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Friday, September 26, 2008

New Democratic Distortion-Twist Blunt's Words

It is incredible how much the Democratic Party has politicized this entire bail out process. First they rush though an announcement that a deal was made so they could say Senator McCain had nothing to do with it. The only problem is that there was not deal. (John Boehner confirms that in this letter).

Then, when the deal falls apart before the Senator even lands in Washington, they blame The Senator for it falling apart. They call McCain's show of leadership "erratic behavior." and now they use half of a Roy Blunt quote to imply that the Republicans were unhappy that Senator McCain came to Washington. Read more below:

Out of bounds! Obama camp distorts a GOP leader's remark By Steven Thomma | McClatchy Newspapers

Throw the flag on: The Obama campaign.

Call: False start.

What happened: The campaign sent out a release Friday quoting Rep. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., saying that fellow Republican John McCain killed a bailout deal.

"Congressman Blunt just confirmed what's been clear since John McCain rode into Washington at the eleventh hour — Senator McCain's political theatrics succeeded only in stopping a bipartisan deal," Obama spokesman Bill Burton said.

The statement offered the damning quote from Blunt, the House minority whip: "Clearly, yesterday, his position on that discussion yesterday was one that stopped a deal from finalizing." The campaign linked to an online video of the quote.

Why that's wrong:

Blunt's words were taken out of context and the video was edited to make his remarks appear more critical of McCain than they actually were.

The video starts after Blunt credited McCain with helping, and it cuts off before Blunt says that McCain helped to stop a part of the deal that House Republicans already opposed.

His full quote is quite different from the edited one the Obama camp used:

"I do think that John McCain was very helpful in what he did," Blunt said. "Clearly, yesterday, his position on that discussion yesterday was one that stopped a deal from finalizing that no House Republican, in my view, would have been for, which means it wouldn't have probably passed the House."

Penalty: Set back the Obama campaign's credibility five yards.

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