ANNOUNCER: This is the Washington Week Webcast Extra.
GWEN IFILL: Hello, I'm Gwen Ifill and this is a stripped-down version of the Washington
Week Webcast Extra. I'm joined around the table by Jeanne Cummings of The Wall Street
Journal and Alexis Simendinger of RealClearPolitics. So it turns out some voters are
thinking ahead. Witness this New Hampshire exchange with Hillary Clinton this week.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: (From video.) The next president will probably appoint several members
of the Supreme Court. Would you consider appointing Obama? (Laughter.)
HILLARY CLINTON: (From video.) Wow, what a great idea. (Laughter, applause.) Nobody has
ever suggested that to me. Wow. I love that. Wow. He may have a few
other things to do, but - (laughter) - I'll tell you, that's a great idea.
GWEN IFILL: Not very often do you actually get to see a candidate get asked a question
they hadn't heard before. And that response, her response, earned her a debate-stage
attack from Marco Rubio. But was it really that surprising an answer?
I didn't think so, that she would say sure, why not, Alexis.
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: Well, what is she going to say, oh, that's an appalling idea?
No, no. And in fact, what it reminded me of, actually, was after her 2008 loss there
was some discussion about whether she herself would make a good Supreme Court justice.
So the concept would not have surprised her, but she knows President Obama well enough to
know that he is going to be busy doing other things. But -
GWEN IFILL: For the record, his press secretary was asked about it today and said no.
JEANNE CUMMINGS: Can you imagine President Obama and Justice Scalia trapped together for
years to come in lifetime appointments?
GWEN IFILL: That would be kind of fun to watch, actually.
JEANNE CUMMINGS: I don't know, I think I'd - I think I'd give them room.
GWEN IFILL: One of the interesting things about it, though, is we all say every single
four years that the most important part of what happens - one of the most important
reasons why we elect a president is who's going to - they're going to appoint, who will
long outlive them, and yet somehow the Supreme Court doesn't ever seem to cut as an
election issue.
JEANNE CUMMINGS: It doesn't. I think it's two steps removed. The last time
I thought that it had some influence was way back in 1992. And I - and I think we
were - you know, the whole Roe v. Wade question was still very vital at that time.
But I think for the voters, they're worried about who's going to help me pay my bills,
who's going to help me, you know with my house and my family and to get my kid into
college and to bring - make me feel safer in a very scary world.
And the Supreme Court just doesn't fit in that, mostly.
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: The one thing, though, I think we're going to hear a little bit more
about it in the general election, and I think it's because voters have tuned a little bit
more to the concept of the Supreme Court as being important on the Affordable Care Act
and being important on immigration.
GWEN IFILL: That's true.
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: Some of the cases, affirmative action for instance.
So I think that the - you know, the campaigns or the parties themselves will get around
to this. Jeanne's point is right, though, is, is a voter going to make their
selection based on that? GWEN IFILL: Not necessarily.
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: No. But the candidates and the parties will make a big thing of it.
GWEN IFILL: It's been interesting, also, to watch the president try to figure a way to
tiptoe through an election year where he's got some things he wants to get done.
But he gives an interview, he says nice things about Hillary Clinton, it becomes, what
does that mean for Bernie Sanders? And then Bernie Sanders makes his way to the
White House and he said what? How did that meeting go?
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: It was interesting because there had been lots of questioning about
whether the president of the United States was going to meet or had met, and when had he
met with Senator Sanders, under what circumstances, because it seemed so clear to a lot of
reporters that President Obama had practically thrown his whole body on the scale for -
GWEN IFILL: (Laughs.) Not just a thumb.
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: - not just a thumb, the whole body - for Secretary Clinton, someone
he served with and had come to admire, even though he had defeated her in 2008.
What happened is that the president turned out to have a little bit of a - I guess a
comeuppance about being wrong about predicting how this election would go, and realized
that it would be much better to look more neutral.
And that meeting was at the request of Senator Sanders in December.
That was not the president clamoring to have him come in.
But Senator Sanders and his wife got 45 minutes with the president.
Senator Sanders was asked, did the president give you any advice on how to defeat Hillary
Clinton? And he laughed and smiled and gave that -
GWEN IFILL: He said, "of course not."
ALEXIS SIMENDINGER: "Of course not" and gave the president, you know, plenty of praise
and was happy to be there.
GWEN IFILL: I wonder the last time when it helped to have an incumbent president vocally
endorse you. I don't necessarily think it does.
JEANNE CUMMINGS: Well, it's - what's interesting is this is - for the last few cycles,
there's been so much edginess between the nominee and the sitting president that what's
unusual is that we don't have the kind of bitter feelings between what may - who may be
the nominee and the sitting president.
But Bernie Sanders just cracked me up when he came out of that meeting because, you know,
the senator can't help but be the senator, right?
(Laughter.) So, you know, he's asked how it went, and he heaps praise on the president
and how they stood side by side and fought for all these great things for America - and
then adds, and of course we have our differences.
And then, you know, names - ticks off some issues, and it was like, OK.
GWEN IFILL: Well, but you got to give it - you have to give it to both of these
candidates. Neither Hillary Clinton nor Bernie Sanders wants to lose the other's
supporters before the first vote has actually been dropped, which we'll be watching for
this week. Thank you both. Thank you for watching.
Keep up with Monday night's caucus results at PBS.org/WashingtonWeek.
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And we'll see you next time on the Washington Week Webcast Extra.