By The Prowler on 9.17.08 @ 12:08AM
Troop withdrawal sabotaged. Beverly Hills money and a broken bank. Biden debate prep.
STANDING BY THE STORY
The Obama campaign spent more than five hours on Monday attempting
to figure out the best refutation of the explosive New York
Post report that quoted Iraqi Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari as saying that Barack
Obama during his July visit to Baghdad demanded that Iraq
not negotiate with the Bush Administration on the withdrawal of
American troops. Instead, he asked that they delay such
negotiations until after the presidential handover at the end of
January.
The three problems, according to campaign sources: The report
was true, there were at least three other people in the room with
Obama and Zebari to confirm the conversation, and there was concern
that there were enough aggressive reporters based in Baghdad with
the sources to confirm the conversation that to deny the comments
would create a bigger problem.
Instead, Obama's national security spokeswoman Wendy
Morigi told reporters that Obama told the Iraqis that they
should not rush through what she termed a "Strategic Framework
Agreement" governing the future of U.S. forces until after
President Bush left office. In other words, the Iraqis should not
negotiate an American troop withdrawal.
According to a Senate staffer working for Sen. Joseph
Biden, Biden himself got involved in the shaping of the
statement. "The whole reason he's on the ticket is the foreign
policy insight," explained the staffer.
BREAKING THE BANK
The woman whom Barack Obama is crediting for
organizing the Barbra Streisand fundraiser it held
last night in Hollywood is also partially responsible for one of
the greater banking collapses in American history.
Penny Pritzker, Obama's national finance chair
was, with her family, the half owner of Superior Bank, which was
shut down in 2001 by the FDIC after it had lost nearly all of its
more than $2 billion of assets on bad loans to high-risk borrowers,
federal regulators said.
Pritzker has avoided media attention over the past week as
reporters covering the Obama campaign sought comment on the Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac debacle.
Pritzker also served as finance chair for Obama's Senate run,
and supported him during his time in the Illinois state
legislature.
One reason Pritzker may have been enamored with Obama was his
willingness to press legislation that loosened state regulatory
policies for land developers and multi-family property owners.
Pritzker is also known to be close to Obama adviser
Valerie
Jarrett, a former political operative for Mayor
Richard M. Daley, and the CEO of a housing and
development company based in Chicago with ties to Obama going back
to his Illinois legislature days.
Jarrett, by the way, is now considered to be the top candidate
to fill Obama's Senate seat should he be elected President.
ZONING IN
Senator Joe Biden is spending between three to
four hours a day prepping for his debate with Alaska Gov.
Sarah Palin, with that time to be increased over
the next two weeks. According to campaign insiders, at least ten to
15 outside volunteers -- beyond those already working on the
campaign -- are assisting in both Biden's and Obama's debate prep.
Debate prep for both John McCain and Palin hasn't been made public,
though it is known that Palin is putting in study time for her
October 2nd debate in St. Louis.
Of biggest concern to Biden, and the focus on the debate, are
domestic policy issues, in-depth foreign policy details that will
highlight what the Democrats believe are Palin's weaknesses on
international issues, and what an Obama adviser called Biden's
"penchant for smarminess."
Biden is notorious in the Senate for his long-winded questions
and his inability to limit his comments to questions during
interviews and floor debate, and Republicans and the McCain
campaign have been banking that Biden's ego and frustration over
the lack of attention focused on him will drive him to
overcompensate during the debate.
"But we're not going to let that happen," says the Obama
adviser. "When Joe wants to get in a zone, he can get in the zone
and stay there. He really wants to be in the zone for this debate
and he is working hard. I saw him work hard to prep on the Roberts
and Alito confirmation hearings. He's working twice as hard on
this, because the stakes and the rewards are so much higher."
topics:
Foreign Policy, John McCain, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Sarah Palin, Hollywood, Iraq, NATO, Alaska