NBC's Gregory Dismisses Santorum Concerns Over Obama Second Term
In a hostile interview with Rick Santorum on Sunday's NBC Meet the
Press, moderator David Gregory attempted to paint the Republican
presidential candidate as some kind of paranoid conspiracy theorist
simply by voicing opposition to President Obama's reelection.
Gregory hyped recent comments by Santorum: "You've talked about
this in terms of why you believe the President is dangerous, that
re-electing the President would unmask some sort of hidden plan that he
has for a second term....What is that secret plan that your so worried
about? And is that not just hyperbole and demagoguery?"
Gregory
played a soundbite of Santorum's supposedly hyperbolic rhetoric in
response to Obama's contraception mandate: "I suspect that they will be
back down here rather shortly, but it's a lesson learned of what this
president would do if he's got another term and he doesn't have to worry
about re-election." Notice the terms "dangerous" or "secret plan" are
nowhere to be found in that statement.
In response to Gregory's own "hyperbole and demagoguery," Santorum
explained: "It's not secret at all....The President's agenda is very,
very clear, he believes, as someone who's smarter than everybody else,
that they should make decisions for you....government taking over
choices from people."
In his next question to Santorum, Gregory made this assertion: "I want
to stay on some of the social issues that have come, I think, to define
your campaign, that certainly give a lot of energy to your campaign and
to your supporters." After Gregory then asked about gay marriage,
Santorum corrected him:
Well, first off, it's not what's defining my campaign. I would say that
what's defining my campaign is going out and talking about liberty,
talking about economic growth, talking about getting manufacturing jobs
back here to this country, trying to grow this economy to make sure that
everybody in America can participate in it....So my campaign isn't
defined by social issues, I understand the media wants to focus that on
those issues, but I've been talking about the issues of economic growth,
I've been talking about opportunity for everybody, I've been talking
about freedom being at stake.
As evidence of Gregory's belief, nearly the entire interview centered
around him grilling Santorum on social issues, without a single economic
or foreign policy question. Minutes later, Gregory obnoxiously wondered if Santorum would allow working mothers to serve in his administration.
Here is a portion of Gregory's February 12 exchange with Santorum:
(...)
GREGORY: You talk about this in broader terms, as I brought up with Mr.
Lew, the idea that a lot of conservatives have, that this is beyond the
religious freedom issue, but this is what happens when government makes
health care decisions. That's your argument and the argument of others.
You've talked about this in terms of why you believe the President is
dangerous, that re-electing the President would unmask some sort of
hidden plan that he has for a second term. This is what you said
recently on Fox News.
SANTORUM: I suspect that they will be back down here rather shortly,
but it's a lesson learned of what this president would do if he's got
another term and he doesn't have to worry about re-election.
GREGORY: What is that secret plan that your so worried about? And is that not just hyperbole and demagoguery?
SANTORUM: It's not secret at all. I mean, the President went out and
promoted, at the time he was promoting ObamaCare, a program of cap and
trade, where he wants to control, and literally control people's ability
to use energy and charge you for that energy in a way that, again, that
the government decides the allocation of these resources. The
President's agenda is very, very clear, he believes, as someone who's
smarter than everybody else, that they should make decisions for you.
And that, whether it's health care, whether it's Dodd-Frank and having
this consumer protection board that's going to go out and tell people
what kind of loans they're going to get, who's going to qualify, who's
not, this government taking over choices from people.
Even if you look at the Medicare system, which we may be talking about,
I mean, the idea that, you know, Ron Wyden and Paul Ryan come together
and say, "Look, we're going to give Medicare recipients choices as to
what is best for them, and President Obama says, "Oh, you give people
choices, that's throwing people off a cliff, we need to make those
decisions for them, we're the ones who should decide what kind of health
care everybody should have. It is a top-down, that
government-knows-best attitude, and it's reaching more and more places
in peoples' lives.
GREGORY: I want to stay on some of the social issues that have come, I
think, to define your campaign, that certainly give a lot of energy to
your campaign and to your supporters. Let me ask you about gay marriage,
an issue you've talked a lot about, Proposition 8 out in California
became an issue this week, if the Supreme Court decided that gays and
lesbians had a constitutional right to marry. What would President
Santorum do? Would you respect that decision by the judiciary?
SANTORUM: Well, first off, it's not what's defining my campaign. I
would say that what's defining my campaign is going out and talking
about liberty, talking about economic growth, talking about getting
manufacturing jobs back here to this country, trying to grow this
economy to make sure that everybody in America can participate in it.
I, you know, went after, as you know, Governor Romney very hard for
this idea that he's not concerned about the very poor or the very rich.
I'm concerned about everybody. And if you look at the track record, it's
one that does reach down and makes sure that everybody has an
opportunity, whether it was the work that I did on welfare reform or the
work that I did on creating all sorts of, you know, opportunities for
people who are lower income, whether in my state or through economic,
you know, enterprise opportunities for lower income people. So my
campaign isn't defined by social issues, I understand the media wants to
focus that on those issues, but I've been talking about the issues of
economic growth, I've been talking about opportunity for everybody, I've
been talking about freedom being at stake.
(...)
-- Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Kyle Drennen on Twitter.