Skip navigation

Obama fires back at Bill Clinton

Democratic contender counter-punches ex-president on experience issue

Democratic presidential candidate Obama attends news conference in Waterloo
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama calls on a reporter at his news conference before a rally in Waterloo, Iowa on Saturday.
Carlos Barria / Reuters
NBC Video: Politics
Abortion amendment to halt health reform?
  Nov. 10: Morning Meeting’s Dylan Ratigan, President of NARAL Pro-Choice America Nancy Keenan and Family Research Council’s Cathy Ruse discuss how the controversial abortion amendment may stop the health reform bill in its tracks.

Slideshow
  The Week in Political Cartoons
Msnbc.com’s political cartoonists take a look back at the past week.

more photos

By Tom Curry
National affairs writer
msnbc.com
updated 10:06 p.m. ET Dec. 15, 2007

Tom Curry
National affairs writer

E-mail
WATERLOO, Iowa - Former president Bill Clinton leveled a new attack on Sen. Barack Obama on Friday, arguing that he lacked the experience needed to be president, a criticism that drew a tart response from Obama on Saturday as he campaigned in Waterloo, Iowa.

“When is the last time we elected a president based on one year of service in the Senate before he started running?” the ex-president asked, in an interview with PBS talk show host Charlie Rose which aired Friday night.

Obama began serving in the Senate in 2005.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The former president wondered whether voters are “prepared to roll the dice” on Obama, considering that he has less experience than his rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination Sen. Hillary Clinton or Sen. Joe Biden.

“Even when I was a governor and young and thought I was the best politician in the Democratic Party, I didn't run the first time,” Clinton said, referring to the 1988 campaign.

In response Obama told a press conference Saturday that Clinton himself had said in 1992 when he ran for president that a candidate can “have the right kind of experience or the wrong kind of experience.”

But unlike Obama, Clinton had been a governor for more than ten years, a reporter reminded Obama.

Obama cites 'over a decade' of experience
“And I’ve been involved in government for over a decade,” replied Obama.

Video
  Bill Clinton assesses Iowa
Dec. 15: Speaking about his wife's campaign, ex-president Bill Clinton says he "never thought she had a big lead in Iowa," but that she "might win there."

MSNBC

The Illinois senator said he had "the experience that the country needs right now, of bringing people together, pushing against the special interests, of speaking to the American people about what needs to be done to move the country forward."

When asked about Sen. Clinton’s reference to possible “surprises” coming out about her rivals for the nomination, Obama said, referring to the senator and the ex-president, “The argument they’re making is that they’ve been around a long time. So whatever negative information is out there, people already know about. The assumption, then, is that lurking in other candidates’ pasts that haven’t been around for 20 years there might be something.”

But Obama said “I’ve probably been more reported on than any political figure in the country over the last year … I hardly think that I’ve been under-exposed during the course of this race.”

He added, “I understand there’s a history of politics being all about slash and burn…. I recall what the Clintons themselves called the ‘politics of personal destruction’ -- which they decried. My suspicion is that that’s just not where the country is at right now. They are not interested in politics as a blood sport; they’re interested in governance and solving problems” such as job creation and product safety.


Sponsored links

Resource guide