Morning Shows Bombard Pawlenty With Attacks from a Liberal 'Republican,' Demand Higher Taxes
All three morning shows on Monday bombarded Tim Pawlenty with a variety
of liberal complaints and demands. ABC and NBC singled out an
Obama-supporting "Republican" who slammed the presidential candidate's
fiscal management of Minnesota. CBS repeatedly lobbied Pawlenty to raise
taxes.
Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos identified ex-Minnesota
Governor Arne Carlson as "one of your Republican predecessors." He
quoted Carlson as saying, "I don't think any governor has left behind a
worse financial mess than Pawlenty has."
Stephanopoulos made no mention of the fact that Carlson endorsed Barack Obama in 2008 or that he was officially expelled from the Minnesota GOP in December of 2010.
On NBC's Today, Matt Lauer highlighted the same statement and described
Carlson simply as "a former Republican Governor of the State of
Minnesota." He challenged, "This is a Republican saying that. How do you
respond?"
Pawlenty described Carlson's affinity for Democrats and show back, "So I
don't think he's an actual neutral or honest broker of anything."
This isn't the first time the Today show forced Pawlenty to respond to
other liberal governors. On February 10, 2011, co-host Meredith Vieira
referenced Pawlenty's Democratic successor, Mark Dayton: "Last night in
his State of the State Address, he said that he was left with a
horrendous fiscal mess and state agencies poorly managed. So what makes
you better-equipped to run the nation's economy, if you left your own
house in such disarray?"
On Monday's Today, Lauer managed to get in a dig about how boring
Pawlenty supposedly is. He derided, "...People often look at you and
they say is there enough charisma there for Tim Pawlenty to beat Barack
Obama? What's your answer to that?"
Stephanopoulos
pushed the Republican, indicating that the killing of Osama bin Laden
has made Obama a successful foreign policy president: "In the wake of
the successful attack on Osama bin Laden, you care to extend and revise
those remarks?"
CBS's Early Show skipped the Arne Carlson question, but co-host Erica
Hill instead lobbied for more taxes, insisting, "What about raising
taxes?...At some point, do you have to look at raising taxes, and do
people have to pay more for what's needed in this country?"
Continuing to lecture Pawlenty, she followed-up, "But if you lower
taxes too much on businesses, you- of course, you need something coming
in, because there is this wide deficit, which we talk so much about. You
need revenue."
A transcript of the Today interview, which aired at 7:18am EDT, follows:
MATT LAUER: Now to presidential politics. Former Minnesota Governor Tim
Pawlenty is throwing his hat into the ring for the 2012 GOP nomination.
He's in Des Moines, Iowa, where he will make a formal announcement
today. Governor Pawlenty, good morning.
TIM PAWLENTY: Good morning to you, Matt.
[ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Joining the Race; Tim Pawlenty Announces 2012 GOP Presidential Run]
LAUER: Nice to have you as part of the party. And let me ask the simplest question, why? Why do you want to be president?
PAWLENTY: Well, I want to be president because America is in big
trouble. Our finances are out of control. The debt and deficit are not
being tackled by the current president. I've got experience in Minnesota
as governor in tackling spending. I balanced budgets. I got an 'A'
rating from the Cato Institute, one of only four governors in the
country to do it. The other three aren't running for president, by the
way, Matt. But our country needs new leadership and we've got to get
this economy moving again. President Obama unfortunately doesn't have
the courage to look the American people in the eye and tell them the
tough truth of things that we're going to need to do to get our spending
under control. I'll do that.
LAUER: I was going to wait until a little later in the interview to
bring this up, but since you talk about balancing budgets and your
record in Minnesota, let me ask you about this. A former Republican
Governor of the State of Minnesota, Arne Carlson, had this to say about
your time there and your fiscal responsibility. Quote, 'I don't think
any governor has left behind a worse financial mess than he has.'
[Source: Time magazine, May 23] This is a Republican saying that. How do
you respond?
PAWLENTY: Well, actually Arne Carlson had become an Obama supporter and
a John Kerry supporter and said he had left the Republican Party some
years ago. So I don't think he's an actual neutral or honest broker of
anything. And it's not accurate. Every time during my time as governor –
eight years, four budget cycles, two years each – I balanced the budget
every time. And, in fact, the last one ends this summer and it's still
going to end in the black. So they're talking about a projected deficit
down the road that's based on a lot of big spending increases that I
don't support and wouldn't have allowed had I continued on as governor.
LAUER: Let me ask you about money. It's going to take a lot of money to
run for president, Governor, and especially when you're going up
against someone like Mitt Romney, who can raise a lot of money and has a
lot of money. Some of the thinking was that a lot of the donors in this
race might have been sitting on the sidelines waiting to hear what
Mitch Daniels was going to do. He's announced he will not run. I know
you've – according to some reports – reached out to some of those
donors. What kind of response are you getting?
PAWLENTY: Well, the response has been good. We're not going to be the
money champion in the race to start with. Though my friend Mitt Romney
will be the front-runner in that regard. But we're going to have enough
money to run a competitive and successful campaign. It may not be the
BMW or the Mercedes campaign but it'll be a good solid Buick and maybe
even trending towards a Cadillac and that'll be enough for us to be
competitive and win.
LAUER: In the early polls you're in the single digits. It looks like
Mitt Romney, in most polls right now, seems to be the front-runner. So
let me ask you a direct head-to-head question. Why would you be a better
nominee than Mitt Romney?
PAWLENTY: Well, I don't criticize or draw contrasts to other people. I
can just tell you what my strengths are. And my strengths are this: When
it comes to getting this federal government spending and deficit and
debt under control, I've got a record in Minnesota of actually doing
that. Like I said, there's only four governors in the country that got
that 'A' grade rating from Cato Institute. I did. I cut taxes, I did
market-based, instead of government-based health care reform,
performance pay for teachers, public employee pension reform. And that's
why these outside groups are saying this is one of the best, if not the
best, conservative record in the country. And I'm proud of the record
and that's one of the strengths I bring to it.
And I also, Matt, have got a background that I think a lot of American
will like. My – I grew up in a blue collar town. My dad was a truck
driver for much of his life. My mom was a home maker. And so I think
those kinds of life stories connect with people, not just in terms of
policy positions but at a heart and gut level as well.
LAUER: And just in the ten seconds I have left, Governor, people often
look at you and they say is there enough charisma there for Tim Pawlenty
to beat Barack Obama? What's your answer to that?
PAWLENTY: Well, I'm not running for entertainer-in-chief. These are
serious times and they need serious people with serious solutions. So if
you're looking for the loudest or a comedian in the race, vote for
somebody else. But I'll bring the solutions forward that will actually
fix the country.
LAUER: Former Governor Tim Pawlenty, congratulations on the announcement. Good luck. Come see us in the studio, please.
PAWLENTY: I'll do it, Matt. thank you.
— Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.