in three prime-time debates.

Typically the top political draw in the final sprint to Election Day, the debates assume outsized importance this year with the race a dead heat. The two polished candidates will have their sound bites and rhetoric down cold so any slip or inadvertent move—like President George H.W. Bush's exasperated glance at his watch or Democrat Al Gore's repeated sighing—could roil the campaign for days and linger in voters' mind until Nov. 6.

No wonder Romney spent days this past week holed up at the Vermont estate of former Massachusetts Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey for debate practice sessions with Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, who played the role of Obama. The president, for his part, has had one practice session with Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, the Democrats' stand-in for Romney, and is certain to have several more before the first debate Oct. 3 in Denver.

The second debate, a town hall-style session, is Oct. 16 in Hempstead, N.Y. The final debate, on foreign policy, is Oct. 22 in Boca Raton, Fla. GOP running mate Paul Ryan and Vice President Joe Biden have one debate, Oct. 11 in Danville, Ky.

Incumbents usually are at a disadvantage, defending a record against a challenger critiquing four years of work. Obama will be trying to avoid the fate

Friday, September 7, 2012

Bill Clinton

CHARLOTTE — Former president Bill Clinton delivered a spirited defense of President Obama’s handling of the nation’s struggling economy here Wednesday night, criticizing the agenda and philosophy of Mitt Romney and accusing the Republican Party of ideological rigidity and an unwillingness to compromise.

In a speech formally nominating Obama for a second term, Clinton argued that the president has spent the past four years putting in place policies that will lead to a more vibrant and balanced economy and asserted that, despite problems, Americans are “clearly better off” than they were when the president was sworn into office

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Fact check: Opening night of the DNC

CHARLOTTE, NC - We heard a number of dubious or misleading claims on the first night of the Democratic National Convention: •The keynote speaker and others claimed the Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, would raise taxes on the "middle class ...

Friday, May 25, 2012

President Obama Accuses Mitt Romney of ‘Cow-Pie Distortion’ on Debt, Deficits

 

DES MOINES, Iowa –  On his first visit back to the Iowa state fairgrounds since the 2008 campaign, President Obama tonight used a grassroots rally to launch sharp new attacks against rival Mitt Romney over the debt and deficit and vigorously defend his own handling of the same. The venue holds symbolic value for Democrats because it was here, in August that Romney made his now-famous declaration that “corporations are people, my friend.” Obama thrust the Republican candidate’s unflattering moment front and center early on. “The worldview that Gov. Romney gained from his experience as a financial CEO explains something. It explains why the last time he visited these same fairgrounds, he famously declared ‘corporations are people,’” Obama said, drawing loud boos from the crowd of 2,500. “That’s what he said, that’s what he called them,” Obama added. “It also explains why, when a woman right here in Iowa shared a story of her financial struggles, he gave her an answer out of an economics textbook.  He said, ‘Our productivity equals our income.’  Let me tell you something: We believe in the profit motive. We believe that risk-takers and investors should be rewarded. That’s what makes our economy so dynamic. But we also believe that everybody should have opportunity.” Ahead of the event, Obama’s re-election campaign circulated a video of Romney’s Iowa State Fair remarks, all aimed at bolstering their claim that the former private equity executive was a wealth-seeker who put investors’ interests ahead of the middle class.   Several of the campaign’s major, multi-state TV ad buys – each of which have included Iowa – have touched on the same theme. Obama offered his most spirited attacks on Romney over his claims about the burgeoning federal debt and record-high deficits that have been incurred over the past three and a half years. “They’ve got the nerve to go around saying that they’re somehow going to bring down the deficit,” he said, referring to Romney’s budget blueprint. “Economists who’ve looked at his plan say it would swell our deficits by trillions of dollars, even with the drastic cuts he’s called for [on] things like education, agriculture and Medicaid. “He promises to do that on day one,” Obama added, referring to the new Romney TV ad by the same name.  “We don’t need that. That’s going backwards. We’re going forwards.”  “Forward” is Obama’s re-election campaign slogan. Romney, on his most recent visit to Des Moines earlier this month, argued that Obama has presided over a “prairie fire of debt,” and told voters, “Every day we fail to act we feed that fire with our own lack of resolve.” His campaign and the Republican National Committee have also stressed that during Obama’s first term, $5 trillion was added to the debt, which now exceeds $15.6 trillion. “A president who broke his promise to cut the deficit in half by the end of his first term has no standing when it comes to fiscal responsibility. By the end of this year, President Obama will have presided over a record-shattering four consecutive trillion-dollar deficits and added an historic amount to our national debt,” said Romney spokesman Ryan Williams. “When you listen to President Obama’s campaign speeches, it’s as if he’s forgotten that he’s been president for nearly four years and has a record to defend. President Obama has proven beyond all doubt that he is not serious about fixing our country’s spending problem.” Offering a rebuttal tonight, Obama said that his administration has taken fiscal issues seriously, attributing high deficits to the “depth of the recession.” He said Romney’s claims were divorced from reality. “I know Gov. Romney came to Des Moines last week worried about a ‘prairie fire of debt.’ That’s what he said: ‘Prairie fire,’” Obama said. “But, you know, he left out some facts. His speech was more like a cow-pie distortion.” “I don’t know whose record he twisted the most, mine or his,” he added. Obama argued that the pace of federal government spending during his tenure has been the slowest of any president in 60 years. “By the way, it’s like the Republicans run up the tab and then we’re sitting there and they’ve left the restaurant,” he said. “Why did you order all those steaks and martinis?” The president said Romney’s budget – which includes new tax cuts for wealthier Americans – would not be the deficit slayer he claims it would be. “Oh, by the way, something else he hasn’t told you is how he’d pay for a new $5 trillion tax cut,” Obama said.  “That’s like trying to put out a prairie fire with some gasoline.” Obama claims his plan would cut the deficit by $4 trillion over 10 years through a combination of spending cuts and tax hikes. SHOWS: World News