Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Obama in Command: The Rolling Stone Interview

By Jann S. Wenner
Sep 28, 2010 7:00 AM EDT

The following is an article from the October 15, 2010 issue of
Rolling Stone.

We arrived at the southwest gate of the white house a little after one o'clock on the afternoon of September 17th. It was a warm fall day, but the capital felt quiet and half-empty, as it does on Fridays at the end of summer, with Congress still in recess. Rolling Stone had interviewed Barack Obama twice before, both times aboard his campaign plane — first in June 2008, a few days after he won the Democratic nomination, and again that October, a month before his election. This time executive editor Eric Bates and I sat down with the president in the Oval Office, flanked by busts of Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. The conversation stretched on for nearly an hour and a quarter. The president began by complimenting my multi-colored striped socks. "If I wasn't president," he laughed, "I could wear socks like that." ...

The President answered these questions, among others:

When you came into office, you felt you would be able to work with the other side. When did you realize that the Republicans had abandoned any real effort to work with you and create bipartisan policy?

How do you feel about the fact that day after day, there's this really destructive attack on whatever you propose? Does that bother you? Has it shocked you?

What do you think the Republican Party stands for today?

What do you think of the Tea Party and the people behind it?

What do you think of Fox News? Do you think it's a good institution for America and for democracy?

More questions than these were asked during the interview -- it runs to seven pages! -- and The President answered all of them thoughtfully.

Click the post's title to read Rolling Stone's entire article.

1 comment:

Joie Vouet said...

TPM has this to say about the interview:

Progressives itching to hear President Obama call out the tea party, take on Fox News and call on his liberal base to step up to the plate in November should head to newsstands and pick up the Oct. 15 issue of Rolling Stone (or just click here). Progressives who want to quibble with Obama and listen to him explain why LGBT rights haven't found their way into the U.S. military yet, why Gitmo's still open and why they have no public health insurance option should pick up a copy, too. ...