Well, that was an interesting bit of impromptu speaching. I can't believe how many political phrases there are that I'm sick of hearing. I urge anyone who wants to know what's going on watch that, especially the question and answer session. Obama was pretty obviously impatient by the end; it comes through in his master-craft wordmincing sometimes. I'll try to write some of this down, and bear in mind all of this is not my opinion or judgment, this is just how I'm adding his words up over the whole session.
Obama's Claims
- "We" were within $100billion worth of negotiation to an agreement, including about $2trillion in discretionary and military cuts, $600billion in entitlement adjustments (however you want to read that), and $1.2trillion in revenue increases through elimination of credits, after the six-person bipartisan committee recommended $2trillion in revenue.
- "I" was willing to accept a "bad" deal, with 3 or 4 or 5 to 1 spending cuts versus revenue increases, because I'm willing to anger the people who elected me and my party because I want this done.
- "I" made this abundantly clear.
Obama's Demands
- John Boehner, Nanci Pelosi, Harry Reid, and Mitch McConnell must show up at his office tomorrow morning, and come up with some kind of preliminary plan by Monday, so they'll have something to tell the stockmarket before the world starts fleeing treasury bonds.
- The debt ceiling increase must be large enough to last through the next election, because he will not accept having this argument again, as an election issue as McConnell wanted.
- If McConnell's plan from a week ago, to use some legislative voodoo to vote against it themselves and leave the "responsibility" to him is fine.
- That the press (i.e. the people in the room), not talk about this as a "food fight".
The Presidential Question you're going to hear over and over
- Republicans, are you capable of saying 'yes' to anything?
Obama is physically incapable of directly insulting people, but he was using every linguistic maneuver he could think of to insult John Boehner, paint him as a slave to a Republican House leadership fight with a congress of people who don't know how government works (still his implications here, he's pretty easy to read when you learn how), and brand the Republican party as the part of intractable rich people (that corporate jet tax-break continues to be a debate goldmine). His little impassioned speech at the end is worth a watch in itself, for stagecraft if nothing else.