Journalists in the service of Pete Peterson
Place your cursor over highlighted text to see observations and critique.
David Wessel
Interviewing Timothy Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury (2012):
“I think we are in the post-denial phase of talking about the deficit, both Democrats and Republicans — [Geithner interjects, “What follows denial, anger?”] — I hope so. I think Pete Peterson hopes someday you get to [a] solution, and you’ve got a few months left in this president’s term to get there. But I think that a lot of people are wondering why anybody should believe that our polarized political system is capable of doing something that touches as many people as this. Why should we believe that this can happen?
“When you talk about fiscal issues, the one question you hear often, particularly from audiences like this, is about Bowles-Simpson. Why didn’t the president embrace Bowles-Simpson and say, ‘I don’t like all of it,’ instead of what he did. Was that a mistake?”
George Will
Interviewing Mitch Daniels, Governor of Indiana (2011):
“The role of public employees’ unions at the state level so far — and perhaps someday at the federal level — will become a big topic of argument over their role in causing and their possible role in helping to solve the fiscal problem at the state level. What’s been your experience in Indiana?”
“You can argue, Governor, that democracies only act on difficult problems under the lash of necessity, when they have no other choice. Hitler was warned about by Churchill, but they paid no attention until they got to the channel ports. In 1983, the Greenspan-Moynahan-Dole commission reformed Social Security because the checks were about two weeks from not being able to go out. What kind of lash of necessity will it take — what catalyzing event might cause the American federal political system to act?”
Judy Woodruff
Moderating a panel discussion between four members of the “Gang of Six” senators then in deficit reduction talks (2011):
“Senator Durbin, you’ve been a member of this group from the outset. How hard has it been for the six of you to sit there — three Republicans and three Democrats — to talk about these issues?”
“And Senator Warner the reason I’m asking, I want to press a little bit more on whether everything is on the table, because what one hears on the outside is that one party is implacably opposed to revenue increases; the other party implacably opposed to any sort of significant entitlement changes. So how is the dynamic inside your group any different from that?”
“Senator Durbin, are you convinced — and I’m going to ask each one of you — are you convinced that you can sell the rest of the Senate on what you come up with?”
Interviewing Representative Paul Ryan, chair of the House Budget Committee (R-Wis.) (2012):
“You were just again, and I’ve heard you in other venues criticize President Obama for demagoguery, playing class warfare in this budget battle by wanting to increase taxes on the wealthy and minimizing cuts in entitlements. However, the question is raised: is it class warfare in reverse to talk about massive tax cuts which mainly benefit the well off, while conversely cutbacks in Medicaid, food stamps, and the rest hurt people at the lower end of the income scale?”