NBC's Williams Invites Colin Powell to Slam GOP 'Hatred' and 'Nastiness'
In an exchange with former Secretary of State and prominent Obama supporter Colin Powell during NBC's live inauguration coverage on Monday, NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams urged Powell to go after Republicans: "General, there's just flat-out hatred out there, too. There's nastiness out there in the land. There's nastiness between these two parties....Let's especially go to the Republican Party....What do they do to widen, if it is in their interest, widen their doorway to membership, to entry?" [Listen to the audio]
Powell seized the opportunity to double down on his recent smear of the
GOP having a "dark vein of intolerance": "I've been saying and said
with David Gregory the other day, the party is not where the American
people have been in recent years....Society is changing and the
Republican Party has not been keeping up with it. And if you dare to say
that, then you're violating the orthodoxy of the party and you find
yourself attacked....If doesn't want to change, it can stay where it is, and I think it will continue to lose elections."
Williams allowed Powell to portray himself as a victim of GOP attacks but failed to press him on his assertion in that Meet the Press interview that Republicans "look down on minorities."
Here is a transcript of the January 21 exchange:
10:51AM ET
BRIAN WILLIAMS: We're joined by a friend of ours out here, another
friend of ours, General Colin Powell is with us. What do you make of
today's pomp and ceremony and what I always say this nation does very
well?
COLIN POWELL: I love it. I love it. I mean, it's one of those days, as
all inauguration days are, where for a moment we come together,
celebrate the magic of our Democratic system, the magic of the people
deciding who the next leader is going to be. As Peggy [Noonan] just
said, he won, and he won rather decisively this time.
But now the challenges are before him. Tomorrow we'll be right back at
it. And you mentioned the vitriol within our system. We've always had,
you know, strong views opposing one another. Our Founding Fathers did.
And I think that's good. That's what democracy is all about. But
ultimately, those strong views have to result in compromise or else we
don't get anywhere. And so I hope beginning tomorrow we'll see a new
level of civility within our discussion, within our political
discussion, and a willingness to compromise. I noticed just in the last
few days, the Republicans have made some offers with respect to the debt
ceiling and I've seen some Republicans talking about immigration
reform. So maybe we are on a roll. But I wouldn't bet on it yet.
WILLIAMS: I, too, noticed those offers on things like the debt ceiling. But, General, what you've
– there's the real first couple of New York and Washington, D.C.,
Beyonce and Jay-Z entering. That will get a lot of attention. We just
missed James Taylor coming down the stairs – General, there's just
flat-out hatred out there, too. There's nastiness out there in the land.
There's nastiness between these two parties – there's the President and
Mrs. Carter – And how do we fix that? Let's especially go to the
Republican Party. They've got – they've been – they've been caucusing.
They've been quite literally in retreat these past few days, House
Republicans. What do they do to widen, if it is in their interest, widen
their doorway to membership, to entry?
POWELL:
Well, as I've been saying and said with David Gregory the other day,
the party is not where the American people have been in recent years.
When you lose an election and you only have 26% favorability rating and
46 or 47% negative, you better start thinking about what's wrong.
So for the last week, a number of folks of have been attacking me for
speaking like this. And my question has been to them, "Well, why should
anyone who voted for Mitt Romney, why didn't they? Why didn't he win?"
And the answer is the party has not kept track with the demographic
changes that are taking place in this country. 74% of Hispanics, 74% or
73, one of those numbers, of Asian Americans, and 94% of African
Americans, did not vote for the Republican ticket. I would worry about
that because we're becoming a minority-majority nation.
And so I think the party has to take a look at itself and see if it's
keeping up with the demographic changes in our society as well as the
societal changes. Society is changing and the Republican Party has not
been keeping up with it. And if you dare to say that, then you're
violating the orthodoxy of the party and you find yourself attacked. A
lot of Republicans have come up to me in the last week and said, "We
agree with you," but they're not going to say anything because they
don't want to give a sound bite that will be used against them in 2014
or 2016. But I sense that the American people understand this and most
of the Republicans that I know understand that the party has to take a
look at itself. If doesn't want to change, it can stay where it is, and I
think it will continue to lose elections.