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1. Russert Targets Private Accounts as "Stumbling Block" to SS Deal On Sunday's Meet the Press, Tim Russert targeted personal accounts as the impediment preventing a "deal" in Congress on Social Security. Identifying his two guests, Democratic Senator Ben Nelson and Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee, as "independent" on the Social Security reform topic, Russert pressed both about dropping the idea. To Nelson: "Should the Democrats refuse to negotiate until the President takes personal accounts off the table?" To Chafee: "Should the President take private, personal accounts off the table and focus on solvency?" Russert soon decided that in addition to GOP opposition to raising the income level subject to the Social Security tax, "the stumbling block appears to be these private or personal accounts." Russert noted Democratic intransigence on the subject, but saw Bush as the one standing in the way as he fretted: "If the President insists that it is his way, private personal accounts as part of Social Security and anything else is a non-starter, can there be a compromise?" And: "If the administration is saying that anything else other than that is a non-starter, where do you go?" 2. Time's Duffy Blames America: "Why Can't We Run a Check Point?" Blame America First. In a discussion on Friday's Washington Week on PBS about the shooting in Iraq by U.S. soldiers, of the car carrying a freed communist Italian journalist, and her claim it was unjustified, Time magazine's Washington Bureau Chief, Michael Duffy, held the U.S. soldiers culpable for the incident which killed an Italian secret agent, demanding: "Why can't we run a check point after a year?" ABC's Martha Raddatz pointed out how witnesses said the "car was traveling in excess of 100 miles per hour" and dismissed the Italian allegations: "Certainly the U.S. troops wouldn't have shot her on purpose." Russert Targets Private Accounts as "Stumbling Block" to SS Deal On Sunday's Meet the Press, Tim Russert targeted personal accounts as the impediment preventing a "deal" in Congress on Social Security. Identifying his two guests, Democratic Senator Ben Nelson and Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee, as "independent" on the Social Security reform topic, Russert pressed both about dropping the idea. To Nelson: "Should the Democrats refuse to negotiate until the President takes personal accounts off the table?" To Chafee: "Should the President take private, personal accounts off the table and focus on solvency?" Russert soon decided that in addition to GOP opposition to raising the income level subject to the Social Security tax, "the stumbling block appears to be these private or personal accounts." Russert noted Democratic intransigence on the subject, but saw Bush as the one standing in the way as he fretted: "If the President insists that it is his way, private personal accounts as part of Social Security and anything else is a non-starter, can there be a compromise?" And: "If the administration is saying that anything else other than that is a non-starter, where do you go?" A rundown of Russert's questions to the two Senators, both of whom appeared in-studio with Russert on the March 13 program: -- Russert: "You're considered independent, undecided. One Republican, one Democrat. Senator Chafee, Vice President Cheney said this to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, that 'the Bush re- election victory provided a mandate 'for the notion of personal retirement accounts,' and that Democrats would pay a political price among younger voters if they blocked them.' Do you believe that the President has a mandate for personal retirement accounts?"
-- Russert: "Does the President have a mandate for them because of his re-election?"
-- Russert: "Senator Nelson, Harry Reid, the leader of the Democrats in the Senate, eleven days ago talked to the press and had this to say. Let's watch.
-- Russert: "But the private accounts proposed by the President do include borrowing and it is suggested by members of the White House staff would involve indexing or benefit cuts."
-- Russert: "Harry Reid has sent a letter to the President signed by 41 Democratic Senators which says to the President, 'We will not negotiate with you. We will not talk to you until you take private personal accounts out of Social Security off the table.' Do you agree with that?"
-- Russert: "But should the Democrats refuse to negotiate until the President takes personal accounts off the table?"
-- Russert: "Senator Chafee, should the President take private, personal accounts off the table and focus on solvency?"
-- Russert: "But the stumbling block appears to be these private or personal accounts. And the President's top economic adviser said this, he rejected as, [text on screen] "'absolutely a non-starter' bipartisan proposals that the administration put aside its drive to create individual investment accounts in Social Security and focus first on extending the system's solvency. Allan Hubbard, in an interview Wednesday with USA Today, also dismissed a Democratic proposal that investment accounts be created to supplement Social Security, not as part of the system.'"
-- "If the administration is saying that anything else other than that [personal accounts] is a non-starter, where do you go?"
-- Russert: "Senator Nelson, the Democrats are united. You may be the exception, but all the other Democrats have said, 'Mr. President, we are not negotiating until you get those accounts off the table.'"
-- Russert: "Do you believe that Democrats in the Senate understand there is a problem with Social Security solvency?"
-- Russert: "Senator Chafee, one of your Republican colleagues we talked about earlier, Lindsey Graham, who has spent weeks attempting to recruit Democratic support for a plan to restructure Social Security, said that Republicans, 'made a strategic mistake' by initially focusing on a proposal to create individual investment accounts. He said the accounts by themselves will not fix the solvency problem Social Security faces as baby boomers begin to retire. 'We've now got this huge fight over a sideshow. It's always been a sideshow, but we sold it as a main event.' Do you agree?"
-- Russert: "Do you think there can be a bipartisan compromise?"
-- Russert: "Senator Nelson, if the President's chief economic adviser is saying 'We must have private accounts,' if Speaker Hastert and Congressman DeLay are saying, 'We will not support raising the cap, it's a tax increase,' and if 41 Democrats in the Senate are saying, 'We will not negotiate as long as there are private accounts,' where are we?"
-- Russert: "Do you think the President made a mistake by leading with private or personal accounts?"
-- Russert: "Some Democrats are concerned that the Republicans want to co-opt the issue of Social Security, that Franklin Roosevelt created a loyal generation of Democrats because he established it, and here comes George Bush trying to reform it, which will make young Americans who invest in the market Republicans. How concerned are your Democratic colleagues that they're going to lose Social Security as a political issue?"
-- Russert: "Senator Chafee, I noted you invoked the name of George McGovern, and I started thinking about an article I read in the Providence Journal how you did not vote for George W. Bush for re-election. You wrote in his father's name. As a protest?" After some discussion about whether Chafee will switch parties and Bush's nickname for Nelson, "Benator," Russert returned to Social Security:
-- Russert: "Will we get a Social Security deal this year?"
Time's Duffy Blames America: "Why Can't We Run a Check Point?" Blame America first. In a discussion on Friday's Washington Week on PBS about the shooting in Iraq by U.S. soldiers, of the car carrying a freed communist Italian journalist, and her claim it was unjustified, Time magazine's Washington Bureau Chief, Michael Duffy, held the U.S. soldiers culpable for the incident which killed an Italian secret agent, demanding: "Why can't we run a check point after a year?" ABC's Martha Raddatz pointed out how witnesses said the "car was traveling in excess of 100 miles per hour" and dismissed the Italian allegations: "Certainly the U.S. troops wouldn't have shot her on purpose." The relevant exchange on the March 11 Washington Week on PBS:
Martha Raddatz: "This is one of those stories that's very tragic. The U.S. certainly says it was an accident, but the Italians kept upping the ante. The reporter, Giuliana Sgrena, suggested that the U.S. soldiers did this on purpose. So You had the military, the Pentagon, the very first day they put out a statement saying the car was approaching at a high rate of speed, it didn't stop at a check point, we followed the rules of engagement basically which were firing warning shots, giving hand signals and finally fired into the engine block. The Italians came right back and said, once again, no, they were going slow. We told everyone we were here. General George Casey, who's the commander of all troops in Iraq said there was no coordination that he knew of whatsoever, that the Italians did not tell the Americans what was going on, did not tell them they would be on that road that night. Beyond that, they are trying to do an investigation into this." -- Brent Baker
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