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Skriven 2006-10-26 23:31:14 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0610264) for Thu, 2006 Oct 26
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Press Gaggle by Dana Perino
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For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
October 26, 2006
Press Gaggle by Dana Perino
Aboard Air Force One
Route Des Moines, Iowa
11:55 A.M. EDT
MS. PERINO: Good morning. We're on our way to Iowa. The President, this
morning, had his normal briefings. Then he signed the Secure Fence Act of
2006. At 12:45 p.m. CDT, the President will make remarks at the Lamberti
for Congress and Iowa Victory 2006 reception. That's at the Iowa State
Fairgrounds. You never know what kind of treats you're going to find there.
I hear there is lots of fun, fried food. Yes, fried Twinkies and fried
Snickers, I think.
At 5:40 p.m., he'll make remarks at Bouchard for U.S. Senate -- that's in
Warren, Michigan. He'll arrive at the White House at 8:30 p.m.
One thing you'll get soon -- it's being worked on at the White House -- is
a Setting the Record Straight on media reports that inaccurately distorted
Prime Minister Maliki's press conference yesterday. Basically the reports
said that Maliki slammed the United States military diplomatic leaders for
saying that -- by saying that he would reject any sort of timetables. The
way that those media reports came out was that he rejected any sort of
benchmarks or goals in terms of policies.
The question he was asked was whether he agreed that there should be a
timetable for withdrawal of troops in 18 months. That is something that
Maliki has rejected as foolhardy, and that the President fully agrees with
Maliki. And you've heard the President say that several times. So you'll
see that this afternoon. I think Tony Snow is doing some TV interviews on
it now, although those are taped and will be shown later.
With that, I will take your questions.
Q Dana, these two Republicans that Bush is appearing with today, both of
them are 20 points behind in their races. They're challengers. These are
not seats that really -- that the Republicans necessarily need. And so why
is Bush focusing on these two candidates, when there's much more
high-profile contested races?
MS. PERINO: I don't know what polls you're looking at. I would want to go
back and check with our folks. We believe these candidates are going to win
these seats. And when the President is invited to come and campaign -- you
heard him yesterday say that he likes to get out there and talk about the
differences between the Republicans and Democrats when it comes to the big
national issues in this campaign: national security, who is going to best
protect this country; and the economy, who's going to keep your taxes low.
These states also will have referendums on local issues. But they were
invited to come and campaign with the President. And you heard him
yesterday -- he thinks that the Republicans are going to win and we think
these candidates are going to win.
Q -- hear anything new from the President today, any new themes or any
hammering home anything that he hasn't talked about before?
MS. PERINO: Well, the President has defined this election as the two main
issues being national security and the economy. You'll hear both of those
today.
Q Will we be hearing anything more about Iraq? Is that going to be a theme
of this speech?
MS. PERINO: I don't know if you heard me -- if you have been following the
speeches that the President has given on the war on terror and national
security, he always does mention Iraq because it is the central front on
the war on terror, as defined by Osama bin Laden. So you will hear about
Iraq, as well.
Q Will he be emphasizing it like he did yesterday in the press conference
-- it was probably 90 percent Iraq.
MS. PERINO: His speech is both war on terror and the economy, so I don't
know how you want to break it down percentage-wise.
Q Any reaction to the tone of the campaign in the closing weeks,
particularly in regard to the Rush comments on the Michael J. Fox ad, and
also the Harold Ford ads that are running in Tennessee?
MS. PERINO: I haven't seen the second one. I do know that Rush Limbaugh
apologized for the -- well, and it was appropriate to. The President was
the first President to fund embryonic stem cell research. What he did with
embryonic stem cell research, though, is draw a moral line that said that
taxpayer dollars should not go to research that destroys embryos. We have
been aggressive in funding for adult stem cell research and cord blood cell
research that -- both of which show great promise.
But that was that one moral -- that was the moral line that the President
said that he would not cross. It's important that people understand that --
what the policy is. It's amazing to me and such a disappointment that
repeatedly it's said that the President is against any sort of stem cell
research. That's just not the case. So if I can help set the record
straight here, I will.
Q How much do you expect to raise today?
MS. PERINO: I refer you to the campaign.
Q -- elaborate again on the "Setting the Record Straight" with Maliki. So
Maliki has agreed that there should be benchmarks, but what he was taking
issue with was the idea that in 18 months U.S. troops will leave if he
doesn't meet those benchmarks?
MS. PERINO: That's exactly right.
Q On Iran --
MS. PERINO: Do you have a question?
Q Yes. They are -- Iran is claiming that they're expanding their uranium
enrichment again. And also I'm curious as to why the U.S. thinks that the
resolution that's being proposed by Germany and Britain is too weak.
MS. PERINO: I didn't see that we had said that it was too weak. I saw Sean
McCormack, the spokesman at the State Department, saying that we support
the draft. We are working with the EU3 partners, as well as the Chinese and
the Russians, in order to reach final language on a resolution. What we do
all agree on is that Iran must halt its enrichment and reprocessing
activities. And we'll continue to work on a multilateral approach to
diplomacy and we'll work on final language. The goal is there, and then
we'll get to the draft. I have not seen us say that we didn't support -- or
that that other draft was weak. And I can check with the State Department
when we get on the ground.
Q Is the President going to be doing fundraisers all the way up to Election
Day?
MS. PERINO: There's a few more fundraisers. We're going to switch fairly
soon to rallies. But we have flexibility in his schedule in case people
need additional some dollars to get across the finish line.
Q Isn't it late to be raising money, in the sense that
-- what can people --
MS. PERINO: One thing that's different in 2006 from the last midterm
elections is the campaign finance law that was passed in between those two
times. And hard dollars are harder to raise then soft dollars. In some
cases, we -- what Karl Rove has said is that we worked really hard early on
to raise money early to help people for this push. We'll be raising money
up until the end if we need to. I'll see if I can get you more of a firm
schedule. It's mostly rallies, I think, from -- after Saturday I think
you're going to see a lot more rallies than traditional fundraising.
Q When is the President going to meet with the automakers in November?
MS. PERINO: That meeting was set for after the election to avoid any
appearance of making it a political meeting. It will be in mid-November.
I'm not able to give you a specific date.
Q What meeting is that?
MS. PERINO: The big three automakers.
All right. Thank you.
END 12:04 P.M. EDT
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