on the economy” rather than a referendum on him, his policies or the Democratic Party.
While he said he should be held accountable for the economy as the nation’s leader, he did not accept the suggestion that he pursued the wrong agenda over the last two years, and he focused blame on his failure to build public support for what he was doing or to change the way Washington works.
In a session taped for CBS’s “60 Minutes” before Mr. Obama left for Asia, the correspondent Steve Kroft pointed out to the president that Republicans view the election as a referendum on him and the Democrats, and asked if he agreed. “I think first and foremost it was a referendum on the economy,” Mr. Obama said. “And the party in power was held responsible for an economy that is still underperforming.”
The interview was Mr. Obama’s first since the election and largely tracked the sentiments he expressed at his news conference the day after the vote.
The president’s interpretation of the election underscored the contrasting messages the two parties have taken from the elections. Republicans won at least 60 more seats in the House to take control, the largest such gain by either party since 1948, and picked up six more seats in the Senate, putting them close to parity with the Democrats, who maintained a much slimmer majority. Republicans also scored significant victories in governor’s and state legislative races.
Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, the House Republican leader slated to become speaker, and Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate Republican minority leader, have said the election was a clear verdict on Mr. Obama’s policies. Mr. Boehner told ABC News last week that the president is experiencing “some denial” and Mr. McConnell repeated Sunday that the issue was not the message but the substance.
“I think the president believes that somehow he didn’t – his product was good but he just didn’t sell it well,” Mr. McConnell said on “Face the Nation” on CBS. “I think he’s a good salesman. I think his problem was not his sales job. It was the product. The American people simply did not like what the president and this Congress were doing substantively.”
Surveys of voters at polling places showed that 37 percent said last Tuesday they were casting their votes to express opposition to Mr. Obama’s policies, while 24 percent said they were supporting his policies. The rest said he was not the impetus for their vote. Those numbers are almost identical to those in 2006 when voters cast judgment on President George W. Bush’s policies and Democrats seized control of Congress in a mid-term election they cast as a referendum on the incumbent president.
Mr. Obama made clear in his interview that he sees the economy as the main source of voter frustration. With unemployment stuck for months at 9.6 percent, no other president in decades has gone into a mid-term election with the jobless rate as high for as long. Nearly 9 in 10 voters last week expressed worry about the direction of the economy; four in 10 said reducing deficits should be the first priority while 4 in 10 said job creation should be a priority.
In his interview, Mr. Obama focused on the latter group, which tended to vote more Democratic than those concerned about deficits. To the notion that voters may have sent a message for smaller, less costly, more accountable government, Mr. Obama responded, “First and foremost, they want jobs and economic growth in this country.”
Pressed by Mr. Kroft, he then added that voters also care about spending. “There is no doubt that folks are concerned about debt and deficits,” he said. “I think that is absolutely a priority. And by the way, that’s a concern that I had before I was even sworn in.”
Echoing comments from his news conference, the president expressed his willingness to negotiate with Mr. Boehner and Mr. McConnell on tax cuts and other issues but gave no specific examples of where he would change his position to build consensus.
The president offered praise for the Republican leaders and expressed regret that at times he had gone too far in his campaign rhetoric attacking the opposition. “Both John and Mitch are very smart,” he said. “They’re capable. They have been able to, I think, organize the Republican caucus very effectively in opposition to a lot of the things that we tried to do over the last two years. And that takes real political skill.”
Without mentioning any examples, he said he bore responsibility for some of the tenor of political discourse lately. “I’ve been guilty of that. It’s not just them,” he said. “Part of my promise to the American people when I was elected was to maintain the kind of tone that says we can disagree without being disagreeable. And I think over the course of two years, there have been times where I’ve slipped on that commitment.”
WASHINGTON — President Obama has told Sudan that if it allows a politically sensitive referendum to go ahead in January, and abides by the results, the United States will move to take the country off its list of state sponsors of terrorism as early as next July, administration officials said Sunday.
The offer, conveyed to the Sudanese authorities over the weekend by Senator John Kerry, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations committee, represents a significant sweetening of the package of incentives the administration offered to Sudan in September for its cooperation with the vote.
Under a peace agreement that ended years of civil war in Sudan, the government in Khartoum agreed to a referendum, now scheduled for Jan. 9, in which the people of southern Sudan will decide whether to secede from the north. They are expected to vote overwhelmingly to do so.
But as the date for the vote nears, there are persistent reports of foot-dragging by the Sudanese authorities in preparing for it, as well as fears of a new outbreak of violence if the north does not honor the results. Dividing Sudan is hugely complicated, since most of its oil fields lie in the south.
In September, the administration presented Sudan with incentives ranging from modest steps like the delivery of agricultural equipment to more sweeping measures, including debt relief, normalized diplomatic relations, the lifting of sanctions and the removal of Sudan from the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism, which it has been on since 1993.
Administration officials said then that they did not expect to take that last step until late 2011 or 2012, one official said, because it was also linked to a resolution of the violence in the Darfur region. But now the United States has made it contingent only on the referendum. The Sudanese government, another official said, had pushed in recent weeks for more clarity in the incentives.
“I believe a broad agreement is within reach if they act with the sense of urgency that is necessary to seize this historic opportunity,” Mr. Kerry said in a statement on Sunday as he left Sudan.
Sudan has long petitioned to be removed from the State Department list, which also includes Iran, Cuba and Syria. Under President Bill Clinton, the administration designated its placement there on the grounds that it harbored Osama bin Laden and other terrorists. But in recent years, Sudan has cooperated in counterterrorism efforts.
Over time, Sudan’s designation has been expanded to include its role in mass killings in Darfur. Economic sanctions against Sudan remain linked to the violence in Darfur, officials said, and cannot be lifted without approval from Congress. Earlier this week, Mr. Obama renewed those sanctions. The president can remove Sudan from the terrorism list after notifying Congress.
The United States, an official said, will not relax “our commitment to solving the problems that have dogged Darfur.”
The administration’s offer does not depend on resolving another sticking point: a separate plebiscite by people in the contested border region of Abyei to decide to join northern or southern Sudan. The two sides have not agreed on the terms of that vote, also scheduled for January.
With diplomats still struggling to break the impasse, administration officials said they recognized that the plebiscite on Abyei may have to be deferred until after the broader vote on independence by southern Sudan.
North Korea was the last nation the United States removed from the terrorism list. That was done by the Bush administration in 2008, in an effort to encourage Pyongyang to be more pliant in talks over its nuclear program — a goal that has been largely unmet, given North Korea’s recent intransigence.
Mr Peña hobbled his way over the finish line in Central Park at 3.30pm, five hours and 40 minutes after beginning the race in Staten Island.
“I’m not from this country, but I saw posters saying ‘Go Edison!” and 'Go for it Peña!' from people I didn’t even know," he said at the finish line.
"The warmth from the American people is amazing.”
The 34 year-old, who was the 12th man to be raised to the surface in the Phoenix rescue capsule from deep below the Atacama Desert last month, had been dubbed "the runner" for his gruelling subterranean exercise regime.
The fitness fanatic and Elvis Presley enthusiast jogged in his heavy miners' boots for several miles each day of his ordeal through dark uneven tunnels finding his footing by the light of his miner's lamp.
He suffered from a knee injury while in the mine, which made his progress during the marathon extremely painful. Mr Peña, who sported a knee support for the run, was forced to walk the last section of the course, from Manhattan to the finish.
“I cried twice because of the pain in my knees,” he said. “But I didn’t travel this far to give up."
Carrying aloft the Chilean flag, Mr Peña was met at the finish line by his wife, Angélica.
He was invited to participate in the challenge through the streets of Manhattan by organisers, who were inspired by his drive and stamina.
"I could have come just to watch, but I decided to take part, to feel the emotion," he said ahead of Sunday's race.
"I have a strong desire to motivate the others. This is the most important thing for me."
On arrival in New York on Thursday he was a guest on The Late Show hosted by David Letterman, where with gyrating hips and quivering lip the miner won over the audience with his own rendition of Elvis's "Suspicious Minds".
He will visit Graceland, Presley's mansion in Memphis, Tennessee and will make a trip to Las Vegas to see "Viva Elvis," a Cirque du Soleil show, before flying home to Chile.
UPDATE: Greek Socialists Win In Local Polls, Drop Election Threat - WSJ.com More BigCharts Virtual Stock Exchange WSJ Asia WSJ Europe WSJ Portuguese WSJ Spanish WSJ Chinese WSJ Japanese WSJ Radio Financial News WSJ Lifestyle Brands WSJwine SEARCH Friday, August 20, 2010 As of 12:13 PM EDT | The Wall Street Journal Business Welcome, Logout My Account My Journal Help Message Center ( new) U.S. Edition Home ? More
WSJ.com is available in the following editions and languages:
U.S. Asia India China Japan Europe Americas en Español em Português Register for FREE Register for FREE Thank you for registering.
We sent an email to:
Please click on the link inside the email to complete your registration
Please register to gain free access to WSJ tools.
An account already exists for the email address entered.
Forgot your username or password?
This service is temporary unavailable due to system maintenance. Please try again later.
The username entered is already associated with another account. Please enter a different username
The email address you have entered is already in use. Please re-enter the email address.
First Name Last Name Email (your email address will be your login)Confirm Email Create a Password Confirm Password Company Size (Optional) Please make a selection 1-99 100-499500-9991,000-2,4992,500-4,9995,000-9,99910,000-14,99915,000-24,99925,000+Not Applicable
From time to time, we will send you e-mail announcements on new features and special offers from The Wall Street Journal Online.
Create a profile for me in the Journal Community
Why Register? Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
As a registered user of The Wall Street Journal Online, you will be able to:
Setup and manage your portfolio
Personalize your own news page
Receive and manage newsletters
Login/Register to set your edition Today's Paper Video Blogs Journal Community Log In Log In Login Password Log in Your login is either a username or an email address.
Keep me logged in. Forgot your password?
World » More World » More Loading… U.S. » More U.S. » More Loading… New York » More New York » More Loading… Business » More Business » More Loading… Markets » More Markets » More Loading… Tech » More Tech » More Loading… Personal Finance » More Personal Finance » More Loading… Life & Culture » More Life & Culture » More Loading… Opinion » More Opinion » More Loading… Careers » More Careers » More Loading… Real Estate » More Real Estate » More Loading… Small Business » More Small Business » More Loading… Asia Europe Earnings Economy Health Law Autos Management Media & Marketing Energy More Industries Accounting Advertising Airlines Banking Chemicals Computer Hardware Computer Software Consumer Products Defense & Aerospace Broadcasting & Entertainment Financial Services & Insurance Food & Tobacco Hospitality Industrial Goods & Services Media Agencies Paper & Forest Products Pharmaceutical & Biotech Real Estate Retail Semiconductors Transportation Close
Dow Jones Reprints: This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool at the bottom of any article or visitwww.djreprints.com
See a sample reprint in PDF format.Order a reprint of this article nowNOVEMBER 7, 2010, 8:11 P.M. ETUPDATE: Greek Socialists Win In Local Polls, Drop Election Threat ArticleCommentsmore in Business »
(Updates with further details, comment.)
ATHENS (Dow Jones)--Greece's ruling Socialists appear to have survived a key test of their popularity in local polls Sunday, prompting Prime Minister George Papandreou to drop his threat of early national elections if the vote went against him.
With more than 50% of the votes counted, Socialist candidates were on track to win in 7 of Greece's 13 electoral regions--including the all important province of Attica, home to 40% of the Greek population--against five for the opposition New Democracy party. In the region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace, the race between the two main parties ...
Email Printer Friendly Order Reprints Share:
facebook
Twitter
Digg
StumbleUpon
Viadeo
Orkut
Yahoo! Buzz
Fark
Reddit
LinkedIn
del.icio.us
MySpace
Copyright 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit
www.djreprints.com
Back To Back ToMSN Money HomepageMSN Money InvestingMost Popular ReadEmailedVideoCommentedSearches1.Opinion: Noonan: Americans Vote for Maturity2.GOP to Use Debt Cap to Push Cuts3.The Fed: Dump the Dollar, Save the Economy
Subscriber Content Read Preview
4.Google Limits Facebook Access to Gmail Contacts5.New Ways Bankers Are Spying on You1.The Madness of Modern Motherhood2.The Perfect Stimulus: Bad Management3.Opinion: Noonan: Americans Vote for Maturity4.New Ways Bankers Are Spying on You5.Can't Decide on Dessert? Try 'Cherpumple'1.Erica Jong on How Motherphilia May Hurt Moms2.New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Hong Kong3.Introducing the Amazing Cherpumple!4.South American Pole Dancers Try for World Finals5.Michelle Obama Dances in Mumbai1.Opinion: Americans Vote for Maturity1038 comments2.Pelosi Bids to Keep Post477 comments3.MSNBC Suspends TV Host Over Political Contributions312 comments4.GOP to Use Debt Cap to Push Spending Cuts268 comments5.Opinion: The Pelosi Minority261 comments 1. Facebook 2. economy 3. Apple 4. Mad Men 5. China Most Read Articles Feed Most Emailed Feed Most Popular Video Feed Most Commented FeedMost Popular Feeds Editors' Picks
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Chicken Fat to Fuel
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Journalist Beating Pressures Kremlin
Subscriber Content Read Preview
EU's Digital Economy Set for a MakeoverDeath of an Economist, or Why 'House' Is Not Your HomeThe Man Who Called the Financial Crisis—70 Years EarlyGreil Marcus On His Four-Decade Fascination With Bob DylanAudi A8L: The Mouth That RoaredOysters Lose AllureTaxpayers Play Hardball Getting Tough in Golf and BaseballVideoprevious nextOpinion Journal Opinion Journal: The Election Is Not Over3:00Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Will Jobs Report Drive Tax Cuts?8:23Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: ObamaCare's Victims6:28Opinion Journal GOP: Unlock the American Economy2:34Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: How the House Was Won7:10Opinion Opinion Journal: A Four-Year Majority11:00Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: A Wave Election10:46Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Red to Blue to Red11:02Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Will Hillary Run in 2012?4:10Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Tea Party Pragmatists3:04Opinion Journal Opinion Journal's Election Preview9:04Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Clinton's October Surprise3:23Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: The California Jobs Debate2:27Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: Obama Tax Cuts?9:40Opinion Journal Opinion Journal: A Death in Argentina2:21 Most Recommended CommentsComments CommentersCommenters 1. “Obama is this: A narcissist with a...;” - David Pearlman 299 Recommendations 2. “I continually hear comments like...;” - Eric Nelson 105 Recommendations 3. “Obama certainly had a history but...;” - Donald Bistrow 97 Recommendations 4. “Clever enough to try to appeal to...;” - Carol Sandor 93 Recommendations 5. “Obama is no Roosevelt?...;” - Bob Zwerneman 74 Recommendations Peter Venetoklis 1012 Recommendations Jack Davidson 815 Recommendations Jonathan Murray 681 Recommendations jean balloon 656 Recommendations Matilda Anders 644 Recommendations More in BusinessAccuser Said Hurd Leaked a DealRegulators, Banks Grapple With Volcker RuleAmazon Expands With Diapers, Soap DealKan to Launch Japan Free-Trade PushAsia's Tepid Inflation Fight null Email Newsletters and Alerts
The latest news and analysis delivered to your in-box. Check the boxes below to sign up.
WSJ.com Email Features Real Time Economics Newsletter News AlertSubmit The email address null is already associated with another account. Please enter a different email address: Enter Your Email Sign UpNew! To sign up for Keyword or Symbol Alerts click here.To view or change all of your email settings, visit the Email Setup Center.
Thank you ! You will receive in your inbox.
To view or change all of your email settings, visit the Email Setup Center. null Email Newsletters and Alerts
The latest news and analysis delivered to your in-box. Check the boxes below to sign up.
WSJ.com Email Features This Week's Most Popular On the Editorial PageSubmit The email address null is already associated with another account. Please enter a different email address: Enter Your Email Sign UpManage Email Preferences