red states rule
12-10-2010, 07:09 PM
Is Obama so desperate and in over his head he has bring Bill in to try and save the day?
Now, will the kook left now turn on Bill as they have on the Bamster?
Anyone walking into the middle of the news conference Friday afternoon at the White House would be forgiven for wondering whether Bill Clinton was back for a command performance as leader of the free world.
Clinton -- who for the record has been out of the president's office for a decade -- stood in front of the White House logo and took questions from reporters as if he hadn't missed a beat. But this time, he was selling the policies of his successor.
Obama, after meeting with Clinton, brought him back onto center stage in a surprise appearance to endorse the tax deal Obama has struck with Republicans. But it remains to be seen whether even Clinton has the power to quell a revolt brewing on the left.
Yet Clinton seemed like the perfect choice to try to pacify liberals angry over a Democratic president tacking to his center. Clinton, after all, popularized "triangulating" in the 90's and was credited for overseeing a decade of prosperity and peace in country.
"I don't believe there is a better deal out there," Clinton told reporters, who called him "Mr. President."
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/12/10/facing-anger-left-obama-meet-clinton/
Now, will the kook left now turn on Bill as they have on the Bamster?
Anyone walking into the middle of the news conference Friday afternoon at the White House would be forgiven for wondering whether Bill Clinton was back for a command performance as leader of the free world.
Clinton -- who for the record has been out of the president's office for a decade -- stood in front of the White House logo and took questions from reporters as if he hadn't missed a beat. But this time, he was selling the policies of his successor.
Obama, after meeting with Clinton, brought him back onto center stage in a surprise appearance to endorse the tax deal Obama has struck with Republicans. But it remains to be seen whether even Clinton has the power to quell a revolt brewing on the left.
Yet Clinton seemed like the perfect choice to try to pacify liberals angry over a Democratic president tacking to his center. Clinton, after all, popularized "triangulating" in the 90's and was credited for overseeing a decade of prosperity and peace in country.
"I don't believe there is a better deal out there," Clinton told reporters, who called him "Mr. President."
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/12/10/facing-anger-left-obama-meet-clinton/