News
2007-08-28
Obama names
Republicans he'll work with
Democratic
presidential candidate Barack Obama often says he will be a
candidate that will bring both parties together, and
Saturday
Democratic
presidential candidate Barack Obama often says he will be a
candidate that will bring both parties together, and
Saturday he named a few of the Republicans he would
reach out to if elected.
''There are some
very capable Republicans who I have a great deal of
respect for,'' Obama said in an interview with the
Associated Press. ''The opportunities are there to
create a more effective relationship between
parties.''
Among the
Republicans he would seek help from are senators Richard
Lugar of Indiana, John Warner of Virginia, and Tom
Coburn of Oklahoma, Obama said.
''On foreign
policy I've worked very closely with Dick Lugar,'' Obama
said. ''I consider him one of my best friends in the Senate.
He's someone I would actively seek counsel and advice
from when it came to foreign policy.''
''Senator Warner
is another example of somebody with great wisdom,
although I don't always agree with him on every issue,''
Obama said. ''I would also seek out people like Tom
Coburn, who is probably the most conservative member
of the U.S. Senate. He has become a friend of mine.''
Part of
Washington's problem is that President Bush has created a
partisan atmosphere, he said.
''The Bush-Cheney
administration has perfected the perpetual campaign,
what I call the 50-plus-one election strategy, where you
just presume half the country is red and half the
country is blue,'' Obama said.
Later in Miami,
Obama reiterated his call for Cuban-American families to
be able to have more contact with their relatives in Cuba.
To rousing
applause at the same Little Havana auditorium where
Republican Ronald Reagan once campaigned, Obama said,
''Just 90 miles from here there is a country where
justice and freedom are out of reach. That's why my
policy toward Cuba will be guided by one word: liberty.''
He said there are
no better ambassadors for change on the communist
island than the Cuban-Americans who send money to relatives.
''It can help
make their families less dependent on Fidel Castro. That's
the way to bring about real change in Cuba,'' Obama said.
''It's time we had a president who realized that.''
Obama addressed a
crowd of more than 1,000 four days after he published
an opinion piece in The Miami Herald that said
restrictions that limit how often Cuban-Americans can travel
to Cuba to visit family and how much money they can
send relatives should be loosened.
The Cuban-exile
vote is considered key to winning Florida, and top
presidential candidates have generally followed the
recommendations of the community's most hard-line and
vocal leaders, who support a full embargo against
Castro's government.
But many in the
large Cuban-American population want to be able to visit
and help family and support the idea of looser restrictions.
Obama said he
wouldn't lift the current trade embargo, adding that his
offer to normalize relations in a post-Castro Cuba would be
made after the country opened up to democratic change.
''Until there's
justice in Cuba, there's no justice anywhere,'' Obama
said. ''We will talk to our enemies as well as our friends
and both to our enemies and to our friends, we will
tell them the truth and tell them what we stand for.''
Obama was in
Florida at the same time the Democratic National Committee
voted to strip Florida of all its presidential delegates if
the state party sticks to a plan for a January 29
primary. He said, however, that Florida will still be
a large player in the general election and that he
will seek to remain competitive in the state.
''The national
party has a difficult task, which is to try to create some
order out of chaos,'' Obama said. ''My job is really not to
speculate on how to make it all work. I'm a candidate,
I'm like a player on the field. I shouldn't be setting
up the rules.'' (Brendan Farrington, AP)
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