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BRIAN WILLIAMS: And Andrea, there couldn’t be more going on right now. There was talk of the fiscal cliff. We have no CIA director. Benghazi’s still around. The Israelis took out the head of Hamas today. And then, John McCain said that if the President puts up his U.N. ambassador, Susan Rice, to replace Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, she will be blocked, they’ll do everything in their power. That’s where the President today almost conjuring the wording of Aaron Sorkin from the movie American President, as will be pointed out all day, really decided to throw down.
ANDREA MITCHELL: This was President Andrew Shepherd really coming through in the East Room of the White House. Because this was President Obama saying, “If you want to pick a fight with my U.N. ambassador, and blame her for something that was not her responsibility on Benghazi, then you come after me, John McCain and Lindsey Graham. Don’t come after Susan Rice.” It was dramatic. He is angry. I know from talking to the White House that they are very angry, they feel Susan Rice is being unfairly blamed, that she was working off of talking points from the intelligence community. And that in her Sunday appearance on Meet the Press, she should not be blamed for what she said about Benghazi.
It’s even funnier when keeping in mind that this is the anchor of the NBC Nightly News and NBC’s Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent. If the segment had been a little longer I’d have expected Williams to go on and say, “dude, Obama today totally reminded me of that scene in The Terminator when Schwarzenegger was like ‘I’ll be back’ and the cops were like ‘whoa.’”
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TERRY MORAN: But the real takeaway from the White House today? There's nothing like a re-election to give the President a jolt of confidence.
BARACK OBAMA: I've got a mandate to help middle class families and families that are working hard to try to get in the middle class. That's my mandate.
MORAN: Gone was the lackluster, stumbling Obama of the first debate in Denver.
OBAMA: Well, ah, ah, ah.
MORAN: And gone, too, was the grimly determined campaigner of the final stretch.
OBAMA: The status quo in Washington has fought us every step of the way.
MORAN: The 44th President, today, was ready to rumble. You heard and saw it most emphatically when he leapt to the defense on Susan Rice, his ambassador to the United Nations. She's under fire for claiming the deadly attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya was not a terrorist attack but a riot sparked by outrage over an anti-Muslim film.
SUSAN RICE: What this began as was a spontaneous, not a premeditated response to what had transpired in Cairo. Cairo, as you know, a few hours earlier, there was a violent protest that was undertaken in reaction to this very offensive video that was disseminated.
MORAN: Rice is now a leading candidate to replace Hillary Clinton as secretary of state. Top Republicans led by Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham, they vowed to block her nomination.
LINDSEY GRAHAM: I don't trust her. And the reason I don't trust her is because I think she knew better and if she didn't know better, she shouldn't be the voice of America.
MORAN: Today, an Obama smackdown.
OBAMA: If Senator McCain and Senator Graham and others want to go after somebody, they should go after me. And should I choose, if I think that she would be the best person to serve America, in the capacity of the State Department, then I will nominate her.
MORAN: But wait. Isn't this supposed to be a moment for bipartisanship? As the country approaches the fiscal cliff, steep tax hikes and spending cuts at the end of the year unless Washington can do a deal, what kind of leadership will the newly emboldened Barack Obama bring to those old, bitter debates?
OBAMA: So, I will, you know, examine ways that I can make sure to communicate my desire to work with everybody. There are probably going to be still some very sharp differences.
MORAN: Bridging those differences, or even just beginning to heal them, that's the real task ahead for President Obama.
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