NBC Can't Wait for Hillary in 2016: 'Can You Think of a More Qualified Human Being?'
During a discussion on Monday, NBC's Today show crew could
barely contain their enthusiasm at the prospect of Hillary Clinton
running for president again in 2016, with new third-hour co-host Willie
Geist proclaiming: "Can you think of a more qualified human
being? She lived in the White House for eight years with another
President, she was a United States senator, and now she's got every
world leader on speed dial, so there'd be no questions about her
qualifications." [Listen to the audio]
Early in the conversation, Geist touted how "there are already polls
out in Iowa, she's got 58% of the vote for 2016" and argued her run was
"inevitable." Fellow co-host Savannah Guthrie thought Clinton could
definitely be persuaded: "...if the head of the party comes to her in
two years, if everybody comes around and says, 'You've got to do it, you
could be the first female president,' I think it would be hard for her
to say no." News reader Natalie Morales added: "Are we ready for a
female president? I think most of America probably is."
Geist concluded: "It's just a question of if she wants to run or not."
Weatherman Al Roker gushed over Bill Clinton being back on the campaign
trail as well: "And her significant other, too. It would be kind of fun,
too....Have him on the stump." Geist replied: "Imagine the excitement?"
Roker remarked: "Oh, man. Wow." Morales wondered: "Who has the bigger
spotlight, that's for sure, right?"
On September 10,
following the Republican and Democratic conventions, correspondent
Andrea Mitchell appeared on Today to start off media rooting for
Hillary: "She says she has no plans to run, but if she did, some say she
would clear the field." Mitchell offered a similar report on Clinton
the day after the election as well.
Amid all the excitement on Monday for the Secretary of State running
for president, no one mentioned her role in the failures surrounding the
terrorist attack in Libya and how that might be a stumbling block in
any future political plans.
Here is a full transcript of the November 12 discussion:
9:09AM ET
AL ROKER: Hillary's next move.
WILLIE
GEIST: Hillary's next move. So there was this piece, a lot of people
are talking about it, in the New York Times yesterday, written by Gail
Collins. She did an interview with Hillary Clinton, in which Secretary
Clinton talked about life after her job as secretary of state. Of
course, the first question everyone asks is, "Will you run for
president?"
NATALIE MORALES: "Will you run again?" Right.
GEIST: And she said, "Can I get five minutes to catch my breath before you start asking me this again?"
MORALES: She deserves a break, right?
SAVANNAH GUTHRIE: She transitioned into talking about HGTV...
GEIST: She did, she did.
GUTHRIE: ...and home improvement shows.
GEIST: She said the only way she relaxes is by watching home
improvement shows. But of course there are already polls out in Iowa,
she's got 58% of the vote for 2016. So it seems a little inevitable –
Savannah, you've covered politics for a long time – that she's gonna
run.
MORALES: What's your under over?
GEIST: But she's not ready to talk about it yet.
GUTHRIE: Yeah, so I interviewed her a year ago and I asked her, I mean,
and I was not the first and certainly not the last to ask her. And I
guess what I think, I don't have any special knowledge here, but I think
she really believes right now that she won't run. I think she's very
tired. She's the most-traveled secretary of state, she's constantly on
the road. And as she said in this article with Gail Collins, she would
like to get un-tired. But assuming she gets un-tired, if the head of the
party comes to her in two years, if everybody comes around and says,
"You've got to do it, you could be the first female president," I think
it would be hard for her to say no.
ROKER: And she's only sixty – she's only 65.
MORALES: Yeah, 65. Are we ready for a female president? I think most of America probably is. It would be interesting.
GUTHRIE: Well, she would be – she would break the glass ceiling that she talked about.
GEIST: Can you think of a more qualified human being? She lived in the
White House for eight years with another President, she was a United
States senator, and now she's got every world leader on speed dial, so
there'd be no questions about her qualifications. It's just a question
of if she wants to run or not.
ROKER: And her significant other, too. It would be kind of fun, too.
GEIST: Well, there's that, there's that.
ROKER: Have him on the stump.
GUTHRIE: The First Gentleman.
GEIST: Imagine the excitement?
ROKER: Oh, man. Wow.
MORALES: Who has the bigger spotlight, that's for sure, right?
ROKER: Yeah.