George Stephanopoulos Highlights Tea Party Candidates 'Called Too Extreme,' Touts Attacks on Rubio
On
Wednesday, Good Morning America co-anchor George Stephanopoulos hosted
the Florida Senate debate and on Thursday morning highlighted the
attacks against Republican Marco Rubio.
Discussing the Tea Party overall, Stephanopoulos dismissed, "
Both
[Joe] Miller and [Christine] O'Donnell have been called too extreme by
their opponents. The same case made here against Rubio."
Stephanopoulos, a former top aide to Bill Clinton, replayed attacks
from the debate both from Democrat Kendrick Meek and independent Charlie
Crist.
Crist
derided Rubio: "Wanting to punish women. Wanting to punish seniors by
raising the age of eligibility. You haven't been drinking the kool aid,
my friend, you've been drinking too much tea."
Stephanopoulos
then played a clip of Meek complaining, "[Rubio] doesn't carry the
values that this state needs in the United States Senate to put people
back to work." Only a snippet of Rubio was seen during the segment.
The host also predicted a downside to GOP gains: "...If Republicans,
as we expect, pick up seats in the House and Senate, maybe even take
control, that's a recipe for more gridlock." Analyst Matt Dowd agreed,
"I don't think this tea kettle is going to be totally vented in this
election cycle because a number of the Tea Party candidates will
probably not win."
Oddly, Stephanopoulos
on Tuesday
pushed the idea that the Tea Party could be "losing traction." On
Thursday, he admitted, "In some key races, the Tea Party tidal wave is
still gaining strength."
A transcript of the October 7 segment can be found below:
7AM tease
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Tea Party time. Christine O'Donnell slips far
behind in new polls. Sarah Palin to the rescue. But, down here in
Florida, the Tea Party favorite riding high after last night's
rollicking debate.
7:05
ROBIN ROBERTS: Let's get back to George, now, in Orlando. George?
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Okay, Robin. Thanks. There are just 26 days to
go until the midterm elections. We're starting a serious debate right
now. And last night, the prime time debate here in Florida. The Florida
Senate debate. And it was hard-charging and hard-hitting, right from the
start. And crystallized a lot of the political conversation taking
place all throughout the country right now. The blows were coming from
all directions. Right, left and center. In some key races, the Tea
Party tidal wave is still gaining strength. A new poll in Nevada shows
Sharron Angle now two points ahead of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
And in Florida, Marco Rubio, who was the first to harness that Tea
Party energy months ago, has a big lead, which has made him the top
target from independent Charlie Crist, on Social Security.
CRIST AD: Rubio wants to raise the Social Security retirement age.
CHARLIE CRIST: He talked about raising the age of eligibility. Said it was on the table.
STEPHANOPOULOS: I just want a yes or no answer. Is it still on the table?
MARCO RUBIO: It is not.
STEPHANOPOULOS: The debate I moderated last night got rocking from
the start and Rubio stuck to the Tea Party themes that have put him
ahead.
RUBIO: Our debt problem going forward is because Washington can't
control spending. If you like Obama Care, if you like the stimulus plan,
you can vote for Charlie Crist or Kendrick Meek.
STEPHANOPOULOS: That message is clicking for Rubio here in Florida.
But, other Tea Party candidates are having a tougher time. A new poll in
Delaware shows Christine O'Donnell trailing her Democratic opponent by
double-digits. And in Alaska, the Tea Party's Joe Miller is locked in an
E-mail debate with Sarah Palin's husband, about whether Palin is
qualified to be president. Todd doesn't think that Miller has been
effusive enough. But, Sarah weighed in last night.
SARAH PALIN: Yeah, a diversion like that, trying to make me a part of
the narrative there in Joe Miller's campaign. Joe Miller is the right
person to help lead Alaska.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Both Miller and O'Donnell have been called too extreme by their opponents. The same case made here against Rubio.
CRIST: I mean, wanting to punish teachers. Wanting to
punish women. Wanting to punish seniors by raising the age of
eligibility. You haven't been drinking the kool aid, my friend, you've
been drinking too much tea.
KENDRICK MEEK: He doesn't carry the values that this state needs in the United States Senate to put people back to work.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Okay and joining us now is our political
contributor, Matthew Dowd. Also columnist for National Journal. You were
here watching last night. And we were talking about the debate. The
first thing you said was this is a microcosm of what's happening in the
country.
MATT DOWD: Yeah. If you watch the debate, it's very interesting. You
have Marco Rubio, on the attack on Washington. Trying to make Crist and
Meek the, sort of, Representative of Washington. He went on attack on
Obama. Said it was the Republican message of anti-Washington.
STEPHANOPOULOS: And spending.
DOWD: Big-time, on spending. You had Meek making the very, very
energetic defense of what they did in Washington, what the Democrats
did. And, so, to me, it's the passion on both of those sides. It ended
up putting Crist in the middle, a little in the soft and squishy middle
because the passion exists on both sides, with what it is in the rest of
the country.
STEPHANOPOULOS: And you think that Rubio was a favorite of the Tea
Party from the beginning, has really mastered that anti-Washington
message. And that's where a lot of the country is right now.
DOWD: Yeah. Absolutely. I think he came out. He's slightly ahead in
this race. I think he did himself well. He probably solidified the
Republicans even more last night. But, he has the disciplined message,
which basically is if you like what's going on in Washington, don't vote
for me. Vote for them. It represents it.
STEPHANOPOULOS: But, as we said in the piece, we're seeing mixed
results from the Tea Party candidates now across the country. Sharron
Angle out in Nevada has pulled a little bit ahead of Harry Reid.
Christine O'Donnell way down in Delaware. Rubio doing, doing pretty well
here. Rand Paul probably going to be doing okay in Kentucky. But, it's
not going to be a clean sweep for the Tea Party on election day, which
could create- which means probably means frustration driving that won't
go away after Election Day.
DOWD: Yeah. I don't think this tea kettle is going to be totally
vented in this election cycle because a number of the Tea Party
candidates will probably not win. And the Republicans will probably not
be able to do, if they do win, a lot. And, so, I think what's going to
happen, is after November, the anger and frustration that exists out
there is only going to grow as we go into the next cycle of elections.
STEPHANOPOULOS: Well, in part, because If Republicans, as we
expect, pick up seats in the House and Senate, maybe even take control,
that's a recipe for more gridlock.
DOWD: Yeah. I think absolutely what's going to happen after this
November, is little is going to get done in Washington. And people are
going to be more frustrated going into the presidential election in
2012.
STEPHANOPOULOS: One of the things we've seen across the country,
which you really feel here as you turn on your television, is campaign
spending. Likely to see $3 billion spent in this election cycle. A lot
of it by groups where you don't know where the money is coming from. And
it's all across the air waves here.
DOWD: Absolutely. The economy that's suffering, the people doing well
are the media consultants because there's ad after ad after ad. You
watched last night in Orlando and it's just every place you go, is a
negative ad about somebody on the ballot. At some point, there's so many
ads that washes over the voters. And I think things like last night's
debate I think have a much bigger impact on voters than the ads do
because there's so many in so many different places. But, a lot of
money's getting spent.
—Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.