Lauer to Michelle Obama: 'Do You Think People Hate Your Husband, Even Those On the Far Right?'
NBC's Matt Lauer seemed shocked that Fox News' Bill O'Reilly, during
his Super Bowl interview, actually asked Barack Obama about his
opponents hating him, as the Today co-anchor, on Wednesday, in an
exclusive interview with the First Lady questioned:
"Do you think people hate your husband, even on the far right?"
Michelle
Obama initially deflected the question as she simply responded: "I'm
sure that there are some people who don't like my husband" because
"you're not gonna please everybody all the time." Lauer, however
continued to press the issue as he asked:
"There is obviously extreme criticism" and went on to wonder if it had changed the President as he questioned is he "the same guy today as he was two years ago?"
In an interview that touched on a wide range of topics from Egypt to
the President's smoking habits and to the First Lady's anti-obesity
campaign, Lauer did ask a tough question on the economy, even reading
from a viewer's e-mail who asked Mrs. Obama for her advice for job
seekers, as he pressed: "If there is someone out there...who is
unemployed...do you expect that person to support your husband in 2012?"
The following are the relevant exchanges from the interview that aired on the February 9 Today show:
MATT LAUER: Before the Super Bowl your husband gave an interview to
Bill O'Reilly and he was asked, during that interview, if it disturbed
him that so many people hated him. And first of all, I think the word
"hate" is a very powerful word. Do you think people hate your husband,
even those on the far right?
MICHELLE OBAMA: I'm sure that there are some people who don't like my
husband. Any President of the United States - this is a tough job.
You're not gonna please everybody all the time. And that's not why you
do this job. There are tough decisions that have to be made. So I'm sure
that there are people who don't like my husband. There are people who
have had strong feelings about every single president that's ever held
the office.
LAUER: Taking "hate" out of it, there is obviously extreme criticism.
And I think you made the comment that you don't think your husband has
changed dramatically as a result of that criticism. Is he the same guy
today that he was two years ago, as he entered the White House?
OBAMA: He is. He really is. He is, I think, one of his gifts is
consistency. Emotionally, he doesn't get too high or too low unless it
has to do with his family. I mean who he is as a president and who he is
as a dad and a husband are very different things. He's got a thick
skin. And he's focused on a set of goals. He wants to do the best job he
can in office. And I think he's doing a great job. And he's, he's
remained steady through it all. And I think that's a good thing.
LAUER: Tough challenges facing him.
OBAMA: Absolutely.
LAUER: And the last time we spoke, he told me the economy, obviously,
was in tough shape. Unemployment was a major, major concern. A lot of
Republicans have criticized your husband saying that he hasn't focused
enough on creating jobs. We asked our viewers to submit e-mail
questions. Mrs. Obama, so many concerned the economy and jobs. If there
is someone out there watching right now who is unemployed and is having a
very difficult time finding a new job, do you expect that person to
support your husband in 2012?
OBAMA: Yes, absolutely.
LAUER: Why?
OBAMA: Because we are seeing some significant improvements in the
economy. I mean, if we look at where we were two years ago when Barack
took office, we are definitely moving in the right direction. It's a
slow growth and that's something that Barack has said throughout. Change
doesn't happen overnight. It takes time. But if you look at the
accomplishments over this year, he has kept every single promise that
he's made. It doesn't always feel good when you're down and out. But I
think we're, we're on the right path.
LAUER: And so to Kitty from Ft. Worth, Texas, who wrote us and said,
"What is your advice, Mrs. Obama, for someone who is out there looking
for a job?" What would you say?
OBAMA: You know, I think one of the - this is why in the State of the
Union Address, my husband focused on investment in the future,
education, community colleges. Many people are gonna have to get
retrained. Because the economic structure of this company, of this
country, I'm sorry, has just changed significantly. Some jobs that were
there are just gone. So my advice is to find the sectors that are
growing. Find a way to retrain. Look at community colleges and use this
time to, to, to recharge skills and, and, and keep growing. We are at
the point in this country where all careers are, are, are fluid. I think
the days of working in that company for 20 years are gone. And, and
young people kind of know that already. They're coming in and they are
thinking, "I'm here two years, but where is my next step? How do I get
my next, you know, training certificate? How do I keep moving and
growing?"
LAUER: Keep improving themselves.
OBAMA: And I think that's, that's how we have to focus.
—Geoffrey Dickens is the Senior News Analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here