War Room

"Just call it a 'no surrender' party"

Who needs Karl Rove when you've got the White House press corps planning political events for you?

At this morning's White House press gaggle, reporters pressed -- and then advised -- Dana Perino on the kind of ceremony the president might have when he vetoes the supplemental spending bill for Iraq that's making its way to his desk.

From the transcript:

Reporter: Do you envision ... a formal -- I don't want to call it a ceremony, but for lack of a better word -- event, at this point?

Perino: We're talking about it, and what we would do, but we don't have any plans yet to announce. We're thinking about it.

Reporter: OK.

Perino: But, obviously, the president has said he's going to veto it, and I think that it's important that the American people see him doing it.

Reporter: But this would be only his second veto, and I recall that during the stem cell veto, there was an elaborate event in which he brought families. I'm wondering if you're planning to bring military --

Perino: A little bit too early for us to preview, since we don't even have the bill yet and we don't know what day that it's coming. It's important.

Reporter: Yes, but you can get it together.

Perino: We're pretty good. (Laughter.)

Reporter: Just call it a "no surrender" party. (Laughter.)

Perino: We'll take that under consideration.

Reporter: A great Bruce Springsteen [song], "No Retreat, No Surrender."

Perino: I don't think he'd come. (Laughter.)

Polls: Obama wins again
Early results indicate that a majority of voters believe Barack Obama swept his debates with John McCain.
McCain loses the last debate
The last debate was John McCain's last chance to change the dynamic of the campaign. If he did change anything, he probably made it worse for himself.
Liveblogging: Abortion comes up, finally
Some on the right had complained about bias in previous debates, citing as one example a lack of questions about an issue they think is good for the Republican ticket.
Liveblogging: McCain gets angry
The temperament gap appears again at the third presidential debate.

Current Salon Politics Stories

Salon Politics Blogs

Recent Posts

McCain loses the last debate
The last debate was John McCain's last chance to change the dynamic of the campaign. If he did change anything, he probably made it worse for himself.
Liveblogging: Abortion comes up, finally
Some on the right had complained about bias in previous debates, citing as one example a lack of questions about an issue they think is good for the Republican ticket.
Liveblogging: McCain gets angry
The temperament gap appears again at the third presidential debate.
Previous Posts…

War Room RSS Feed

Posts by date

October 2008
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

About War Room

War Room is written and edited by Alex Koppelman, with contributions from Salon reporters around the country.