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Obama says would like to run more pragmatic campaigns | US President Barack Obama has said he would like to be more pragmatic in future electoral campaigns, but added that such a change would not take place overnight. Becoming
the first sitting American president to appear on the "The Daily Show', Obama
told Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert, when asked the question: "Yes we can,
but..."
the President was cut off by the audience's laughter. "... It is not going to
happen overnight," he finished. With less than a week to go for Senate polls in
which the Democrats are likely to fare badly, CBS News quoted Obama as saying
that there were things his administration accomplished that people "don't even
know about." The president was comfortable, slouching in his seat, his jacket
unbuttoned to reveal a light blue or purple tie. He rarely sipped his water from
a cup Stewart dubbed "Mug Force One." He had a warm welcome from the
audience
of mostly twenty-somethings. When Stewart asked if Obama always enjoyed such a
welcome, the president joked, "not at the Republican Congressional Caucus."
Referencing
a 2008 campaign speech signature, Stewart opened interview asking Mr. Obama,
"Are
we the people we were waiting for? Or does it turn out those people are still
out there- and we don't have their number?" Mr. Obama said multiple times that
he knew people were frustrated. Stewart referenced the president's hiring of Larry
Summers for the National Economic Council. Summers served in the Clinton
administration.
Summers did "a heckuva job," Stewart said, corrected by the president, "You don't
want to use that phrase, dude." Obama reiterated that most jobs lost in "toughest
years of any time since the Great Depression" were before his administration's
economic policies were put into place. In a discussion on health care reform,
in which Stewart referenced a conversation he had with a member of the audience
before taping began, Stewart told the president he ran with such "audacity," but
that his legislative approaches have seemed "timid" at times. Laundry-listing
positive effects of his health care reform, Obama said, "Jon, I love your show,
but this is something where I have a profound disagreement with you... this notion
that health care was timid." Before he exited, Obama asked if he could make one
"plug," to which Stewart asked, "Are you dropping an album?" The president
encouraged
the young audience to vote Tuesday. He also told the Comedy Central host it would
have "made a difference" if Stewart held his rally two years ago. Calling Obama
the "most interesting guest ever," Stewart said he had to re-shoot the show's
open to allow the presidential interview to run in its entirety.
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