Obama grilled during âDaily Showâ appearance
Reporting from Washington â An appearance on âThe Daily Showâ offered President Obama little comic relief from the serious midterm election campaign, as he was peppered with tough questions rooted in whether he has lived up to the promise of his 2008 campaign.
The mood was light-hearted during Obamaâs interview with Jon Stewart on the satirical Comedy Central program, but exchanges were hard-hitting and direct.
Stewart challenged the president about âtimid legislationâ to reform the nationâs healthcare system, economic recovery and financial reform, and whether it was possible to keep the inspiration and change promised in his 2008 campaign moving forward.
âYou ran on the idea that this system needed basic reform. It feels like some of the reforms that passed â like healthcare â have been done in a very political manner that has papered over a foundation that is corrupt,â Stewart asked at one point.
Obama argued that the work of his administration was unfinished, that he had promised âchange you can believe in,â not âchange you can believe in in 18 months.â
âOver the last two years in the emergency situation, our attitude was that weâve got to get some things done. In order to do that, [we] basically worked with the process as opposed to transforming the process, and that frustrated folks. It frustrates me,â Obama said.
He acknowledged that frustration would likely be reflected in the coming election.
âOver and over again we have moved forward on an agenda that is making a difference in peopleâs lives each and every day,â he said. âNow is it enough? No, and so I expect and I think that most Democrats out there expect that people want to see more progress. We have done an awful lot that we talked about during the campaign and weâre going to do more.â
Obama challenged most strongly Stewartâs suggestion that health reform was âtimid.â
âThis is what most people would say is as significant a piece of legislation as we have seen in this countryâs history,â he said. âWhat happens is it gets discounted because the assumption is we didnât get 100 percent of what we wanted, we only get 90 percent of what we wanted -- so letâs focus on the 10 percent we didnât get.â
Obama appeared on set with the Comedy Central host, who is taping in Washington this week, as part of a frenzied final push for votes from constituencies that strongly supported him in 2008 but typically donât vote in strong numbers in midterm elections.
Earlier Wednesday, Obama taped an interview with conservative talk radio host Michael Smerconish. He phoned into Al Sharptonâs American Urban Radio Network program Tuesday, and taped an interview with Spanish-language radio host âPiolinâ while in California last Friday.
The White House has regularly put Obama on platforms that have rarely, if ever, seen a president before. He became the first sitting president to appear on a late night talk show in 2009 when he was a guest on âThe Tonight Show,â and later visited David Lettermanâs âLate Showâ set as well.
In each of the past two years, heâs appeared on ESPNâs SportsCenter to make NCAA basketball tournament selections. And he also was a guest on a daytime talk show, âThe View.â
âThereâs a lot of different channels for people to watch these days,â press secretary Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. âThey get their information from not just television news and cable and newspapers and radio and the Internet. ⌠And the president hasnât been shy about going to the places where people are getting their information and trying to make his case.â
Gibbs added that the White House agreed to the âDaily Showâ interview before Stewart announced his âMarch to Restore Sanity,â planned for the National Mall this Saturday. While making it clear Obama was in no way endorsing the event, Gibbs said that any effort to âget people involved in and excited in participating in that democracy on either side is a good thing.â