CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE
[CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE] [DEARBORN, MICH USA] FTG FOR COVERAGE OF THE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE IN DEARBORN, MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR MITT ROMNEY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KANS) REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR MIKE HUCKABEE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER NEW YORK CITY MAYOR RUDY GIULIANI PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE DUNCAN HUNTER (R-CALIF) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE TOM TANCREDO (R-COLO) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE RON PAUL (R-TEX) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER SENATOR FRED THOMPSON (R-TENN) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN (R-ARIZ) 15:53:44 WALKOUT / VS OF CANDIDATES WALKING OUT 15:54:31 PAN LEFT AND RIGHT ACROSS CANDIDATES ON STAGE 16:00:31 BARTIROMO: Hi there. I'm Maria Bartiromo of CNBC. On behalf of the Michigan Republican Party and the University of Michigan-Dearborn, welcome to the first presidential candidates debate focused on the economy. We're coming to you from the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center here in Dearborn, in the heart of the American auto industry, a fitting backdrop to the economic issues facing the American people. MATTHEWS: And good evening from me. I'm Chris Matthews of MSNBC. Joining Maria and me in questioning the presidential hopefuls this evening will be John Harwood, chief Washington correspondent for CNBC, and Jerry Seib of the Wall Street Journal. We have a lot of ground to cover today, so in the interest of time, let's get right to it. Maria? BARTIROMO: OK, Chris. Senator Thompson, this is your first debate in the election. We welcome you. THOMPSON: Thank you. BARTIROMO: And we kick off with you. THOMPSON: Thank you. 16:01:59 BARTIROMO: The economy is America's greatest strength. In a recent poll by the Wall Street Journal and NBC News, two-thirds of the American people said that we are either in a recession or headed toward one. Do you agree with that? And, as president, what will you do to ensure economy vibrancy in this country? 16:02:12 THOMPSON: I think there is no reason to believe that we're headed for a recession. We're enjoying 22 quarters of successive economic growth that started 2001 and then further in 2003 with the tax cuts that we put in place. THOMPSON: We're enjoying low inflation. We're enjoying low unemployment. The stock market seems to be doing pretty well. I see no reason to believe we're headed for an economic downturn. As far as the economic prosperity of the future is concerned, I think it's a different story. I think if you look at the short term, it's rosy. I think if you look at a 10-year projection, it's rosy. But we are spending money we do not have. We are on a mandatory spending lockdown that is pushing us in a direction that is unsustainable. We're spending the money of future generations, and those yet to be born. That has to do with our mandatory spending problem. Everyone knows that we have to address that. And it's the fundamental and foremost challenge, I think, facing our country economically. BARTIROMO: Senator, you painted a very nice picture. The Dow and the S&P 500 today at new highs -- tonight -- record numbers. BARTIROMO: And, yet, two-thirds of the people surveyed said we are either in a recession or headed for one. Why the angst? THOMPSON: Well, I think there are pockets in the economy that, certainly, they're having difficulty. I think they're certainly -- those in Michigan that are having difficulty. I think you always find that in a vibrant, dynamic economy. I think that not enough has been done to tell what some call the greatest story never told, and that is that we are enjoying a period of growth right now and we should acknowledge what got us there and continue those same policies on into the future. BARTIROMO: Governor Romney, here in Detroit, Michigan, alone, one in every 29 homes went into foreclosure in the first six months of the year. 16:04:01 Whose job is it to fix this problem? The government or private enterprise? 16:04:12 ROMNEY: It's everybody's job. It's inexcusable that Michigan is undergoing a one-state recession, that the rest of the country is growing and seeing low levels of unemployment, but Michigan is seeing ongoing, high levels of unemployment, almost twice the national rate. ROMNEY: Industry is shrinking here, jobs are going away. This is just unacceptable. And, therefore, everyone's going to have to come together to solve the problem. 16:05:25 And that means, from the president's standpoint, the president's going to have to stand up and say -- you know what? -- to the auto industry: The door's always open. We're ongoing to work with you and make sure that you have a listening ear and someone who will participate with labor and with management. Number two, we're going to make sure that we invest in technology and research. A lot of that relate into energy, fuels, automotive research like material sites to help boost Michigan once again. We're going to have to fix the schools, as Newt Gingrich pointed out. 22 percent of Detroit kids don't -- excuse me, 22 percent graduate from high school. That's unacceptable. We're also going to have to do a better job keeping our taxes down. Jennifer Granholm has made a big mistake by raising taxes. I was, frankly, a little nervous to -- about being here tonight. I figured she was going to pot a tax on the debate before we got finished. (LAUGHTER) ROMNEY: So... (APPLAUSE) And we're going to have to go to work, as well, to make sure that there's a level playing field around the world, as we compete, to make sure that American goods are pushing into other markets, but goods coming overseas aren't getting an advantage, as they do now, with embedded taxes. There's a lot we can do to strengthen Michigan. And in some respects, what Michigan is seeing, the entire nation is going to see, unless we take action now to get Michigan stronger. BARTIROMO: Thank you. 16:05:48 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, the private equity firms are making billions of dollars. I guess it's a mystery to me -- and you can explain it, as a New Yorker -- where these billions of dollars come from; where were they before; and is there any downside to this amazing bonanza in the hedge fund and the private equity firms? 16:06:07 GIULIANI: Well, I mean the market is a wonderful thing. GIULIANI: I mean, the free market is our -- one of our greatest assets. And the leading Democratic candidate once said that the unfettered free market is the most destructive force in modern America. I mean, just get an idea of where the philosophy comes from. The free market is the asset that has allowed us to -- the sky's the limit. The reality is, that what we have to do is look at the fundamentals. A president can't be a economic forecaster. A president's not going to be any better an economic forecaster than you are a baseball forecaster -- and I'm not a particularly baseball forecaster this afternoon. (LAUGHTER) So the reality is a president has to work on the fundamentals. What are the fundamentals? Keep taxes low. Keep regulations moderate. Keep spending under control. GIULIANI: That's an area where we need a lot of help. And make sure you do something about legal reform so that our legal system doesn't -- it's 2.2 percent of our GDP now, is spent on all these frivolous lawsuits. It's double any other industrialized nation. If we don't get control of that, that's another way in which we're going to eat up our future. 16:07:20 So we got a prospect on the Democratic side of overspending, overtaxing, over-regulating, and over-suing, and I think you need a Republican alternative to that, which is an emphasis on the pillars of growth that I mentioned. MATTHEWS: Just to test your forecasting ability, Mr. Mayor, will Torre keep his job? (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: God willing. MATTHEWS: OK. 16:07:37 GIULIANI: Joe Torre is the best manager in the history of the Yankees, at least in the modern era. So -- and he's my friend. MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Paul, I think you have questions and concerns about the bonanza in the hedge fund industry. Do you? 16:07:50 PAUL: Yes. I think this is not a consequence of free markets. What's happening is, there's transfer of wealth from the poor and the middle class to the wealthy. PAUL: This comes about because of the monetary system that we have. When you inflate a currency or destroy a currency, the middle class gets wiped out. So the people who get to use the money first which is created by the Federal Reserve system benefit. So the money gravitates to the banks and to Wall Street. That's why you have more billionaires than ever before. Today, this country is in the middle of a recession for a lot of people. Michigan knows about it. Poor people know about it. The middle class knows about it. Wall Street doesn't know about it. Washington, D.C., doesn't know about it. But it's because of the monetary system and the excessive spending. As long as we live beyond our means we are destined to live beneath our means. And we have lived beyond our means because we are financing a foreign policy that is so extravagant and beyond what we can control, as well as the spending here at home. And we're depending on the creation of money out of thin air, which is nothing more than debasement of the currency. It's counterfeit. And it is a natural, predictable consequence that you're going to have people benefit from it and other people suffer. 16:09:02 PAUL: So, if you want a healthy economy, you have to study monetary theory and figure out why it is that we're suffering. And everybody doesn't suffer equally, or this wouldn't be so bad. It's always the poor people -- those who are on retired incomes -- that suffer the most. But the politicians and those who get to use the money first, like the military industrial complex, they make a lot of money and they benefit from it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Congressman 16:09:29 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, what about that? How are you going to win the middle class back? Wall Street executives are making millions of dollars every year, paying tax rates of 15 percent, while the average guy out there is paying 30 percent in taxes. Is this system fair? 16:09:43 MCCAIN: Everybody is paying taxes and wealth creates wealth. And the fact is that I would commend to your reading, Ron, "Wealth of Nations," because that's what this is all about. MCCAIN: A vibrant economy creates wealth. People pay taxes. Revenues are at an all time high. What's the problem? It's not just here in Michigan. It's in the heartland of America. We're losing industrial jobs and we're not taking care of those who are left behind. Every town hall meeting that I have people say, "I don't know if I'm going to have health insurance or now." We're going to have to bring costs under control of health care if we're going to assure people that they're going to have retirement and they're going to be able to have the much needed medical care that they are -- need, as they grow older. The fact is that Social Security is going broke. The fact is that Medicare is going broke. That's a little straight talk and we've got to fix it. And we have to get spending under control and we Republicans who came to power in 1994 to change government, government changed us. 16:10:46 MCCAIN: And unless we get spending under control and eliminate all this waste and pork-barrel spending, the latest is this public works, $21 billion worth of pork barrel projects in public works, which the president should veto. Another one he should veto is the SCHIP program, which he should say, "Take the 'C' out of, because now it's for everybody, like every other entitlement program." And, by the way, a dollar a pack increase for cigarettes? So we want to take care of children's health and we want everybody to smoke? I don't get it. And we've got to get wasteful spending under control. (APPLAUSE) 16:11:25 BARTIROMO: So you're saying, Senator -- so you're saying the system is fair? 16:11:31 MCCAIN: Sure, it's fair. Should we -- because the bulk of the taxes are paid by wealthy people. Should we reform our tax code, which is completely broken, which no one understands, no living American understands? Absolutely, we should fix our tax code. MCCAIN: And we should fix it immediately. And we should have Congress either vote up or down on a freer, fairer, simpler tax code. (APPLAUSE) And I believe that Americans deserve that. (APPLAUSE) 16:12:01 MATTHEWS: Great transition. Governor Huckabee, tell us about your fair tax. You're going to get rid of the IRS. You're going to have a, basically, consumer tax. Won't that discourage spending? The American economy seems to always be driven by people buying things, maybe, they can't even afford. If you put a tax on spending, as opposed to income, won't that encourage people to hoard their money, rather than spend it... HUCKABEE: Now, Chris... MATTHEWS: ... and hurt the economy 16:12:21 HUCKABEE: You know Americans better than that. Nothing's going to discourage them from spending money. (LAUGHTER) Just go to any shopping center on Saturday. You'll find that people aren't having to be begged to go spend money. No, the fair tax does something that is absolutely phenomenal for the economy: It untaxes productivity. HUCKABEE: It untaxes those things which we export. It means that for the first time in a long time in this country, instead of exporting our jobs, we'll actually be exporting products that we make in America, and we'll be able to make sure that there's a level playing field. It ends the underground economy that right now makes it so that folks like us end up paying taxes, but drug dealers don't; illegals don't; prostitutes and pimps, they don't. But we do. You know, a lot of people are going to be watching this debate, they're going to hear Republicans on this stage talk about how great the economy is. And, frankly, when they hear that they're going to probably reach for the dial. I want to make sure people understand that for many people on this stage the economy's doing terrifically well, but for a lot of Americans it's not doing so well. The people who handle the bags and make the beds at our hotels and serve the food, many of them are having to work two jobs. HUCKABEE: And that's barely paying the rent. And you know what else? They don't think that they can afford for their kids to go to college. They're pretty sure they're not going to be able to afford health insurance. And so I hope, in the course of this, we can talk about how a fair tax really lifts up everybody, including those at the bottom of the economic spectrum and untaxes the poor people in our culture 16:13:56 MATTHEWS: Congressman Hunter, do you agree with that: the idea of replacing the IRS -- the income tax, a direct tax -- with an indirect sales tax? 16:13:59 DUNCAN: I'm a sponsor of the fair tax. But let me tell you, Chris, what is missing from this economy: 1.8 million jobs that have moved to communist China from the United States, including over 54,000 jobs from Michigan. You know, a couple of years ago, when our guys were getting hurt with roadside bombs in Iraq, I tried to find one steel company left in America that could still make high-grade armor steel plate to put on the sides of our Humvees to protect against roadside bombs. HUNTER: I found one company left that could still do that. And as you go down through the array of military systems that we need for our security we find that more and more of those have gone offshore. So this is also a security issue. You know, in Willow Run, just a couple of miles away, we made a bomber every 60 minutes during World War II. We made tens of thousands of tanks in Michigan. Today, we could not do that because we've fractured the great industrial base of this country and we pushed it offshore with bad trade deals. And I would say to my colleagues and Senator Thompson and the other senators, you all voted for "most favored nation" trading status for Communist China. That set the groundwork for 1.8 million high- paying manufacturing jobs moving offshore, going offshore, some of them never to return. HUNTER: And what I would do is pass the Hunter-Ryan bill which would put countervailing duties on the Chinese when they cheat. They are cheating on trade right now. I'd bring those jobs back home to the United States and I would connect up the middle class of America with the Republican Party one more time. 16:15:37 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, do you want to respond to that question or that comment by the congressman about Chinese trade? 16:15:42 THOMPSON: Free and fair trade as been good for America; responsible for millions of jobs in this country. We cannot turn our back on that. I was one of the strictest advocates of imposing restrictions on the Chinese for their behavior in terms of exporting dangerous materials to other countries and tying some of trade policies to what they did in that regard. They have still not done enough. They have devalued their currency which puts them in a favored position as far as our manufacturers are concerned. THOMPSON: But in terms of turning our back on free trade, that's not the direction to go in. It's meant too much for our country. And every country in the history in the world that's ever turned its back on free trade has suffered for it as a consequence. BARTIROMO: Ladies and gentlemen, we ask you, please, to refrain from the applause so that we can get as much time as possible with the candidates. Thank you so much. 16:16:30 Senator Brownback, are you prepared to say, categorically, that under a Brownback administration, there will not be a tax increase? 16:16:37 BROWNBACK: Yes. And I'd like to use the rest of my answer -- and time -- to talk about some other things. (LAUGHTER) Because, clearly, the last thing we need to do is raise taxes in this country. Currently, the country now, the average citizen works until the first part, the middle of May, just to pay their taxes. We're taxed to the max. And I think it's not enough just to say I'm not going to raise taxes. What should we go to differently? Because the current tax code really is an abomination. BROWNBACK: People don't understand it, it's manipulative, it's Washington trying to direct people's lives. So I put forward a proposal of an optional flat tax. And putting that on the table, saying, "OK, you can pick this -- if you want to stay in the code, go ahead, God bless you. But here's an optional flat tax." 16 countries around the world have gone to the flat tax. Nobody has gone back away from it, because it creates growth, it creates growth in the economy, and it increases revenue for the government. And we also -- we have to get spending under control. Here you've got to change the system. And I've been around it long enough to see that Republicans or Democrats in control, the system is built to spend. Our constituents come in all the time to my office and they say, "I'm a conservative, but could we have this bridge? How about this hospital?" They never say, "We've got too much federal money. Would you please cut it?" Nobody has ever told me that. So I think we need to take that BRAC military process for base- closing, apply it to the rest of government. 16:18:06 BROWNBACK: So you have an annual process for culling federal spending, that requires a vote of Congress. BARTIROMO: So name one program you would cut. 16:18:15 BROWNBACK: The advanced technology program would be a good one to start with. It goes toward high-end spending, corporate welfare programs. There's an abundance of those that we've gone at. I worked with Senator McCain; a number of us did. But cutting spending is tough to do because you've always got somebody pushing back and seeking more. That's why you've got to change the system, so that it regularly requires a vote of Congress on things to cut. That's what will actually reduce spending. 16:18:41 BARTIROMO: Congressman Tancredo, same question: Are you prepared to say, categorically, that, under your administration, there will be no tax increase 16:18:47 TANCREDO: Absolutely. I'll take the oath. The fact is this, that when we talk about spending cuts, which everybody, I think, on this stage adheres to and certainly pays lip service to, we have to think about what exactly it is that pushes spending at the federal level. TANCREDO: And, believe it or not, it isn't even earmarks. I'm all for dumping them. It's OK with me. But don't think for a moment that if we did it tomorrow all of a sudden we'd have a balanced budget. Of course, we would not. Because the thing that pushes spending at the federal level is mandatory spending. It's two things, really: Medicare, Social Security. Now, you can cut the entire budget, the discretionary budget. You could cut the whole thing out and only come close -- well, you'd cut the deficit pretty significantly. But, frankly, you really want to do without funding for the armed services? And that's exactly what we're talking about in the discretionary side. It's about $700 billion out of the $3 trillion budget. If you want to control federal spending you must look at Social Security and Medicare. TANCREDO: And it's a dicey game. I know the president tried. I give him credit for at least getting out there, touching that third rail, getting burned by it. He did. Jumped back immediately. But the reality is this: If you don't do it, forget about all this talk about reducing federal spending, it's not going to happen. You better address Social Security. You better come up with a way to allow for private Social Security accounts, structurally rechange (ph) -- structurally fix both of those things, or forget the idea of ending deficit spending. 16:20:33 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani and Governor Romney, these are 30 second answers. You've been having a tit for tat on tax cutting. What's the difference between the two of you. Your Honor, first? 16:20:35 GIULIANI: I cut taxes 23 times when I was mayor of New York City. I believe in tax cuts. I believe in being a supply sider. I cut the income tax I think it was 24 percent. We got 42 percent more revenues. I see in the Wall Street Journal this morning an editorial that says: Can we take the good news that the tax cuts have actually worked to produce about $500 billion in additional revenue no one ever thought was possible. So it's something that I believe in from results. I cut taxes by over $9 billion. I didn't cut every tax. You can't possibly cut every tax, as I think Congressman Tancredo pointed out. You need money for police. You need money for military. But I cut, I think, as many taxes as you possibly could in that period of time. And George Will said I ran the most conservative government, from that point of view, in the last 40 or 50 years in the entire country. 16:21:23 MATTHEWS: Let's go to Governor Romney. Your difference with Mayor Giuliani on tax cutting? 16:21:26 ROMNEY: Well, we both agree with the need to cut taxes and have fought to do so. And I did so in my state, too. We both believe in cutting back on spending as well. ROMNEY: But if you want to cut taxes, you're going to have to cut spending. And the best tool that a governor has and the best tool the president has had is a line item veto. And Mayor Giuliani took the line item veto that the president had all the way to the Supreme Court and took it away from the president of the United States. I think that was a mistake. He also fought to keep the commuter tax, which was a very substantial tax, a almost $400 million tax on commuters coming into New York. And when it's all said and done, if you're a New York taxpayer, city taxpayer, your state and city tax combined can reach as high as 10 percent. And in our state, if you're a Boston worker, it's going to be more like 5.3 percent. 16:22:08 RSo we both worked real hard to get the taxes down, to get the spending down. But I'm in favor of the line item veto. I exercised it 844 times. Thank heavens we had the line item veto. And I'd like it at the federal government level as well. We need it. 16:22:21 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, respond. 16:22:23 GIULIANI: I mean, the difference is that under Governor Romney, spending went up in Massachusetts, per capita, by 8 percent. Under me, spending went down by 7 percent. The line item veto was unconstitutional. I took Bill Clinton to the Supreme Court and beat Bill Clinton. It's unconstitutional. What the heck can you do about that, if you're a strict constructionist? And, finally, the point is that you've got to control taxes. But I did it; he didn't. GIULIANI: I controlled taxes. I brought taxes down by 17 percent. Under him, taxes went up 11 percent per capita. I led; he lagged. MATTHEWS: Sir, rebuttal here. Final rebuttal. (CROSSTALK) 16:22:59 ROMNEY: It's baloney. Mayor, you've got to check your facts. No taxes -- I did not increase taxes in Massachusetts. I lowered taxes, number one. Number two, the Club for Growth looked at our respect to spending record. They said my spending grew 2.2 percent a year. Yours grew 2.8 percent a year. But, look, we're both guys that are in favor of keeping spending down and keeping taxes down. We're not far a part on that. The place we differ is on the line-item veto. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I had it, used it 844 times. I want to see Liddy Dole's (ph) line-item veto put in place. The president's proposal to have it put in place. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I'd have never gone to the Supreme Court and said it's unconstitutional. MATTHEWS: Do you believe it is? ROMNEY: I do not believe the line item veto is properly structured. The president, just last year, introduced a line item veto that passes constitutional muster. Elizabeth Dole did the same thing. I'm in favor of the line item veto to make sure that the president is able to help get out pork and waste. Washington is finally going to have to have a reduction in spending. Republicans got spending out of control. 16:24:04 GIULIANI: You have to be honest people. And you can't fool all of the people all of the time. The line item veto is unconstitutional. You don't get to believe about it; the Supreme Court has ruled on it. So you can bang your head up against the stone wall all you want. I am in favor of a line item veto, expect you have to do it legally. And as the mayor of New York, if I had let President Clinton take $250 million away from the people of my city illegally and unconstitutionally, I wouldn't have been much of a mayor. So I took... (CROSSTALK) 16:24:31 GIULIANI: So I took President Clinton to court and I beat him. And I don't think it's a bad idea to have a Republican presidential candidate who actually has beat President Clinton at something. (LAUGHTER) MATTHEWS: OK, we've got to go to John Harwood. Thank you. (APPLAUSE) HARWOOD: As good as that fight is, I've got a question for Senator Thompson. (CROSSTALK) 16:24:48 HARWOOD: Senator Thompson, in the kind of dynamic economy that you mentioned lots of new jobs are created, but a lot of jobs are lost as well. The Bureau of Labor Statistic says three-fourths of manufacturing workers who lose their jobs and get new ones see their incomes go down. How would you explain to those people that their shrinking American dream is the price of progress, and what would you do to help them? 16:25:18 THOMPSON: Well, in a dynamic economy there are jobs lost and there are jobs gained, and so far there have been more jobs gained. And to put up barriers and say that so-and-so cannot lose a job would be the wrong thing to do in a free market economy. It's been so well for us. It's made us the most prosperous nation in the history of the world. But there's some things that you can recognize about the manufacturing industry and how important it is to us and how we can do something for the industry to help them hire more people and keep the wheels rolling. THOMPSON: Government policies, in terms of taxing and spending and regulation -- the manufacturing industry is, in large part, an international industry, nowadays, which means prices are set internationally. Manufacturers cannot do much about that, but they get hit with costs, domestically. We can do a lot about their costs, in terms of taxes and regulation. We have the second highest corporate tax penalty in the world. We need to do better than that. 16:26:18 We need to open up foreign markets. A lot of them are closing their markets to our people. Our people are not afraid to compete, if the markets are open and the currency's not devalued. 16:26:31 HUNTER: Yes, let me answer that. You know, Senator Thompson, there is one place where the federal government has a role in manufacturing. And that's ensuring that everybody's playing by the rules. Now, when Communist China devalues their currency by 40 percent, they undercut American products around the world. They undercut them so low that we can't even pay for the cost of materials and meet their prices. HUNTER: Now, that has put 1.8 million working Americans out of work. And that job, the job of enforcing those rules, is the president's job. That's what I intend to do. 16:27:06 MATTHEWS: Let me ask Senator McCain, you know, when a lot of us grew up, in the late '50s and early '60s, a young guy could come out of high school, marry his girlfriend from school, get a job at a big industrial plant making planes or making subways, and provide for a family with a middle-class income and his spouse wouldn't have to work. Will we ever go back to that world again? 16:27:23 MCCAIN: I'd like to say yes, Chris, but I think we are in the midst of a revolution that we haven't seen since the industrial revolution. A lot of people don't know that 50,000 Americans now make their living off eBay. We know that people have been left behind. We know that the tax code is eminently unfair. We know that one of the big problems right here in Detroit is that when they -- before they turn a wrench on a new care it's a $1,700 legacy cost for health care for their retired employees. MCCAIN: For Toyota, it's $200. We're going to have to fix health care. We're going to have to fix Social Security. And this line about it's just discretionary spending that's a problem -- the problem is, my friend, the American people no longer have trust and confidence in us that we will fix anything. As president, I'll fix them. 16:28:13 And the point is, that we need to have job retraining programs. We need to go to the community colleges. We even need, if you're a senior laid-off worker, who gets another job, to make up in compensation for the amount of money that's the difference between the job that they lost. We have to fix these programs. But, first, we've got to go to the American people with clean hands. We've got to tell them, we've stopped spending $3 million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. I don't know if that's a paternity issue or a criminal issue. (LAUGHTER) MCCAIN: I've got -- we've got to tell him that we will not spend $2 billion on an aircraft tanker which I was able to stop and save the taxpayers $2 billion because of this incredible, extravagant waste in defense spending today, which is the biggest part of our budget. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman Tancredo? 16:29:10 TANCREDO: I just want to quickly respond. I certainly can agree with the senator on one thing: that the government -- that the people of this country believe that the government is broken and hasn't fixed their problems to a large extent because of the senator's efforts in support of illegal immigration. That's one reason why they're concerned. And you're absolutely right. The government hasn't fixed the problem. And for every single illegal immigrant family in this country, it costs $20,000 -- it costs us $20,000, $20,000 in infrastructural costs. They pay about $10,000 in taxes. You really want to do something to restore the people's faith in government, do something about illegal immigration, don't just talk about it. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Jerry? 16:29:54 SEIB: Governor Romney, trade keeps popping up here so lets boar in on it a little bit. By one estimate, the U.S. has lost 5 million jobs to overseas trade since 1989 and the U.S. must borrow everyday $2 billion from overseas to pay for its imports. SEIB: President Bush says trade is still good for America. Are you a Bush Republican on trade? 16:30:07 ROMNEY: Well, I believe in trade, but I believe in opening up markets to American goods and services. And it's been calculated that the average family in America is $9,000 a year richer because we have the ability to sell products around the world. And a lot of people in this country make their living making products that go around the world. But it's also true that the people who negotiate these agreements -- the people who sit down with the Chinese and sit down the Mexicans and others are people, by and large, who spent their life in politics. And the politicians come together and try to understand how the economy works. I think I'm probably the only guy on the stage who spent most of his career in the business world. I understand how the economy works. I understand how if you make a certain adjustment in the agreement, it's going to have a huge impact on the United States. And so if, for instance, we agree to sit down with China, I understand that if we don't get real careful and protect patents and designs and technology, that what we tend to sell the most of, those kinds of things -- intellectual property -- is going to get stolen by the Chinese or by others; that we have to recognize agreements have to be in our benefit, not just in their benefit. ROMNEY: And so as I look across the agreements we've made, I recognize we're going to have to do a better job. We're going to have to have people who understand how the business world works, how the economy works, and make sure that the playing field really is level by having people who know something about the economy and that understand the business world being part of that effort. I want to make sure that the American worker gets a fair shake. We need to make sure that the Chinese begin to float their currency and they protect our designs and our patents and our technology. We need to make sure that the American workers don't have to carry the burden of extra taxes as we sell our products around the world. 16:31:41 The come here without that tax embedded. We can do a better job.ROMNEY: And I want to do a better job for the American worker. And by the way, this is key for Michigan. And for me, Michigan is personal. I'm going to go to work to help Michigan. BARTIROMO: Thank you, Governor. (APPLAUSE) 16:31:59 Mayor Giuliani, foreign acquisitions in the United States are headed for a record in 2007, and yet some money is still turned away. A Dubai company could not acquire our ports. A Chinese company could not acquire Unical. Has this company -- has this country become protectionist or are there serious, real national security concerns? 16:32:16 GIULIANI: Well, I think we're on a verge of going in one direction or another. I mean, for example, you want to get specific, the four trade deals with Peru, Colombia, Panama, South Korea that are in front of Congress right now, which the Democrats are trying to block, would be good deals for the United States. In three of the four of them, we would actually get to export more than we're importing. Why they would want to block this I can't understand. GIULIANI: We're already importing about 98 percent -- 90 to 98 percent -- from those countries. We would actually get to export more, and we would increase our exports. So, yes, we have to improve our free trade agreements. I think you've got to almost separate them into two different categories. ? 16:32:58 There's economic protection and then there's protection for safety, security, and legal rights. And I don't think we've done a particularly good job on the second, and we have to improve those agreements. But we can't throw out the baby with the bathwater. We can't say, because these agreements weren't perfect, because they have problems, because they have issues, we're going to turn our back on free trade. Our percentage of our economy that now depends on exports has gone up from 9 percent to 12 percent. We're a country that depends on exports. And we're also an entrepreneurial country. We're a country that should think about all these people that are coming out of poverty in China and India and elsewhere -- we should think of them as new customers. We should be thinking about, what can we sell to them: energy independence, health care? There's so much we can sell to them. Let's get back our entrepreneurial spirit, rather than having our head down. 16:33:46 BARTIROMO: So, yes or no: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? 16:33:49 GIULIANI: Sure, if they are -- if they are considered to be safe. If they pass safety and security clearances. Unfortunately, that deal was done so hastily, it was done so quickly, nobody can tell whether they could or they couldn't. But you just can't rule out foreign companies. There's a whole procedure you go through as to whether or not are they safe, are they secure? We cannot stop doing business with the rest of the world. If we do, this is one of the reasons our depression became a Great Depression, because we erected such high tariffs that we extended the depression from two or three years to 10 or 11 years 16:34:25 BARTIROMO: Very quickly, down the line, same question: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? Congressman? PAUL: If there's no conflict with national security, certainly, yes, they should. BARTIROMO: This is the story: Dubai owning NASDAQ. Is there security interests? 16:34:32 PAUL: I don't think they're a threat to our national security, no. So they would be able to. 16:34:44 HUCKABEE: I think it really matters as to whether or not they're going to be -- there's going to be a fair trade. And the fact is, we don't have fair trade. And that's the issue we've got to address. Can they buy a company? Sure. But our real problem continues to be that an American company is having to pay an extraordinarily high tax on everything they produce, but the countries who are importing to us don't have the same border adjustability that we do. HUCKABEE: And that's why we're losing jobs here. That's why people in Michigan are going -- looking for something to do. And that's what has to change and it's not being changed. And this party is going to have to start addressing it or we're going to get our britches beat next year. BARTIROMO: Senator McCain? 16:35:20 MCCAIN: Yes, of course. They have to pass the required security requirements and everything like that. I'm a student of history. Every time the United States has become projectionist and listened to this siren song that you're hearing partially this stage tonight, we could pay at a very heavy price. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Acts in the 1930s were direct contributors to World War II. It sounds like a lot of fun to bash Chinese and others, but free trade has been the engine of our economy in the last half of this year; it will continue to be. MCCAIN: And free trade should be the continuing principle that guides this nation's economy. BARTIROMO: Governor? 16:35:57 ROMNEY: Of course, you let a country invest in the United States. Because we're going to have to stop thinking always in terms of defense and trying to keep other people out. The key is that America can compete around the world and win, and we do in product after product, service after service. We're the best in the world. But we have to make sure that as we enter into agreements with other nations we make sure that those agreements are in our benefit as well as theirs. Usually that's the case, but not always. And in some cases it's not. We're going to make sure that our goods and services are sold around the world, that they're not held up, that our technology is not stolen. And we're going to make sure that America gets the best shake in these agreements. And, heck, you got to realize this country can compete with anyone in the world, has before, will always. We do not (inaudible) and put a motor on ourselves. We put down the drawbridge and say, "Let's go out and compete." BARTIROMO: Senator? 16:36:45 THOMPSON: The answer is yes. THOMPSON: Dubai would own 20 percent of NASDAQ. But NASDAQ under this deal, as I understand it, would gain more than 30 percent of the Dubai company. It all depends on national security issues. Doesn't seem to be one there. But we should look at all these deals carefully because we have a vast infrastructure. A great portion of it is in private hands. There's no way, frankly, we can protect it all. So we need to do everything that we can to make sure that we're doing all that we can to protect the infrastructure we've got and scrutinize these deals number, first and foremost, from a national security stand point. BARTIROMO: Congressman Hunter? 16:37:26 HUNTER: No, because I don't trust them. And I don't trust them because a few years ago Dubai while an American Customs agent was trying to stop them, set for delivery a set of nuclear triggers to an anonymous recipient in Islamabad, probably for the A.Q. Khan network. That went directly against American interests so I would not do that. And to all my colleagues who talk about the joy of free trade, that requires one thing: good business deals. HUNTER: We've made the only business deal in the world with 132 other competitors where they get to have a rebate on their taxes and then put a block up of 15 to 20 percent tariff against our goods and we don't get to do the same thing. That's why we have a trade deficit with countries that have higher labor rates than the United States. So we're short on good businessmen, and I would junk those bad trade deals, bring them back to the table. And I'd practice mirror trade. If a country wants to put a 15 percent tariff against the United States, they're going to see that reflected back at them. If they want to take it down to 1 percent, we'll take it down to 1. But there's not going to be a one-way street any longer. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Senator Brownback? 16:38:35 BROWNBACK: Yes. I think of the people on this stage, I'm the only one that's worked in the trade field. I was in the trade field as White House fellow in the first Bush administration. If this party walks away from free trade, we're going the wrong way as a party. BROWNBACK: And I think, to Congressman Hunter, who's a wonderful man, the United States is a low-trade -- low-tariff country. I think our average tariff, on anything that we have a tariff on, and most things we don't, is at 4 percent. So the negotiations we do are always with countries that have higher tariffs. And it's -- so the objective that we have is to get those down, and we've had a decent record. What we've got to do now, I think, is really focus in on China's currency manipulation and intellectual property... BARTIROMO: So the answer's yes? BROWNBACK: Yes. 16:39:23 TANCREDO: No, if -- I'll tell you, if Dubai wanted to buy Wal- Mart, I might think about it. (LAUGHTER) But if they wanted to buy something else that would have, in this case, certainly, more of an impact on our national security interests, I'd say, no, we'd have to think about that in a totally different way. It is exactly the same with regard to China. There are things that we should have thought of in the first place, when we passed the PNTR, which I voted against, along with Duncan Hunter. And I absolutely agree that trade is a great idea in many respects. TANCREDO: But when you trade with people who are your potential enemy, and they have shown a willingness to use that economic opportunity to actually increase their threats to the United States, I'm not for trading with them at all. 16:40:00 MATTHEWS: Governor -- I mean, Senator Thompson, let me ask you about an income tax issue. It gets batted around a lot in Washington, the alternative minimum tax. And here are the fiscal consequences. There's 20 million people about to be hit by that tax. It was meant to make sure rich people paid taxes, but now it's moving down because of inflation. If this tax isn't changed, 20 million people are hit by it. If we eliminate the alternative minimum tax, it costs the federal government $100 billion that has to be replaced, presumably, somewhere else. How do you deal with something like that? 16:40:28 THOMPSON: Well, in the first place, I don't buy the concept that any reduction in taxes is lost revenue to the government. The taxpayers haven't lost it. It's in their pocket. They know exactly where to find it. We shouldn't confuse the wealth of government with the wealth of nations. Just because the money's sent to Washington doesn't mean that the people are any richer. In fact, it's just the opposite is the case. As you pointed out, the AMT was designed for the -- to target the rich guy.THOMPSON: And when the Democrats start targeting the rich guy if you're a middle class guy, you ought to run to the other side of the house because you're going to get hit. They're not going to be on target. And this is another one of those cases. As you point out, we're going from about 4 million people covered now to over 20 million people. What we're going to have to do, though, is look at this as a part of a total picture. Generally speaking, lower taxes and lower tax rates grow the economy. It's been proven in the '20s, it was proven during the Kennedy administration, proven during the Reagan administration, and again during this administration. I would apply that same principle to the AMT. It ought to be phased out. 16:41:36 It think the responsible thing to do, though, until we get a handle on our mandatory spending side of the ledger is to index it for inflation and fix it for another year while we look at the budget in total. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Senator. We're going to break right now. 16:41:49 COMMERCIAL BREAK 16:45:34 MATTHEWS: We're branching out into other topics. Senator Thompson, all things considered, has the Bush policy toward Iraq been a good one? 16:45:37 THOMPSON: I think the policy we're engaged in now is the right one. Clearly, to me, we didn't go in with enough troops and we didn't know what to expect when we got there. But now we're showing signs of progress. I think we got to take advantage of the opportunities that we have there, now that we see a window of opportunity for things to turn around and us to stabilize that place and not have to leave with our tail between our legs. If we did that, it would make for a more dangerous United States of America. THOMPSON: I think we've got to come to terms with the nature of the threat that our country faces. 16:46:10 It is a global war; Islamic fascism has declared it upon us. They look at it as something that's been going on for a long, long time. They're perfectly willing for it to go on for a long time more, killing millions of innocent people in the process.They play by no rules and they are intent on bringing down Western civilization and the United States of America. So we have to understand what's necessary -- and the determination that we need to show to friend and foe alike that we'll do what's necessary to fight on any front that we have to fight on. This is a front in a much broader war, and I think the young people that I talked to coming back from understand that. In fact, sometimes it's strange to me to think that the average 20-year-old serving us in Iraq knows more about what it takes for our national security than the average 20-year veteran on Capitol Hill 16:47:00 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, last week on the campaign trail you were critical of President Bush for the lack of asking for sacrifice for the American -- from the American people after September 11th; adding that, "Just go shopping," wasn't enough. What would you have asked? 16:47:14 MCCAIN: I would have asked Americans, when we were incredibly united -- part of that I give credit to my friend the mayor of New York City, and Americans were ready to serve a cause greater than themselves. I would have told them, first of all, consider the military, also the Peace Corps, also AmeriCorps, also neighborhood watches, also volunteer organizations that we would form up all over America -- that way we would all serve this nation. I'd just like to mention, I'm the only one on this stage that four years ago said this is a failed policy in Iraq, it's not going to work, its got to be changed. I was criticized by Republicans for my severe criticism of Secretary Rumsfeld. MCCAIN: I advocated the strategy that's succeeding, and thank God the American people are giving us a little window so we can let this thing succeed and not have happen, as the president of Iran recently said, the United States will leave Iraq and there will be vacuum and Iran will fill it. That's what's at stake here. 16:48:14 MATTHEWS: Congressman Paul, would you -- would we have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:48:20 PAUL: Probably not, but that should not be a reason. That's an old theory. It's mercantilistic, it's neo-colonialism, that you have to maintain your supply routes and your natural resources. But I think there's still a lot of those kind of people around. And they believe -- we were told -- it was about oil and jobs when it first started in 1990, and this is just a continuation of that war. Indeed, this war is a mistake; was a mistake to go in. PAUL: It's very costly. And it has a lot of economic ramifications. 16:48:52 We're going broke. We have this huge deficit. We're spending nearly $1 trillion with maintaining our empire overseas. And that's a cost. Right now, we owe foreigners $2.7 trillion. No wonder they have money to come back in here and buy stuff up, and then we object. But that has to do with our monetary system, as well as our foreign policy. So if we want prosperity, we have to change our foreign policy. We have to live within our means. But we can't maintain a reserve currency where all -- our greatest export today are paper dollars. We create money out of thin air and they still accept it as if it was backed by gold. And that is the reason all this money goes overseas. And at the same time, we finance all this military activity overseas, it's bankrupting this country. 16:49:39 And not only that; it's a threat to our personal liberties here and it's going to be a threat to our economy, because we are beginning to live beneath our means. PAUL: And that is a natural consequence when you live beyond your means. So we must change our policy, both overseas and domestically. 16:49:59 MATTHEWS: Do you believe that, Senator Brownback, that we wouldn't have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:50:02 BROWNBACK: I don't believe that in the least. We went to Iraq -- on the war in Iraq -- what I voted for was the war on terrorism. And Afghanistan was where the Taliban was -- where Al Qaida was located. It was run by the Taliban. And we saw, in Iraq, what we thought was the mixture of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. And it was in 2003. This was in close proximity to 2001 when we had the 9/11 crisis. And I wasn't about to trust that Saddam Hussein wasn't going to mix terrorists with weapons of mass destruction. Now, we haven't found the weapons of mass destruction. But that doesn't mean we leave. And I think the Bush administration has generally done well militarily. And I think the military has done a fabulous job. (APPLAUSE) BROWNBACK: I think we have done poorly on the political side. And this Friday Joe Biden and I are getting together in Des Moines and we're going to be talking about the political side, a three-state solution in Iraq. This is what ultimately is going to happen. You're going to have a Kurdish north, a Sunni west, a Shia south, within one country, federalism with a weak federal government, the federal government headquartered in Baghdad. Joe and I don't agree on hardly anything, but this is what we need to do to get the political equation. That's what has been poorly done by the Bush administration, starting with General Garner and moving on through the succession. It hasn't been well handled politically. We've got to get a better, bipartisan political solution. We can. 16:51:30 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, Senator Brownback made the point that we haven't been able to find the WMD. You made a statement a couple of days ago, I believe, that alluded to the fact you believed that there were such weapons in Iraq. MATTHEWS: Do you believe they were there right before we got in -- they were moved out somewhere? 16:51:44 THOMPSON: No, I didn't say that. I was just stating what was obvious and that is that Saddam had had them prior. They used them against his own people -- against the Kurds. And of course, he had a nuclear reactors back -- I believe it was in '81 when the Israelis bombed that. And the Iraq Study Group reported that had designs on reviving his nuclear program which he had started once upon a time. So, there's no question that he had had them in times passed, and in my own estimation, there's no question that if left to his own devices, he and his son would still be running that place, attacking their neighbors and murdering their own people and developing a nuclear capability -- especially in looking what Iran is doing as their next door neighbor and long-time adversary. THOMPSON: And the whole place would be nuclearized. Saudi Arabia would probably respond to that. Other Sunni nations would respond to it. And you'd have an entirely nuclearized part of the world that we don't have now. That would be extremely problematic for us from an oil standpoint as well as a global stability standpoint. MATTHEWS: Thank you. 16:52:55 Governor Romney, that raises the question, if you were president of the United States, would you need to go to Congress to get authorization to take military action against Iran's nuclear facilities? 16:53:03 ROMNEY: You sit down with your attorneys and tell you want you have to do, but obviously the president of the United States has to do what's in the best interest of the United States to protect us against a potential threat. The president did that as he was planning on moving into Iraq and received the authorization of Congress... MATTHEWS: Did he need it? ROMNEY: You know, we're going to let the lawyers sort out what he needed to do and what he didn't need to do. But, certainly, what you want to do is to have the agreement of all the people -- leadership of our government as well as our friends around the world where those circumstances are available. 16:53:31 ROMNEY: But the key thing here is to make sure we don't have to use military action against Iran. That's what you hope to be able to do and that's why we're going to put a lot tougher sanctions on Iran -- economic sanctions, credit sanctions. We're also going to have to get serious about treating Ahmadinejad like the rogue and bafoon that he is. And it was outrageous for the United Nations to invite him to come to this country. It was outrageous for Columbia to invite him to speak at their university. 16:53:56 This is a person denied the Holocaust, a person who has spoken about genocide, is seeking the means to carry it out. And it is unacceptable to this country to allow that individual to have he control of launching a nuclear weapon. And so we will take the action necessary to keep that from happening. And I think each person on the stage, certainly in my case, I would make sure that we would take the action necessary to keep Iran from having a nuclear weapon 16:54:24 MATTHEWS: I guess I want to get to the basic constitutional view here of you gentlemen. I want to start with Congressman Hunter. The same question. If we get -- I'd like to get a number -- response. This couldn't be more important. Do you believe that Congress has to authorize a strategic attack, not an attack on -- during hot pursuit, but a strategic attack on weaponry in Iran -- do you need congressional approval as commander and chief? 16:54:38 HUNTER: Answer, Chris, it depends on one thing. First, I think the president does not need that if the target is fleeting. We live in this age of terrorists with high technology. And, if you have a very narrow window to hit a target, the president's going to have to take that on his shoulders. HUNTER: He's going to have to do it. He has right to do that under the Constitution, as the commander in chief of the military forces. If he has time, then certainly you want to go to Congress, as we did in Iraq, and get the approval of Congress. So it's a matter of whether or not the target is fleeting. And with respect to Iran, Iran is walking down the path to build a nuclear device. They've got now about a thousand centrifuges. They claim they've got 3,000. At some point, we may have to preempt that target. If we do, it should be done, hopefully, with allies, but perhaps by the U.S. alone. MATTHEWS: The same question down the line, gentlemen. It's so important. 16:55:28 Congressman Paul, do you believe the president needs authorization of Congress to attack strategic targets in Iran, nuclear facilities? 16:55:33 P PAUL: Absolutely. This idea of going and talking to attorneys totally baffles me. Why don't we just open up the Constitution and read it? You're not allowed to go to war without a declaration of war. Now, as far as fleeting enemies go, yes. If there's an imminent attack on us. We've never had that happen in 220 years. PAUL: The thought that the Iranians could pose an imminent attack on the United States is preposterous. There's no way. This is just... (CROSSTALK) PAUL: This is -- this is just war propaganda, continued war propaganda, preparing this nation to go to war and spread this war not only in Iraq, but into Iran, unconstitutionally. It is a road to disaster for us as a nation. It's a road to our financial disaster if we don't read the Constitution once in a while. MATTHEWS: Around the... (APPLAUSE) 16:56:26 Governor Huckabee, same question. Do you need Congress to approve such an action? 16:56:29 HUCKABEE: A president has to whatever is necessary to protect the American people. If we think Iran is building nuclear capacity that could be used against us in any way, including selling some of the nuclear capacity to some other terrorist group, then, yes, we have a right... MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: And I would do it in a heartbeat. MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: Well, if it's necessary to get it done because it's actionable right now, yes. If you have the time and the luxury of going to Congress, that's always better. But, Chris, the most important single thing is to make sure. MATTHEWS: And if Congress say no, what do you do? (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: If Congress says no, what do you do, Governor? HUCKABEE: You do what's best for the American people and you suffer the consequences. But what you don't do is what you never do, is let the American people one day get hit with a nuclear device because you had politics going on in Washington, instead of the protection of the American people first. (APPLAUSE) 16:57:17 MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 16:57:21 MCCAIN: We're dealing, of course, with hypotheticals. If the situation is that it requires immediate action to ensure the security of the United States of America, that's what you take your oath to do, when you're inaugurated as president of the United States. If it's a long series of build-ups, where the threat becomes greater and greater, of course you want to go to Congress; of course you want to get approval, if this is an imminent threat to the security of the United States of America. So it obviously depends on the scenario. But I would, at minimum -- I would, at minimum, consult with the leaders of Congress because there may come a time when you need the approval of Congress. And I believe that this is a possibility that is, maybe, closer to reality than we are discussing tonight. 16:58:14 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? THOMPSON: On this question? Yes, I think John has it right. I would add that under the War Powers Act, there's always a conflict between the Congress and the president as to the exact applicability of that when an engagement lasts for a particular period of time and when they must come before Congress. I don't think anybody running for president should diminish the power of the office before he gets there and take side in a hypothetical dispute. But I would say that in any close call, you should go to Congress, whether it's legally required or not. Because you're going to need the American people and Congress will help you if they're voting for it or if they support it, or leaders, especially in the opposite party, are convinced and looking at the evidence that this is the right thing to do, that will help you with the American people. THOMPSON: And we have learned that, over the long term in any conflict, we've got to have the strong support of the American people over a protracted period of time. 16:59:32 MATTHEWS: Just to bring it up to date on this, the political context -- you know, Mayor, that Hillary Clinton has proposed -- she's co-sponsored legislation to do just this: require the president to come to Congress for any decision to go to attack a nuclear facility in Iran. GIULIANI: It really depends on exigency of the circumstances and how legitimate it is, that it really is an exigent circumstance. It's desirable, it's safer to go to Congress, get approval from Congress. If you're really dealing with an exigent circumstance, then the president has to act in the best interests of the country. And the point of -- I think it was Congressman Paul made before -- that we've never had an eminent attack, I don't know where he was on September 11th. PAUL: That was no country. (APPLAUSE) That was 19 thugs. That had nothing to do with a country. GIULIANI: And since September -- well, I think it was kind of organized in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And if we had known about it, maybe -- maybe hitting a target there, quickly, might have helped prevent it. In any event, we've had 23 plots since September 11, where Islamic terrorists are planning to kill Americans, that we've had to stop. So imminent attack is a possibility, and we should be ready for it. 17:00:22 Now, you asked me about Hillary Clinton. At the last Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton was asked by Tim Russert whether she agreed with my position on Iran. I like that form of debate, by the way. Any time you want to do it that way, ask her if she agrees with my other positions as well. 17:00:36 But on Iran -- on Iran, what she said was, she was asked would you take a strong position that Iran will not be allowed to become nuclear and that we would use a military option, if we had to. And she didn't answer the question. GIULIANI: Well, you've got to answer the question. The answer is: Yes, we would. Iran is a greater danger than Iraq. Iraq cannot be seen in a vacuum. And we have to be willing to use a military option to stop Iran from become nuclear. If we're willing to do it, we have a much better chance of having sanctions for it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Mayor BARTIROMO: Let me zero in on oil. 17:01:09 Mayor Giuliani, under your leadership, how will this country become energy/oil independent and strike the right balance between environmental conservation and oil exploration? 17:01:21 GIULIANI: You know, the question that Chris asked before, about whether or not we would have had to have gone to war in Iraq if we were energy independent and we didn't have to depend on Middle Eastern oil -- I mean, that is -- I think the answer is probably we should have and would have gone to war against Saddam Hussein anyway, but maybe not. And certainly, they'd have less leverage. And I think Iran would be a lot more of a paper tiger if we were more energy independent. So this is -- and you can go on and there are a lot of examples like that. GIULIANI: This is a matter of national security. You've got to support all the alternatives. There's no magic bullet here. Biofuels, nuclear power -- we haven't licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years. We haven't had a new refinery in 30 years. We're on hold. Hydroelectric power, solar power, wind power, conservation -- we have to support all of these things. We've got to support them in a positive way. And this is an area in which the federal government, the president has to treat this like putting a man on the moon. It is a matter of national security. 17:02:21 One of the ways to win the Islamic terrorist war against us is for us to be energy independent. 17:02:28 BARTIROMO: But where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling off the coasts of Florida, California? 17:02:32 GIULIANI: You don't draw the line anywhere. What you do is, you work with people to try to advance all of these technologies. You can't do everything. You can't do long-term damage to our environment. That would be a mistake. That would be an overreaction. You have to make sound judgments, and you have to advance these new technologies. Why the heck haven't we licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years? GIULIANI: France is 80 percent nuclear. The United States is 20 percent nuclear, and we're going down to 15 percent. It comes because of inaction. It comes because we're not willing to stand up. And we're not willing to stand up sometimes to irrational fears and irrational special interests. 17:03:11 BARTIROMO: Senator Brownback, same question. Where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling exploration off the coasts of Florida? 17:03:17 BROWNBACK: I think that you go in every place that you can to find resources. I put forward a proposal for us to be energy secure, not independent, energy secure in 15 years. I don't think it's realistic for us to say that we can be independent of every country around the world on oil supplies or energy supplies in the near future given our dependence and given the nature of what the global economy is like. But I think one of the key answers is right here in Detroit. We've got to get more electricity involved in our car fleet. There's a Chevy Malibu parked out front here that's a hybrid flex fuel. They've got hybrid cars; they've got flex fuel cars. I think that's a big part of the answer. I'd like to see us move forward with getting those first 20 to 30 miles off of electricity that you plug into at night. BROWNBACK: That's technology. We're putting forward tax credits and incentives to try to move that forward. That's something Detroit here needs to grab on, and is. And that can move us forward as an industry and as a country. BARTIROMO: But on the issue of exploration, you said yes to the coast of Florida. And do you say yes to ANWR? BROWNBACK: I voted yes for ANWR. And I would support those, in other places, environmentally sound. We have to do it in an environmentally sound fashion. BARTIROMO: Congressman? 17:04:37 TANCREDO: You bet. I would agree to exploration off the coasts. I mean, it's -- how fair is it, today, that, Louisiana is producing all the oil that California and other countries are consuming, and they refuse to allow the exploration of oil off the coasts? I'd say, you know, if you won't allow it, you can't use it, the stuff that we're getting from Louisiana. (APPLAUSE) Now, the other thing is this. When we talk about deficits, our trade deficits, by the way, it's not importing, you know, toys from China that causes it. The biggest chunk of our trade deficit is due to one thing and one thing oil -- only. It's oil. That's where all the dollars flow. And where do they flow? To countries that want to kill us. So, yes, you better drill every place you can here, and you better figure out every way to reduce your dependency on foreign oil. BARTIROMO: John Harwood? 17:05:32 HARWOOD: Senator McCain, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips, this past year, earned a combined $72 billion in profits. Is that too much? Should the oil industry pay higher taxes, or should it be required to use some of those profits to help solve our energy problems? 17:05:34 MCCAIN: I would hope that they would use those profits to further the cause of alternate energy, nuclear power, of a lot of other ways that we have to employ in order to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil. 17:06:14 By the way, I wouldn't drill off the coast of Florida unless the people of Florida wanted to. And I wouldn't drill off the coast of California unless the people of California wanted to. And I wouldn't drill in the Grand Canyon unless the people in Arizona wanted to. HARWOOD: But you wouldn't require the oil industry... MCCAIN: I would do those things. What's that... HARWOOD: You would not require the oil industry to use its profits to help pursue alternative energy? MCCAIN: I would not require them to, but I think that public pressure and a lot of other things, including a national security requirement that we reduce and eliminate our dependence on foreign oil and we stop the contamination of our atmosphere which is -- in climate change, which is real and is taking place. MCCAIN: And we have now a confluence of two national security requirements. One is to address the issue of climate change, and nuclear power is a very big part of that. And it's also a requirement to not allow Chavez in Venezuela, Putin in Russia and the president of Iran to dictate world events, bully their neighbors and use oil as a weapon which would probably further terrorism and endanger this nation's national security. (APPLAUSE) 17:07:03 (UNKNOWN): Governor Huckabee, the federal government has spent years and billions of dollars promoting ethanol but the result has been a glut of ethanol and gas prices that are still at record levels. Wouldn't it be better to just let the free market determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or not? 17:07:21 HUCKABEE: But the accelerated pace at which we get there is critical for national security, as well as for our own economic interest. The fact is, we keep talking about 15-, 20-, 30-year plans; that's nonsense. If we don't start saying we'll do this within a decade, we're never, ever going to get there. And we need to approach it the same way that a car does at the Nascar pit-stop -- you rush in, you get it done because you have to. We're in a race. We're in a race for our lives against people who want to kill us. And a lot of the reasons that we are entangled in the Middle East is because our money buys their oil, that money ends up coming back to us in the way of Islamo-fascism terrorists. 17:08:04 We've got to come to the place where everything is on the table: nuclear, biofuels, ethanol, wind, solar -- any and everything this country can produce. We once had a president who said, "Let's go to the moon in 10 years," and we were there in eight. HUCKABEE: And we did that when we started with the technology of bottle rockets, when we got the thing launched. And we all saw that we can do it. But we can't do it when we create this sense of: We'll wait until another generation. We can't wait until another generation. Instead of running it like Nascar, we've been running it like taking the family station wagon in for letting Goober and Gomer take a look at it when they get time, under the shade tree. (LAUGHTER) So it's critical that for our own interest, economically and from a point of national security, that we become energy independent and commit to doing it within a decade. 17:08:53 (UNKNOWN): Senator Thompson, let me ask you to respond on ethanol. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes sense... 17:08:56 THOMPSON: First of all... (UNKNOWN): ... or should the market? THOMPSON: ... I want to explain for my friends here who Goober and Gomer are. (LAUGHTER) Excuse me. HUCKABEE: (OFF-MIKE) they watched Andy and Opie. (LAUGHTER) (UNKNOWN): It's a southern thing, I guess. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or should the free market make that determination? THOMPSON: Ultimately, it'll be the free market, but I think, like the governor says, I think that we're in a situation now where we've got to use everything that's available to us. I think renewables and alternatives are a part of that picture. I don't look for it to last forever. When the industry gets up and running and on its feet again, I don't see the need for what we're doing now. But you have to look at the bigger picture. Most economic downturns over the last 25 years have been preceded by a spike in oil prices. There's probably plenty of oil out there for the indefinite future. But price is an issue. And that brings in the whole question of the importance of stability in the world. The United States, since the end of World War II, has been a force for stability and democracy, which helps bring about stability, for a long, long time. Our policies with regard to places like the Middle East and Iraq right now are very important with regard to the very issue we're talking about, because instability and crises in the wrong parts of the world are going to cause dramatic results in the upward movement of oil prices, and that could be devastating to our economy. 17:10:26 BARTIROMO: Quick follow up. Governor Romney, you said government shouldn't get involved in business and free markets, but yet we subsidize farmers to the tune of $26 billion last year. Will the government end up bailing out farmers again? 17:10:36 ROMNEY: I believe in domestic supports for our agriculture industry. I don't see our food supply being the same kind of jeopardy situation that our energy supply is in. And clearly, there's a responsibility of government to make sure that our farmers are treated on the same basis as farmers in Europe and other markets that we compete with when the middle of the Doha round at the WTO talks. And if we find a way to bring down subsidies around the world, that will be good news. But with regards to energy -- and that's really the heart of what we're describing here -- one side of this is, of course, the fear. The fear of the fact that we face global warming. That we face serious competitive challenges globally unless we become serious with our getting prices of energy down. ROMNEY: But the other is the opportunity. It's a great opportunity for America to develop technology to lead the world in energy efficiency as well as energy production. And whether it's nuclear or liquefied coal, where we sequester the CO2, far more fuel-efficient automobiles -- by the way, where bureaucrats don't write the rules, but where business people come together and say, "Let's find a way to make sure that the American, the domestic industry can thrive." These are some of the incentives that have to be behind our policies with regard to our investments, the new technologies like ethanol. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Chris? 17:11:45 MATTHEWS: This is one of those 30-second down the line, gentlemen, questions. Polls show that Republicans are known as the party of national security and of moral values. But polls also show that voters look now at least to the Democrats to handle the economy. How are you going to win back their confidence? In order. Congressman Paul? 17:12:25 PAUL: Well, first, we have to have a sound economy, and we don't. We're overtaxed. We're over-regulated. And we work with a currency that is non-functional. And our prosperity is slipping. PAUL: And we are over-extended overseas -- you can't have a prosperous economy at home when you're spending all the money overseas. You can't even have a strong national defense if you're spending all this money overseas in wars that we're not winning. So, if we want a prosperous economy here, we have to change these policies and we can't be bailing out farmers and subsidizing ethanol -- this is just the wrong way to go. The taxpayers pay for the subsidiaries, and then they pay for higher prices when they buy the gasoline or buy the food; it never works. MATTHEWS: Governor? 17:12:45 HUCKABEE: The American people have always believed that the American dream was a lie for them. Most of us here today, probably every one of us are living better than we ever dreamed we would when we were kids. But when I ask the question of how many of you think your kids and grandkids are going to be living better than you, rarely does a hand go up. HUCKABEE: A lot of what has to happen is a restoring of the resilience of optimism in this country, and part of that is making sure that they understand that we understand we've got big problems that need big ideas, things like a total overhaul of our tax system and people who are running this country who grew up the hard way with a struggle, who understand what it's like to not be sure that the next day is going to necessarily be a great and prosperous one. MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 17:13:22 MCCAIN: The American people no longer have trust or confidence in our government. Our failure at Katrina, our failures in Iraq, our failures to get spending under control. And we've got to restore that trust and confidence. If we're going to have real immigration reform, we're going to have to have trust that we will secure the borders. The American people want us to stop the outrageous wasteful spending, which has caused our Republican base to become disenchanted and disillusioned. 17:13:54 We're going to have to do some -- make some decisions and make some hard choices. The American people are read to accept them. MCCAIN: But they want for us to be straight with them, and they want straight talk, that they will know the challenges and they will rise to meet them. MATTHEWS: How do the Republican win back confidence on the economy, Governor Romney? 17:14:10 ROMNEY: First, by being confident, not going out with the message of doom and gloom and of all the problems we have, but instead pointing out that the future's going to be even brighter than our past. And I'm entirely convinced of that. This nation has everything it needs to succeed around the world and at home. We have the heart of the American people, which is sound and alive and well. We have technology, innovation, capital. We need to have leadership that'll tell us the truth and actually lead. And vis-a-vis meeting with most likely Hillary Clinton, I can't wait to talk about the fact that I spent my life in the economy. I understand how jobs come and why they go. I know how to get a health care plan not just talked about, but actually implemented. I know how to make sure that we keep our taxes down and our spending down. I know how to help American companies do business around the world and stop those foreign companies from coming in here unfairly. ROMNEY: That's what I've done throughout my career. 17:14:39 I can't wait to debate with her, because I've done it. She's just talked about it. MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? 17:15:04 THOMPSON: I think we need to tell the American people the truth. Congress' approval rating now is about 11 percent. I don't think anybody believes anything coming out of Washington anymore. I think we need to tell them the truth that our security is on the line, that our economy is on the line, the our prosperity is on the line. We're going to have to do some things differently. We're probably going to have to spend more than 4 percent of our budget because we're spending right now on our military. We're bankrupting the next generation and those yet to be born. Those are truthful things that the American people, I think, have an intuition about. We need to own up to it. It's not all gloom and doom. We want to live in a world and a country that's free, and free markets. People accept responsibility, people who play by the rules and work hard can expect to live the American dream. If they need help in this country they get help and those that can help themselves are expected to do so. MATTHEWS: Mayor? 17:15:59 GIULIANI: How about division of a robust, strong America, an America that looks at energy independence from the point of view of, not only are you we going to develop it for ourselves, but this is exactly what we could be selling to China and to India. They need energy independence more than we do. How about an America that fixes its health care system in the right way, so we can actually sell that abroad? America -- the possibilities for America in this global economy are endless, if we don't put a lid on ourselves. Hillary Clinton, the governor mentioned, wants to put a lid on us. She wants to put a lid on our growth. We want to give people freedom. I'll give you an example. Hillary, the other day -- remember the Hillary bond program? She's going to give out -- she's going to give $5,000 to every child born in America, with her picture on it. (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: I think, right, right? OK, OK, OK. (LAUGHTER) I challenged her on it. I challenged her. She has backed off that. She has a new one today. This one is, she's going to give out $1,000 to everybody, to set up a 401(k). The problem is, this one costs $5 billion more than the last one. MOREn GIULIANI: So, I don't know -- Hillary is filled with endless ways to spend... MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Hunter? GIULIANI: ... and we're going to have to control that. 17:17:08 HUNTER: Chris, you know, we've got -- American families have watched $75,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore, $60,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore. They understand that something's wrong. And we've talked a little bit about the deficit about $160 billion this year. The trade deficit is $800 billion this year. And the one thing that we can do to restore confidence in the Republican party is be good businessmen and good leaders. Let's get rid of the bad trade deals and let's bring back to the table our trading competitors and make deals that give our guys sitting there at the kitchen table with their families a fair shot at a good job and give those small businesses that have been outdone by China's cheating on trade a good chance at winning for a change. That's what we can do. MATTHEWS: Senator, thank you. 17:17:55 BROWNBACK: I think real plans like an optional flat tax we can do, personal Social Security accounts, and being optimistic. This is the most powerful nation in the history of mankind. Right now, less than 5 percent of the world's population, yet 20 percent of the world's economy, a third of the world's military spending. Forty percent of our research and development budget around the world is in this country. I mean, this place rocks. (APPLAUSE) And I think we need to be optimistic and upward looking at what this nation.. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman? 17:18:25 TANCREDO: You want to raise wage rates in the United States. You want to reduce taxes in the United States. You want to re- encourage people to think about us doing the right thing as Republicans. Do this: Stop illegal immigration into this country -- will do all of these -- those things. And I'll tell you something else we need to do. I have never voted with Republicans than I have since we've been in the minority; it's incredible. We're fighting the Democrats now on tooth and nail on every single thing -- SCHIP -- great. You know what? Standing on principle is a good idea. Too bad we didn't do it when we were in the majority. Lets think about this now. Stop pandering. Stop pandering to all of these special interest groups. Do what's right regardless of whether or not people all agree with you when you take... MATTHEWS: All right. TANCREDO: ... you know, this kind of put your finger in the wind. do what you believe in. Stop pandering; they'll believe in us. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: We have a special interest to hear from. Right now we're taking a commercial break. 17:19:11 COMMERCIAL BREAK 17:20:16 END OF TAPE
CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE
[CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE] [DEARBORN, MICH USA] FTG FOR COVERAGE OF THE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE IN DEARBORN, MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR MITT ROMNEY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KANS) REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR MIKE HUCKABEE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER NEW YORK CITY MAYOR RUDY GIULIANI PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE DUNCAN HUNTER (R-CALIF) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE TOM TANCREDO (R-COLO) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE RON PAUL (R-TEX) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER SENATOR FRED THOMPSON (R-TENN) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN (R-ARIZ) 15:53:44 WALKOUT / VS OF CANDIDATES WALKING OUT 15:54:31 PAN LEFT AND RIGHT ACROSS CANDIDATES ON STAGE 16:00:31 BARTIROMO: Hi there. I'm Maria Bartiromo of CNBC. On behalf of the Michigan Republican Party and the University of Michigan-Dearborn, welcome to the first presidential candidates debate focused on the economy. We're coming to you from the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center here in Dearborn, in the heart of the American auto industry, a fitting backdrop to the economic issues facing the American people. MATTHEWS: And good evening from me. I'm Chris Matthews of MSNBC. Joining Maria and me in questioning the presidential hopefuls this evening will be John Harwood, chief Washington correspondent for CNBC, and Jerry Seib of the Wall Street Journal. We have a lot of ground to cover today, so in the interest of time, let's get right to it. Maria? BARTIROMO: OK, Chris. Senator Thompson, this is your first debate in the election. We welcome you. THOMPSON: Thank you. BARTIROMO: And we kick off with you. THOMPSON: Thank you. 16:01:59 BARTIROMO: The economy is America's greatest strength. In a recent poll by the Wall Street Journal and NBC News, two-thirds of the American people said that we are either in a recession or headed toward one. Do you agree with that? And, as president, what will you do to ensure economy vibrancy in this country? 16:02:12 THOMPSON: I think there is no reason to believe that we're headed for a recession. We're enjoying 22 quarters of successive economic growth that started 2001 and then further in 2003 with the tax cuts that we put in place. THOMPSON: We're enjoying low inflation. We're enjoying low unemployment. The stock market seems to be doing pretty well. I see no reason to believe we're headed for an economic downturn. As far as the economic prosperity of the future is concerned, I think it's a different story. I think if you look at the short term, it's rosy. I think if you look at a 10-year projection, it's rosy. But we are spending money we do not have. We are on a mandatory spending lockdown that is pushing us in a direction that is unsustainable. We're spending the money of future generations, and those yet to be born. That has to do with our mandatory spending problem. Everyone knows that we have to address that. And it's the fundamental and foremost challenge, I think, facing our country economically. BARTIROMO: Senator, you painted a very nice picture. The Dow and the S&P 500 today at new highs -- tonight -- record numbers. BARTIROMO: And, yet, two-thirds of the people surveyed said we are either in a recession or headed for one. Why the angst? THOMPSON: Well, I think there are pockets in the economy that, certainly, they're having difficulty. I think they're certainly -- those in Michigan that are having difficulty. I think you always find that in a vibrant, dynamic economy. I think that not enough has been done to tell what some call the greatest story never told, and that is that we are enjoying a period of growth right now and we should acknowledge what got us there and continue those same policies on into the future. BARTIROMO: Governor Romney, here in Detroit, Michigan, alone, one in every 29 homes went into foreclosure in the first six months of the year. 16:04:01 Whose job is it to fix this problem? The government or private enterprise? 16:04:12 ROMNEY: It's everybody's job. It's inexcusable that Michigan is undergoing a one-state recession, that the rest of the country is growing and seeing low levels of unemployment, but Michigan is seeing ongoing, high levels of unemployment, almost twice the national rate. ROMNEY: Industry is shrinking here, jobs are going away. This is just unacceptable. And, therefore, everyone's going to have to come together to solve the problem. 16:05:25 And that means, from the president's standpoint, the president's going to have to stand up and say -- you know what? -- to the auto industry: The door's always open. We're ongoing to work with you and make sure that you have a listening ear and someone who will participate with labor and with management. Number two, we're going to make sure that we invest in technology and research. A lot of that relate into energy, fuels, automotive research like material sites to help boost Michigan once again. We're going to have to fix the schools, as Newt Gingrich pointed out. 22 percent of Detroit kids don't -- excuse me, 22 percent graduate from high school. That's unacceptable. We're also going to have to do a better job keeping our taxes down. Jennifer Granholm has made a big mistake by raising taxes. I was, frankly, a little nervous to -- about being here tonight. I figured she was going to pot a tax on the debate before we got finished. (LAUGHTER) ROMNEY: So... (APPLAUSE) And we're going to have to go to work, as well, to make sure that there's a level playing field around the world, as we compete, to make sure that American goods are pushing into other markets, but goods coming overseas aren't getting an advantage, as they do now, with embedded taxes. There's a lot we can do to strengthen Michigan. And in some respects, what Michigan is seeing, the entire nation is going to see, unless we take action now to get Michigan stronger. BARTIROMO: Thank you. 16:05:48 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, the private equity firms are making billions of dollars. I guess it's a mystery to me -- and you can explain it, as a New Yorker -- where these billions of dollars come from; where were they before; and is there any downside to this amazing bonanza in the hedge fund and the private equity firms? 16:06:07 GIULIANI: Well, I mean the market is a wonderful thing. GIULIANI: I mean, the free market is our -- one of our greatest assets. And the leading Democratic candidate once said that the unfettered free market is the most destructive force in modern America. I mean, just get an idea of where the philosophy comes from. The free market is the asset that has allowed us to -- the sky's the limit. The reality is, that what we have to do is look at the fundamentals. A president can't be a economic forecaster. A president's not going to be any better an economic forecaster than you are a baseball forecaster -- and I'm not a particularly baseball forecaster this afternoon. (LAUGHTER) So the reality is a president has to work on the fundamentals. What are the fundamentals? Keep taxes low. Keep regulations moderate. Keep spending under control. GIULIANI: That's an area where we need a lot of help. And make sure you do something about legal reform so that our legal system doesn't -- it's 2.2 percent of our GDP now, is spent on all these frivolous lawsuits. It's double any other industrialized nation. If we don't get control of that, that's another way in which we're going to eat up our future. 16:07:20 So we got a prospect on the Democratic side of overspending, overtaxing, over-regulating, and over-suing, and I think you need a Republican alternative to that, which is an emphasis on the pillars of growth that I mentioned. MATTHEWS: Just to test your forecasting ability, Mr. Mayor, will Torre keep his job? (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: God willing. MATTHEWS: OK. 16:07:37 GIULIANI: Joe Torre is the best manager in the history of the Yankees, at least in the modern era. So -- and he's my friend. MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Paul, I think you have questions and concerns about the bonanza in the hedge fund industry. Do you? 16:07:50 PAUL: Yes. I think this is not a consequence of free markets. What's happening is, there's transfer of wealth from the poor and the middle class to the wealthy. PAUL: This comes about because of the monetary system that we have. When you inflate a currency or destroy a currency, the middle class gets wiped out. So the people who get to use the money first which is created by the Federal Reserve system benefit. So the money gravitates to the banks and to Wall Street. That's why you have more billionaires than ever before. Today, this country is in the middle of a recession for a lot of people. Michigan knows about it. Poor people know about it. The middle class knows about it. Wall Street doesn't know about it. Washington, D.C., doesn't know about it. But it's because of the monetary system and the excessive spending. As long as we live beyond our means we are destined to live beneath our means. And we have lived beyond our means because we are financing a foreign policy that is so extravagant and beyond what we can control, as well as the spending here at home. And we're depending on the creation of money out of thin air, which is nothing more than debasement of the currency. It's counterfeit. And it is a natural, predictable consequence that you're going to have people benefit from it and other people suffer. 16:09:02 PAUL: So, if you want a healthy economy, you have to study monetary theory and figure out why it is that we're suffering. And everybody doesn't suffer equally, or this wouldn't be so bad. It's always the poor people -- those who are on retired incomes -- that suffer the most. But the politicians and those who get to use the money first, like the military industrial complex, they make a lot of money and they benefit from it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Congressman 16:09:29 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, what about that? How are you going to win the middle class back? Wall Street executives are making millions of dollars every year, paying tax rates of 15 percent, while the average guy out there is paying 30 percent in taxes. Is this system fair? 16:09:43 MCCAIN: Everybody is paying taxes and wealth creates wealth. And the fact is that I would commend to your reading, Ron, "Wealth of Nations," because that's what this is all about. MCCAIN: A vibrant economy creates wealth. People pay taxes. Revenues are at an all time high. What's the problem? It's not just here in Michigan. It's in the heartland of America. We're losing industrial jobs and we're not taking care of those who are left behind. Every town hall meeting that I have people say, "I don't know if I'm going to have health insurance or now." We're going to have to bring costs under control of health care if we're going to assure people that they're going to have retirement and they're going to be able to have the much needed medical care that they are -- need, as they grow older. The fact is that Social Security is going broke. The fact is that Medicare is going broke. That's a little straight talk and we've got to fix it. And we have to get spending under control and we Republicans who came to power in 1994 to change government, government changed us. 16:10:46 MCCAIN: And unless we get spending under control and eliminate all this waste and pork-barrel spending, the latest is this public works, $21 billion worth of pork barrel projects in public works, which the president should veto. Another one he should veto is the SCHIP program, which he should say, "Take the 'C' out of, because now it's for everybody, like every other entitlement program." And, by the way, a dollar a pack increase for cigarettes? So we want to take care of children's health and we want everybody to smoke? I don't get it. And we've got to get wasteful spending under control. (APPLAUSE) 16:11:25 BARTIROMO: So you're saying, Senator -- so you're saying the system is fair? 16:11:31 MCCAIN: Sure, it's fair. Should we -- because the bulk of the taxes are paid by wealthy people. Should we reform our tax code, which is completely broken, which no one understands, no living American understands? Absolutely, we should fix our tax code. MCCAIN: And we should fix it immediately. And we should have Congress either vote up or down on a freer, fairer, simpler tax code. (APPLAUSE) And I believe that Americans deserve that. (APPLAUSE) 16:12:01 MATTHEWS: Great transition. Governor Huckabee, tell us about your fair tax. You're going to get rid of the IRS. You're going to have a, basically, consumer tax. Won't that discourage spending? The American economy seems to always be driven by people buying things, maybe, they can't even afford. If you put a tax on spending, as opposed to income, won't that encourage people to hoard their money, rather than spend it... HUCKABEE: Now, Chris... MATTHEWS: ... and hurt the economy 16:12:21 HUCKABEE: You know Americans better than that. Nothing's going to discourage them from spending money. (LAUGHTER) Just go to any shopping center on Saturday. You'll find that people aren't having to be begged to go spend money. No, the fair tax does something that is absolutely phenomenal for the economy: It untaxes productivity. HUCKABEE: It untaxes those things which we export. It means that for the first time in a long time in this country, instead of exporting our jobs, we'll actually be exporting products that we make in America, and we'll be able to make sure that there's a level playing field. It ends the underground economy that right now makes it so that folks like us end up paying taxes, but drug dealers don't; illegals don't; prostitutes and pimps, they don't. But we do. You know, a lot of people are going to be watching this debate, they're going to hear Republicans on this stage talk about how great the economy is. And, frankly, when they hear that they're going to probably reach for the dial. I want to make sure people understand that for many people on this stage the economy's doing terrifically well, but for a lot of Americans it's not doing so well. The people who handle the bags and make the beds at our hotels and serve the food, many of them are having to work two jobs. HUCKABEE: And that's barely paying the rent. And you know what else? They don't think that they can afford for their kids to go to college. They're pretty sure they're not going to be able to afford health insurance. And so I hope, in the course of this, we can talk about how a fair tax really lifts up everybody, including those at the bottom of the economic spectrum and untaxes the poor people in our culture 16:13:56 MATTHEWS: Congressman Hunter, do you agree with that: the idea of replacing the IRS -- the income tax, a direct tax -- with an indirect sales tax? 16:13:59 DUNCAN: I'm a sponsor of the fair tax. But let me tell you, Chris, what is missing from this economy: 1.8 million jobs that have moved to communist China from the United States, including over 54,000 jobs from Michigan. You know, a couple of years ago, when our guys were getting hurt with roadside bombs in Iraq, I tried to find one steel company left in America that could still make high-grade armor steel plate to put on the sides of our Humvees to protect against roadside bombs. HUNTER: I found one company left that could still do that. And as you go down through the array of military systems that we need for our security we find that more and more of those have gone offshore. So this is also a security issue. You know, in Willow Run, just a couple of miles away, we made a bomber every 60 minutes during World War II. We made tens of thousands of tanks in Michigan. Today, we could not do that because we've fractured the great industrial base of this country and we pushed it offshore with bad trade deals. And I would say to my colleagues and Senator Thompson and the other senators, you all voted for "most favored nation" trading status for Communist China. That set the groundwork for 1.8 million high- paying manufacturing jobs moving offshore, going offshore, some of them never to return. HUNTER: And what I would do is pass the Hunter-Ryan bill which would put countervailing duties on the Chinese when they cheat. They are cheating on trade right now. I'd bring those jobs back home to the United States and I would connect up the middle class of America with the Republican Party one more time. 16:15:37 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, do you want to respond to that question or that comment by the congressman about Chinese trade? 16:15:42 THOMPSON: Free and fair trade as been good for America; responsible for millions of jobs in this country. We cannot turn our back on that. I was one of the strictest advocates of imposing restrictions on the Chinese for their behavior in terms of exporting dangerous materials to other countries and tying some of trade policies to what they did in that regard. They have still not done enough. They have devalued their currency which puts them in a favored position as far as our manufacturers are concerned. THOMPSON: But in terms of turning our back on free trade, that's not the direction to go in. It's meant too much for our country. And every country in the history in the world that's ever turned its back on free trade has suffered for it as a consequence. BARTIROMO: Ladies and gentlemen, we ask you, please, to refrain from the applause so that we can get as much time as possible with the candidates. Thank you so much. 16:16:30 Senator Brownback, are you prepared to say, categorically, that under a Brownback administration, there will not be a tax increase? 16:16:37 BROWNBACK: Yes. And I'd like to use the rest of my answer -- and time -- to talk about some other things. (LAUGHTER) Because, clearly, the last thing we need to do is raise taxes in this country. Currently, the country now, the average citizen works until the first part, the middle of May, just to pay their taxes. We're taxed to the max. And I think it's not enough just to say I'm not going to raise taxes. What should we go to differently? Because the current tax code really is an abomination. BROWNBACK: People don't understand it, it's manipulative, it's Washington trying to direct people's lives. So I put forward a proposal of an optional flat tax. And putting that on the table, saying, "OK, you can pick this -- if you want to stay in the code, go ahead, God bless you. But here's an optional flat tax." 16 countries around the world have gone to the flat tax. Nobody has gone back away from it, because it creates growth, it creates growth in the economy, and it increases revenue for the government. And we also -- we have to get spending under control. Here you've got to change the system. And I've been around it long enough to see that Republicans or Democrats in control, the system is built to spend. Our constituents come in all the time to my office and they say, "I'm a conservative, but could we have this bridge? How about this hospital?" They never say, "We've got too much federal money. Would you please cut it?" Nobody has ever told me that. So I think we need to take that BRAC military process for base- closing, apply it to the rest of government. 16:18:06 BROWNBACK: So you have an annual process for culling federal spending, that requires a vote of Congress. BARTIROMO: So name one program you would cut. 16:18:15 BROWNBACK: The advanced technology program would be a good one to start with. It goes toward high-end spending, corporate welfare programs. There's an abundance of those that we've gone at. I worked with Senator McCain; a number of us did. But cutting spending is tough to do because you've always got somebody pushing back and seeking more. That's why you've got to change the system, so that it regularly requires a vote of Congress on things to cut. That's what will actually reduce spending. 16:18:41 BARTIROMO: Congressman Tancredo, same question: Are you prepared to say, categorically, that, under your administration, there will be no tax increase 16:18:47 TANCREDO: Absolutely. I'll take the oath. The fact is this, that when we talk about spending cuts, which everybody, I think, on this stage adheres to and certainly pays lip service to, we have to think about what exactly it is that pushes spending at the federal level. TANCREDO: And, believe it or not, it isn't even earmarks. I'm all for dumping them. It's OK with me. But don't think for a moment that if we did it tomorrow all of a sudden we'd have a balanced budget. Of course, we would not. Because the thing that pushes spending at the federal level is mandatory spending. It's two things, really: Medicare, Social Security. Now, you can cut the entire budget, the discretionary budget. You could cut the whole thing out and only come close -- well, you'd cut the deficit pretty significantly. But, frankly, you really want to do without funding for the armed services? And that's exactly what we're talking about in the discretionary side. It's about $700 billion out of the $3 trillion budget. If you want to control federal spending you must look at Social Security and Medicare. TANCREDO: And it's a dicey game. I know the president tried. I give him credit for at least getting out there, touching that third rail, getting burned by it. He did. Jumped back immediately. But the reality is this: If you don't do it, forget about all this talk about reducing federal spending, it's not going to happen. You better address Social Security. You better come up with a way to allow for private Social Security accounts, structurally rechange (ph) -- structurally fix both of those things, or forget the idea of ending deficit spending. 16:20:33 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani and Governor Romney, these are 30 second answers. You've been having a tit for tat on tax cutting. What's the difference between the two of you. Your Honor, first? 16:20:35 GIULIANI: I cut taxes 23 times when I was mayor of New York City. I believe in tax cuts. I believe in being a supply sider. I cut the income tax I think it was 24 percent. We got 42 percent more revenues. I see in the Wall Street Journal this morning an editorial that says: Can we take the good news that the tax cuts have actually worked to produce about $500 billion in additional revenue no one ever thought was possible. So it's something that I believe in from results. I cut taxes by over $9 billion. I didn't cut every tax. You can't possibly cut every tax, as I think Congressman Tancredo pointed out. You need money for police. You need money for military. But I cut, I think, as many taxes as you possibly could in that period of time. And George Will said I ran the most conservative government, from that point of view, in the last 40 or 50 years in the entire country. 16:21:23 MATTHEWS: Let's go to Governor Romney. Your difference with Mayor Giuliani on tax cutting? 16:21:26 ROMNEY: Well, we both agree with the need to cut taxes and have fought to do so. And I did so in my state, too. We both believe in cutting back on spending as well. ROMNEY: But if you want to cut taxes, you're going to have to cut spending. And the best tool that a governor has and the best tool the president has had is a line item veto. And Mayor Giuliani took the line item veto that the president had all the way to the Supreme Court and took it away from the president of the United States. I think that was a mistake. He also fought to keep the commuter tax, which was a very substantial tax, a almost $400 million tax on commuters coming into New York. And when it's all said and done, if you're a New York taxpayer, city taxpayer, your state and city tax combined can reach as high as 10 percent. And in our state, if you're a Boston worker, it's going to be more like 5.3 percent. 16:22:08 RSo we both worked real hard to get the taxes down, to get the spending down. But I'm in favor of the line item veto. I exercised it 844 times. Thank heavens we had the line item veto. And I'd like it at the federal government level as well. We need it. 16:22:21 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, respond. 16:22:23 GIULIANI: I mean, the difference is that under Governor Romney, spending went up in Massachusetts, per capita, by 8 percent. Under me, spending went down by 7 percent. The line item veto was unconstitutional. I took Bill Clinton to the Supreme Court and beat Bill Clinton. It's unconstitutional. What the heck can you do about that, if you're a strict constructionist? And, finally, the point is that you've got to control taxes. But I did it; he didn't. GIULIANI: I controlled taxes. I brought taxes down by 17 percent. Under him, taxes went up 11 percent per capita. I led; he lagged. MATTHEWS: Sir, rebuttal here. Final rebuttal. (CROSSTALK) 16:22:59 ROMNEY: It's baloney. Mayor, you've got to check your facts. No taxes -- I did not increase taxes in Massachusetts. I lowered taxes, number one. Number two, the Club for Growth looked at our respect to spending record. They said my spending grew 2.2 percent a year. Yours grew 2.8 percent a year. But, look, we're both guys that are in favor of keeping spending down and keeping taxes down. We're not far a part on that. The place we differ is on the line-item veto. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I had it, used it 844 times. I want to see Liddy Dole's (ph) line-item veto put in place. The president's proposal to have it put in place. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I'd have never gone to the Supreme Court and said it's unconstitutional. MATTHEWS: Do you believe it is? ROMNEY: I do not believe the line item veto is properly structured. The president, just last year, introduced a line item veto that passes constitutional muster. Elizabeth Dole did the same thing. I'm in favor of the line item veto to make sure that the president is able to help get out pork and waste. Washington is finally going to have to have a reduction in spending. Republicans got spending out of control. 16:24:04 GIULIANI: You have to be honest people. And you can't fool all of the people all of the time. The line item veto is unconstitutional. You don't get to believe about it; the Supreme Court has ruled on it. So you can bang your head up against the stone wall all you want. I am in favor of a line item veto, expect you have to do it legally. And as the mayor of New York, if I had let President Clinton take $250 million away from the people of my city illegally and unconstitutionally, I wouldn't have been much of a mayor. So I took... (CROSSTALK) 16:24:31 GIULIANI: So I took President Clinton to court and I beat him. And I don't think it's a bad idea to have a Republican presidential candidate who actually has beat President Clinton at something. (LAUGHTER) MATTHEWS: OK, we've got to go to John Harwood. Thank you. (APPLAUSE) HARWOOD: As good as that fight is, I've got a question for Senator Thompson. (CROSSTALK) 16:24:48 HARWOOD: Senator Thompson, in the kind of dynamic economy that you mentioned lots of new jobs are created, but a lot of jobs are lost as well. The Bureau of Labor Statistic says three-fourths of manufacturing workers who lose their jobs and get new ones see their incomes go down. How would you explain to those people that their shrinking American dream is the price of progress, and what would you do to help them? 16:25:18 THOMPSON: Well, in a dynamic economy there are jobs lost and there are jobs gained, and so far there have been more jobs gained. And to put up barriers and say that so-and-so cannot lose a job would be the wrong thing to do in a free market economy. It's been so well for us. It's made us the most prosperous nation in the history of the world. But there's some things that you can recognize about the manufacturing industry and how important it is to us and how we can do something for the industry to help them hire more people and keep the wheels rolling. THOMPSON: Government policies, in terms of taxing and spending and regulation -- the manufacturing industry is, in large part, an international industry, nowadays, which means prices are set internationally. Manufacturers cannot do much about that, but they get hit with costs, domestically. We can do a lot about their costs, in terms of taxes and regulation. We have the second highest corporate tax penalty in the world. We need to do better than that. 16:26:18 We need to open up foreign markets. A lot of them are closing their markets to our people. Our people are not afraid to compete, if the markets are open and the currency's not devalued. 16:26:31 HUNTER: Yes, let me answer that. You know, Senator Thompson, there is one place where the federal government has a role in manufacturing. And that's ensuring that everybody's playing by the rules. Now, when Communist China devalues their currency by 40 percent, they undercut American products around the world. They undercut them so low that we can't even pay for the cost of materials and meet their prices. HUNTER: Now, that has put 1.8 million working Americans out of work. And that job, the job of enforcing those rules, is the president's job. That's what I intend to do. 16:27:06 MATTHEWS: Let me ask Senator McCain, you know, when a lot of us grew up, in the late '50s and early '60s, a young guy could come out of high school, marry his girlfriend from school, get a job at a big industrial plant making planes or making subways, and provide for a family with a middle-class income and his spouse wouldn't have to work. Will we ever go back to that world again? 16:27:23 MCCAIN: I'd like to say yes, Chris, but I think we are in the midst of a revolution that we haven't seen since the industrial revolution. A lot of people don't know that 50,000 Americans now make their living off eBay. We know that people have been left behind. We know that the tax code is eminently unfair. We know that one of the big problems right here in Detroit is that when they -- before they turn a wrench on a new care it's a $1,700 legacy cost for health care for their retired employees. MCCAIN: For Toyota, it's $200. We're going to have to fix health care. We're going to have to fix Social Security. And this line about it's just discretionary spending that's a problem -- the problem is, my friend, the American people no longer have trust and confidence in us that we will fix anything. As president, I'll fix them. 16:28:13 And the point is, that we need to have job retraining programs. We need to go to the community colleges. We even need, if you're a senior laid-off worker, who gets another job, to make up in compensation for the amount of money that's the difference between the job that they lost. We have to fix these programs. But, first, we've got to go to the American people with clean hands. We've got to tell them, we've stopped spending $3 million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. I don't know if that's a paternity issue or a criminal issue. (LAUGHTER) MCCAIN: I've got -- we've got to tell him that we will not spend $2 billion on an aircraft tanker which I was able to stop and save the taxpayers $2 billion because of this incredible, extravagant waste in defense spending today, which is the biggest part of our budget. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman Tancredo? 16:29:10 TANCREDO: I just want to quickly respond. I certainly can agree with the senator on one thing: that the government -- that the people of this country believe that the government is broken and hasn't fixed their problems to a large extent because of the senator's efforts in support of illegal immigration. That's one reason why they're concerned. And you're absolutely right. The government hasn't fixed the problem. And for every single illegal immigrant family in this country, it costs $20,000 -- it costs us $20,000, $20,000 in infrastructural costs. They pay about $10,000 in taxes. You really want to do something to restore the people's faith in government, do something about illegal immigration, don't just talk about it. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Jerry? 16:29:54 SEIB: Governor Romney, trade keeps popping up here so lets boar in on it a little bit. By one estimate, the U.S. has lost 5 million jobs to overseas trade since 1989 and the U.S. must borrow everyday $2 billion from overseas to pay for its imports. SEIB: President Bush says trade is still good for America. Are you a Bush Republican on trade? 16:30:07 ROMNEY: Well, I believe in trade, but I believe in opening up markets to American goods and services. And it's been calculated that the average family in America is $9,000 a year richer because we have the ability to sell products around the world. And a lot of people in this country make their living making products that go around the world. But it's also true that the people who negotiate these agreements -- the people who sit down with the Chinese and sit down the Mexicans and others are people, by and large, who spent their life in politics. And the politicians come together and try to understand how the economy works. I think I'm probably the only guy on the stage who spent most of his career in the business world. I understand how the economy works. I understand how if you make a certain adjustment in the agreement, it's going to have a huge impact on the United States. And so if, for instance, we agree to sit down with China, I understand that if we don't get real careful and protect patents and designs and technology, that what we tend to sell the most of, those kinds of things -- intellectual property -- is going to get stolen by the Chinese or by others; that we have to recognize agreements have to be in our benefit, not just in their benefit. ROMNEY: And so as I look across the agreements we've made, I recognize we're going to have to do a better job. We're going to have to have people who understand how the business world works, how the economy works, and make sure that the playing field really is level by having people who know something about the economy and that understand the business world being part of that effort. I want to make sure that the American worker gets a fair shake. We need to make sure that the Chinese begin to float their currency and they protect our designs and our patents and our technology. We need to make sure that the American workers don't have to carry the burden of extra taxes as we sell our products around the world. 16:31:41 The come here without that tax embedded. We can do a better job.ROMNEY: And I want to do a better job for the American worker. And by the way, this is key for Michigan. And for me, Michigan is personal. I'm going to go to work to help Michigan. BARTIROMO: Thank you, Governor. (APPLAUSE) 16:31:59 Mayor Giuliani, foreign acquisitions in the United States are headed for a record in 2007, and yet some money is still turned away. A Dubai company could not acquire our ports. A Chinese company could not acquire Unical. Has this company -- has this country become protectionist or are there serious, real national security concerns? 16:32:16 GIULIANI: Well, I think we're on a verge of going in one direction or another. I mean, for example, you want to get specific, the four trade deals with Peru, Colombia, Panama, South Korea that are in front of Congress right now, which the Democrats are trying to block, would be good deals for the United States. In three of the four of them, we would actually get to export more than we're importing. Why they would want to block this I can't understand. GIULIANI: We're already importing about 98 percent -- 90 to 98 percent -- from those countries. We would actually get to export more, and we would increase our exports. So, yes, we have to improve our free trade agreements. I think you've got to almost separate them into two different categories. ? 16:32:58 There's economic protection and then there's protection for safety, security, and legal rights. And I don't think we've done a particularly good job on the second, and we have to improve those agreements. But we can't throw out the baby with the bathwater. We can't say, because these agreements weren't perfect, because they have problems, because they have issues, we're going to turn our back on free trade. Our percentage of our economy that now depends on exports has gone up from 9 percent to 12 percent. We're a country that depends on exports. And we're also an entrepreneurial country. We're a country that should think about all these people that are coming out of poverty in China and India and elsewhere -- we should think of them as new customers. We should be thinking about, what can we sell to them: energy independence, health care? There's so much we can sell to them. Let's get back our entrepreneurial spirit, rather than having our head down. 16:33:46 BARTIROMO: So, yes or no: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? 16:33:49 GIULIANI: Sure, if they are -- if they are considered to be safe. If they pass safety and security clearances. Unfortunately, that deal was done so hastily, it was done so quickly, nobody can tell whether they could or they couldn't. But you just can't rule out foreign companies. There's a whole procedure you go through as to whether or not are they safe, are they secure? We cannot stop doing business with the rest of the world. If we do, this is one of the reasons our depression became a Great Depression, because we erected such high tariffs that we extended the depression from two or three years to 10 or 11 years 16:34:25 BARTIROMO: Very quickly, down the line, same question: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? Congressman? PAUL: If there's no conflict with national security, certainly, yes, they should. BARTIROMO: This is the story: Dubai owning NASDAQ. Is there security interests? 16:34:32 PAUL: I don't think they're a threat to our national security, no. So they would be able to. 16:34:44 HUCKABEE: I think it really matters as to whether or not they're going to be -- there's going to be a fair trade. And the fact is, we don't have fair trade. And that's the issue we've got to address. Can they buy a company? Sure. But our real problem continues to be that an American company is having to pay an extraordinarily high tax on everything they produce, but the countries who are importing to us don't have the same border adjustability that we do. HUCKABEE: And that's why we're losing jobs here. That's why people in Michigan are going -- looking for something to do. And that's what has to change and it's not being changed. And this party is going to have to start addressing it or we're going to get our britches beat next year. BARTIROMO: Senator McCain? 16:35:20 MCCAIN: Yes, of course. They have to pass the required security requirements and everything like that. I'm a student of history. Every time the United States has become projectionist and listened to this siren song that you're hearing partially this stage tonight, we could pay at a very heavy price. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Acts in the 1930s were direct contributors to World War II. It sounds like a lot of fun to bash Chinese and others, but free trade has been the engine of our economy in the last half of this year; it will continue to be. MCCAIN: And free trade should be the continuing principle that guides this nation's economy. BARTIROMO: Governor? 16:35:57 ROMNEY: Of course, you let a country invest in the United States. Because we're going to have to stop thinking always in terms of defense and trying to keep other people out. The key is that America can compete around the world and win, and we do in product after product, service after service. We're the best in the world. But we have to make sure that as we enter into agreements with other nations we make sure that those agreements are in our benefit as well as theirs. Usually that's the case, but not always. And in some cases it's not. We're going to make sure that our goods and services are sold around the world, that they're not held up, that our technology is not stolen. And we're going to make sure that America gets the best shake in these agreements. And, heck, you got to realize this country can compete with anyone in the world, has before, will always. We do not (inaudible) and put a motor on ourselves. We put down the drawbridge and say, "Let's go out and compete." BARTIROMO: Senator? 16:36:45 THOMPSON: The answer is yes. THOMPSON: Dubai would own 20 percent of NASDAQ. But NASDAQ under this deal, as I understand it, would gain more than 30 percent of the Dubai company. It all depends on national security issues. Doesn't seem to be one there. But we should look at all these deals carefully because we have a vast infrastructure. A great portion of it is in private hands. There's no way, frankly, we can protect it all. So we need to do everything that we can to make sure that we're doing all that we can to protect the infrastructure we've got and scrutinize these deals number, first and foremost, from a national security stand point. BARTIROMO: Congressman Hunter? 16:37:26 HUNTER: No, because I don't trust them. And I don't trust them because a few years ago Dubai while an American Customs agent was trying to stop them, set for delivery a set of nuclear triggers to an anonymous recipient in Islamabad, probably for the A.Q. Khan network. That went directly against American interests so I would not do that. And to all my colleagues who talk about the joy of free trade, that requires one thing: good business deals. HUNTER: We've made the only business deal in the world with 132 other competitors where they get to have a rebate on their taxes and then put a block up of 15 to 20 percent tariff against our goods and we don't get to do the same thing. That's why we have a trade deficit with countries that have higher labor rates than the United States. So we're short on good businessmen, and I would junk those bad trade deals, bring them back to the table. And I'd practice mirror trade. If a country wants to put a 15 percent tariff against the United States, they're going to see that reflected back at them. If they want to take it down to 1 percent, we'll take it down to 1. But there's not going to be a one-way street any longer. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Senator Brownback? 16:38:35 BROWNBACK: Yes. I think of the people on this stage, I'm the only one that's worked in the trade field. I was in the trade field as White House fellow in the first Bush administration. If this party walks away from free trade, we're going the wrong way as a party. BROWNBACK: And I think, to Congressman Hunter, who's a wonderful man, the United States is a low-trade -- low-tariff country. I think our average tariff, on anything that we have a tariff on, and most things we don't, is at 4 percent. So the negotiations we do are always with countries that have higher tariffs. And it's -- so the objective that we have is to get those down, and we've had a decent record. What we've got to do now, I think, is really focus in on China's currency manipulation and intellectual property... BARTIROMO: So the answer's yes? BROWNBACK: Yes. 16:39:23 TANCREDO: No, if -- I'll tell you, if Dubai wanted to buy Wal- Mart, I might think about it. (LAUGHTER) But if they wanted to buy something else that would have, in this case, certainly, more of an impact on our national security interests, I'd say, no, we'd have to think about that in a totally different way. It is exactly the same with regard to China. There are things that we should have thought of in the first place, when we passed the PNTR, which I voted against, along with Duncan Hunter. And I absolutely agree that trade is a great idea in many respects. TANCREDO: But when you trade with people who are your potential enemy, and they have shown a willingness to use that economic opportunity to actually increase their threats to the United States, I'm not for trading with them at all. 16:40:00 MATTHEWS: Governor -- I mean, Senator Thompson, let me ask you about an income tax issue. It gets batted around a lot in Washington, the alternative minimum tax. And here are the fiscal consequences. There's 20 million people about to be hit by that tax. It was meant to make sure rich people paid taxes, but now it's moving down because of inflation. If this tax isn't changed, 20 million people are hit by it. If we eliminate the alternative minimum tax, it costs the federal government $100 billion that has to be replaced, presumably, somewhere else. How do you deal with something like that? 16:40:28 THOMPSON: Well, in the first place, I don't buy the concept that any reduction in taxes is lost revenue to the government. The taxpayers haven't lost it. It's in their pocket. They know exactly where to find it. We shouldn't confuse the wealth of government with the wealth of nations. Just because the money's sent to Washington doesn't mean that the people are any richer. In fact, it's just the opposite is the case. As you pointed out, the AMT was designed for the -- to target the rich guy.THOMPSON: And when the Democrats start targeting the rich guy if you're a middle class guy, you ought to run to the other side of the house because you're going to get hit. They're not going to be on target. And this is another one of those cases. As you point out, we're going from about 4 million people covered now to over 20 million people. What we're going to have to do, though, is look at this as a part of a total picture. Generally speaking, lower taxes and lower tax rates grow the economy. It's been proven in the '20s, it was proven during the Kennedy administration, proven during the Reagan administration, and again during this administration. I would apply that same principle to the AMT. It ought to be phased out. 16:41:36 It think the responsible thing to do, though, until we get a handle on our mandatory spending side of the ledger is to index it for inflation and fix it for another year while we look at the budget in total. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Senator. We're going to break right now. 16:41:49 COMMERCIAL BREAK 16:45:34 MATTHEWS: We're branching out into other topics. Senator Thompson, all things considered, has the Bush policy toward Iraq been a good one? 16:45:37 THOMPSON: I think the policy we're engaged in now is the right one. Clearly, to me, we didn't go in with enough troops and we didn't know what to expect when we got there. But now we're showing signs of progress. I think we got to take advantage of the opportunities that we have there, now that we see a window of opportunity for things to turn around and us to stabilize that place and not have to leave with our tail between our legs. If we did that, it would make for a more dangerous United States of America. THOMPSON: I think we've got to come to terms with the nature of the threat that our country faces. 16:46:10 It is a global war; Islamic fascism has declared it upon us. They look at it as something that's been going on for a long, long time. They're perfectly willing for it to go on for a long time more, killing millions of innocent people in the process.They play by no rules and they are intent on bringing down Western civilization and the United States of America. So we have to understand what's necessary -- and the determination that we need to show to friend and foe alike that we'll do what's necessary to fight on any front that we have to fight on. This is a front in a much broader war, and I think the young people that I talked to coming back from understand that. In fact, sometimes it's strange to me to think that the average 20-year-old serving us in Iraq knows more about what it takes for our national security than the average 20-year veteran on Capitol Hill 16:47:00 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, last week on the campaign trail you were critical of President Bush for the lack of asking for sacrifice for the American -- from the American people after September 11th; adding that, "Just go shopping," wasn't enough. What would you have asked? 16:47:14 MCCAIN: I would have asked Americans, when we were incredibly united -- part of that I give credit to my friend the mayor of New York City, and Americans were ready to serve a cause greater than themselves. I would have told them, first of all, consider the military, also the Peace Corps, also AmeriCorps, also neighborhood watches, also volunteer organizations that we would form up all over America -- that way we would all serve this nation. I'd just like to mention, I'm the only one on this stage that four years ago said this is a failed policy in Iraq, it's not going to work, its got to be changed. I was criticized by Republicans for my severe criticism of Secretary Rumsfeld. MCCAIN: I advocated the strategy that's succeeding, and thank God the American people are giving us a little window so we can let this thing succeed and not have happen, as the president of Iran recently said, the United States will leave Iraq and there will be vacuum and Iran will fill it. That's what's at stake here. 16:48:14 MATTHEWS: Congressman Paul, would you -- would we have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:48:20 PAUL: Probably not, but that should not be a reason. That's an old theory. It's mercantilistic, it's neo-colonialism, that you have to maintain your supply routes and your natural resources. But I think there's still a lot of those kind of people around. And they believe -- we were told -- it was about oil and jobs when it first started in 1990, and this is just a continuation of that war. Indeed, this war is a mistake; was a mistake to go in. PAUL: It's very costly. And it has a lot of economic ramifications. 16:48:52 We're going broke. We have this huge deficit. We're spending nearly $1 trillion with maintaining our empire overseas. And that's a cost. Right now, we owe foreigners $2.7 trillion. No wonder they have money to come back in here and buy stuff up, and then we object. But that has to do with our monetary system, as well as our foreign policy. So if we want prosperity, we have to change our foreign policy. We have to live within our means. But we can't maintain a reserve currency where all -- our greatest export today are paper dollars. We create money out of thin air and they still accept it as if it was backed by gold. And that is the reason all this money goes overseas. And at the same time, we finance all this military activity overseas, it's bankrupting this country. 16:49:39 And not only that; it's a threat to our personal liberties here and it's going to be a threat to our economy, because we are beginning to live beneath our means. PAUL: And that is a natural consequence when you live beyond your means. So we must change our policy, both overseas and domestically. 16:49:59 MATTHEWS: Do you believe that, Senator Brownback, that we wouldn't have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:50:02 BROWNBACK: I don't believe that in the least. We went to Iraq -- on the war in Iraq -- what I voted for was the war on terrorism. And Afghanistan was where the Taliban was -- where Al Qaida was located. It was run by the Taliban. And we saw, in Iraq, what we thought was the mixture of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. And it was in 2003. This was in close proximity to 2001 when we had the 9/11 crisis. And I wasn't about to trust that Saddam Hussein wasn't going to mix terrorists with weapons of mass destruction. Now, we haven't found the weapons of mass destruction. But that doesn't mean we leave. And I think the Bush administration has generally done well militarily. And I think the military has done a fabulous job. (APPLAUSE) BROWNBACK: I think we have done poorly on the political side. And this Friday Joe Biden and I are getting together in Des Moines and we're going to be talking about the political side, a three-state solution in Iraq. This is what ultimately is going to happen. You're going to have a Kurdish north, a Sunni west, a Shia south, within one country, federalism with a weak federal government, the federal government headquartered in Baghdad. Joe and I don't agree on hardly anything, but this is what we need to do to get the political equation. That's what has been poorly done by the Bush administration, starting with General Garner and moving on through the succession. It hasn't been well handled politically. We've got to get a better, bipartisan political solution. We can. 16:51:30 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, Senator Brownback made the point that we haven't been able to find the WMD. You made a statement a couple of days ago, I believe, that alluded to the fact you believed that there were such weapons in Iraq. MATTHEWS: Do you believe they were there right before we got in -- they were moved out somewhere? 16:51:44 THOMPSON: No, I didn't say that. I was just stating what was obvious and that is that Saddam had had them prior. They used them against his own people -- against the Kurds. And of course, he had a nuclear reactors back -- I believe it was in '81 when the Israelis bombed that. And the Iraq Study Group reported that had designs on reviving his nuclear program which he had started once upon a time. So, there's no question that he had had them in times passed, and in my own estimation, there's no question that if left to his own devices, he and his son would still be running that place, attacking their neighbors and murdering their own people and developing a nuclear capability -- especially in looking what Iran is doing as their next door neighbor and long-time adversary. THOMPSON: And the whole place would be nuclearized. Saudi Arabia would probably respond to that. Other Sunni nations would respond to it. And you'd have an entirely nuclearized part of the world that we don't have now. That would be extremely problematic for us from an oil standpoint as well as a global stability standpoint. MATTHEWS: Thank you. 16:52:55 Governor Romney, that raises the question, if you were president of the United States, would you need to go to Congress to get authorization to take military action against Iran's nuclear facilities? 16:53:03 ROMNEY: You sit down with your attorneys and tell you want you have to do, but obviously the president of the United States has to do what's in the best interest of the United States to protect us against a potential threat. The president did that as he was planning on moving into Iraq and received the authorization of Congress... MATTHEWS: Did he need it? ROMNEY: You know, we're going to let the lawyers sort out what he needed to do and what he didn't need to do. But, certainly, what you want to do is to have the agreement of all the people -- leadership of our government as well as our friends around the world where those circumstances are available. 16:53:31 ROMNEY: But the key thing here is to make sure we don't have to use military action against Iran. That's what you hope to be able to do and that's why we're going to put a lot tougher sanctions on Iran -- economic sanctions, credit sanctions. We're also going to have to get serious about treating Ahmadinejad like the rogue and bafoon that he is. And it was outrageous for the United Nations to invite him to come to this country. It was outrageous for Columbia to invite him to speak at their university. 16:53:56 This is a person denied the Holocaust, a person who has spoken about genocide, is seeking the means to carry it out. And it is unacceptable to this country to allow that individual to have he control of launching a nuclear weapon. And so we will take the action necessary to keep that from happening. And I think each person on the stage, certainly in my case, I would make sure that we would take the action necessary to keep Iran from having a nuclear weapon 16:54:24 MATTHEWS: I guess I want to get to the basic constitutional view here of you gentlemen. I want to start with Congressman Hunter. The same question. If we get -- I'd like to get a number -- response. This couldn't be more important. Do you believe that Congress has to authorize a strategic attack, not an attack on -- during hot pursuit, but a strategic attack on weaponry in Iran -- do you need congressional approval as commander and chief? 16:54:38 HUNTER: Answer, Chris, it depends on one thing. First, I think the president does not need that if the target is fleeting. We live in this age of terrorists with high technology. And, if you have a very narrow window to hit a target, the president's going to have to take that on his shoulders. HUNTER: He's going to have to do it. He has right to do that under the Constitution, as the commander in chief of the military forces. If he has time, then certainly you want to go to Congress, as we did in Iraq, and get the approval of Congress. So it's a matter of whether or not the target is fleeting. And with respect to Iran, Iran is walking down the path to build a nuclear device. They've got now about a thousand centrifuges. They claim they've got 3,000. At some point, we may have to preempt that target. If we do, it should be done, hopefully, with allies, but perhaps by the U.S. alone. MATTHEWS: The same question down the line, gentlemen. It's so important. 16:55:28 Congressman Paul, do you believe the president needs authorization of Congress to attack strategic targets in Iran, nuclear facilities? 16:55:33 P PAUL: Absolutely. This idea of going and talking to attorneys totally baffles me. Why don't we just open up the Constitution and read it? You're not allowed to go to war without a declaration of war. Now, as far as fleeting enemies go, yes. If there's an imminent attack on us. We've never had that happen in 220 years. PAUL: The thought that the Iranians could pose an imminent attack on the United States is preposterous. There's no way. This is just... (CROSSTALK) PAUL: This is -- this is just war propaganda, continued war propaganda, preparing this nation to go to war and spread this war not only in Iraq, but into Iran, unconstitutionally. It is a road to disaster for us as a nation. It's a road to our financial disaster if we don't read the Constitution once in a while. MATTHEWS: Around the... (APPLAUSE) 16:56:26 Governor Huckabee, same question. Do you need Congress to approve such an action? 16:56:29 HUCKABEE: A president has to whatever is necessary to protect the American people. If we think Iran is building nuclear capacity that could be used against us in any way, including selling some of the nuclear capacity to some other terrorist group, then, yes, we have a right... MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: And I would do it in a heartbeat. MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: Well, if it's necessary to get it done because it's actionable right now, yes. If you have the time and the luxury of going to Congress, that's always better. But, Chris, the most important single thing is to make sure. MATTHEWS: And if Congress say no, what do you do? (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: If Congress says no, what do you do, Governor? HUCKABEE: You do what's best for the American people and you suffer the consequences. But what you don't do is what you never do, is let the American people one day get hit with a nuclear device because you had politics going on in Washington, instead of the protection of the American people first. (APPLAUSE) 16:57:17 MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 16:57:21 MCCAIN: We're dealing, of course, with hypotheticals. If the situation is that it requires immediate action to ensure the security of the United States of America, that's what you take your oath to do, when you're inaugurated as president of the United States. If it's a long series of build-ups, where the threat becomes greater and greater, of course you want to go to Congress; of course you want to get approval, if this is an imminent threat to the security of the United States of America. So it obviously depends on the scenario. But I would, at minimum -- I would, at minimum, consult with the leaders of Congress because there may come a time when you need the approval of Congress. And I believe that this is a possibility that is, maybe, closer to reality than we are discussing tonight. 16:58:14 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? THOMPSON: On this question? Yes, I think John has it right. I would add that under the War Powers Act, there's always a conflict between the Congress and the president as to the exact applicability of that when an engagement lasts for a particular period of time and when they must come before Congress. I don't think anybody running for president should diminish the power of the office before he gets there and take side in a hypothetical dispute. But I would say that in any close call, you should go to Congress, whether it's legally required or not. Because you're going to need the American people and Congress will help you if they're voting for it or if they support it, or leaders, especially in the opposite party, are convinced and looking at the evidence that this is the right thing to do, that will help you with the American people. THOMPSON: And we have learned that, over the long term in any conflict, we've got to have the strong support of the American people over a protracted period of time. 16:59:32 MATTHEWS: Just to bring it up to date on this, the political context -- you know, Mayor, that Hillary Clinton has proposed -- she's co-sponsored legislation to do just this: require the president to come to Congress for any decision to go to attack a nuclear facility in Iran. GIULIANI: It really depends on exigency of the circumstances and how legitimate it is, that it really is an exigent circumstance. It's desirable, it's safer to go to Congress, get approval from Congress. If you're really dealing with an exigent circumstance, then the president has to act in the best interests of the country. And the point of -- I think it was Congressman Paul made before -- that we've never had an eminent attack, I don't know where he was on September 11th. PAUL: That was no country. (APPLAUSE) That was 19 thugs. That had nothing to do with a country. GIULIANI: And since September -- well, I think it was kind of organized in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And if we had known about it, maybe -- maybe hitting a target there, quickly, might have helped prevent it. In any event, we've had 23 plots since September 11, where Islamic terrorists are planning to kill Americans, that we've had to stop. So imminent attack is a possibility, and we should be ready for it. 17:00:22 Now, you asked me about Hillary Clinton. At the last Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton was asked by Tim Russert whether she agreed with my position on Iran. I like that form of debate, by the way. Any time you want to do it that way, ask her if she agrees with my other positions as well. 17:00:36 But on Iran -- on Iran, what she said was, she was asked would you take a strong position that Iran will not be allowed to become nuclear and that we would use a military option, if we had to. And she didn't answer the question. GIULIANI: Well, you've got to answer the question. The answer is: Yes, we would. Iran is a greater danger than Iraq. Iraq cannot be seen in a vacuum. And we have to be willing to use a military option to stop Iran from become nuclear. If we're willing to do it, we have a much better chance of having sanctions for it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Mayor BARTIROMO: Let me zero in on oil. 17:01:09 Mayor Giuliani, under your leadership, how will this country become energy/oil independent and strike the right balance between environmental conservation and oil exploration? 17:01:21 GIULIANI: You know, the question that Chris asked before, about whether or not we would have had to have gone to war in Iraq if we were energy independent and we didn't have to depend on Middle Eastern oil -- I mean, that is -- I think the answer is probably we should have and would have gone to war against Saddam Hussein anyway, but maybe not. And certainly, they'd have less leverage. And I think Iran would be a lot more of a paper tiger if we were more energy independent. So this is -- and you can go on and there are a lot of examples like that. GIULIANI: This is a matter of national security. You've got to support all the alternatives. There's no magic bullet here. Biofuels, nuclear power -- we haven't licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years. We haven't had a new refinery in 30 years. We're on hold. Hydroelectric power, solar power, wind power, conservation -- we have to support all of these things. We've got to support them in a positive way. And this is an area in which the federal government, the president has to treat this like putting a man on the moon. It is a matter of national security. 17:02:21 One of the ways to win the Islamic terrorist war against us is for us to be energy independent. 17:02:28 BARTIROMO: But where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling off the coasts of Florida, California? 17:02:32 GIULIANI: You don't draw the line anywhere. What you do is, you work with people to try to advance all of these technologies. You can't do everything. You can't do long-term damage to our environment. That would be a mistake. That would be an overreaction. You have to make sound judgments, and you have to advance these new technologies. Why the heck haven't we licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years? GIULIANI: France is 80 percent nuclear. The United States is 20 percent nuclear, and we're going down to 15 percent. It comes because of inaction. It comes because we're not willing to stand up. And we're not willing to stand up sometimes to irrational fears and irrational special interests. 17:03:11 BARTIROMO: Senator Brownback, same question. Where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling exploration off the coasts of Florida? 17:03:17 BROWNBACK: I think that you go in every place that you can to find resources. I put forward a proposal for us to be energy secure, not independent, energy secure in 15 years. I don't think it's realistic for us to say that we can be independent of every country around the world on oil supplies or energy supplies in the near future given our dependence and given the nature of what the global economy is like. But I think one of the key answers is right here in Detroit. We've got to get more electricity involved in our car fleet. There's a Chevy Malibu parked out front here that's a hybrid flex fuel. They've got hybrid cars; they've got flex fuel cars. I think that's a big part of the answer. I'd like to see us move forward with getting those first 20 to 30 miles off of electricity that you plug into at night. BROWNBACK: That's technology. We're putting forward tax credits and incentives to try to move that forward. That's something Detroit here needs to grab on, and is. And that can move us forward as an industry and as a country. BARTIROMO: But on the issue of exploration, you said yes to the coast of Florida. And do you say yes to ANWR? BROWNBACK: I voted yes for ANWR. And I would support those, in other places, environmentally sound. We have to do it in an environmentally sound fashion. BARTIROMO: Congressman? 17:04:37 TANCREDO: You bet. I would agree to exploration off the coasts. I mean, it's -- how fair is it, today, that, Louisiana is producing all the oil that California and other countries are consuming, and they refuse to allow the exploration of oil off the coasts? I'd say, you know, if you won't allow it, you can't use it, the stuff that we're getting from Louisiana. (APPLAUSE) Now, the other thing is this. When we talk about deficits, our trade deficits, by the way, it's not importing, you know, toys from China that causes it. The biggest chunk of our trade deficit is due to one thing and one thing oil -- only. It's oil. That's where all the dollars flow. And where do they flow? To countries that want to kill us. So, yes, you better drill every place you can here, and you better figure out every way to reduce your dependency on foreign oil. BARTIROMO: John Harwood? 17:05:32 HARWOOD: Senator McCain, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips, this past year, earned a combined $72 billion in profits. Is that too much? Should the oil industry pay higher taxes, or should it be required to use some of those profits to help solve our energy problems? 17:05:34 MCCAIN: I would hope that they would use those profits to further the cause of alternate energy, nuclear power, of a lot of other ways that we have to employ in order to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil. 17:06:14 By the way, I wouldn't drill off the coast of Florida unless the people of Florida wanted to. And I wouldn't drill off the coast of California unless the people of California wanted to. And I wouldn't drill in the Grand Canyon unless the people in Arizona wanted to. HARWOOD: But you wouldn't require the oil industry... MCCAIN: I would do those things. What's that... HARWOOD: You would not require the oil industry to use its profits to help pursue alternative energy? MCCAIN: I would not require them to, but I think that public pressure and a lot of other things, including a national security requirement that we reduce and eliminate our dependence on foreign oil and we stop the contamination of our atmosphere which is -- in climate change, which is real and is taking place. MCCAIN: And we have now a confluence of two national security requirements. One is to address the issue of climate change, and nuclear power is a very big part of that. And it's also a requirement to not allow Chavez in Venezuela, Putin in Russia and the president of Iran to dictate world events, bully their neighbors and use oil as a weapon which would probably further terrorism and endanger this nation's national security. (APPLAUSE) 17:07:03 (UNKNOWN): Governor Huckabee, the federal government has spent years and billions of dollars promoting ethanol but the result has been a glut of ethanol and gas prices that are still at record levels. Wouldn't it be better to just let the free market determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or not? 17:07:21 HUCKABEE: But the accelerated pace at which we get there is critical for national security, as well as for our own economic interest. The fact is, we keep talking about 15-, 20-, 30-year plans; that's nonsense. If we don't start saying we'll do this within a decade, we're never, ever going to get there. And we need to approach it the same way that a car does at the Nascar pit-stop -- you rush in, you get it done because you have to. We're in a race. We're in a race for our lives against people who want to kill us. And a lot of the reasons that we are entangled in the Middle East is because our money buys their oil, that money ends up coming back to us in the way of Islamo-fascism terrorists. 17:08:04 We've got to come to the place where everything is on the table: nuclear, biofuels, ethanol, wind, solar -- any and everything this country can produce. We once had a president who said, "Let's go to the moon in 10 years," and we were there in eight. HUCKABEE: And we did that when we started with the technology of bottle rockets, when we got the thing launched. And we all saw that we can do it. But we can't do it when we create this sense of: We'll wait until another generation. We can't wait until another generation. Instead of running it like Nascar, we've been running it like taking the family station wagon in for letting Goober and Gomer take a look at it when they get time, under the shade tree. (LAUGHTER) So it's critical that for our own interest, economically and from a point of national security, that we become energy independent and commit to doing it within a decade. 17:08:53 (UNKNOWN): Senator Thompson, let me ask you to respond on ethanol. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes sense... 17:08:56 THOMPSON: First of all... (UNKNOWN): ... or should the market? THOMPSON: ... I want to explain for my friends here who Goober and Gomer are. (LAUGHTER) Excuse me. HUCKABEE: (OFF-MIKE) they watched Andy and Opie. (LAUGHTER) (UNKNOWN): It's a southern thing, I guess. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or should the free market make that determination? THOMPSON: Ultimately, it'll be the free market, but I think, like the governor says, I think that we're in a situation now where we've got to use everything that's available to us. I think renewables and alternatives are a part of that picture. I don't look for it to last forever. When the industry gets up and running and on its feet again, I don't see the need for what we're doing now. But you have to look at the bigger picture. Most economic downturns over the last 25 years have been preceded by a spike in oil prices. There's probably plenty of oil out there for the indefinite future. But price is an issue. And that brings in the whole question of the importance of stability in the world. The United States, since the end of World War II, has been a force for stability and democracy, which helps bring about stability, for a long, long time. Our policies with regard to places like the Middle East and Iraq right now are very important with regard to the very issue we're talking about, because instability and crises in the wrong parts of the world are going to cause dramatic results in the upward movement of oil prices, and that could be devastating to our economy. 17:10:26 BARTIROMO: Quick follow up. Governor Romney, you said government shouldn't get involved in business and free markets, but yet we subsidize farmers to the tune of $26 billion last year. Will the government end up bailing out farmers again? 17:10:36 ROMNEY: I believe in domestic supports for our agriculture industry. I don't see our food supply being the same kind of jeopardy situation that our energy supply is in. And clearly, there's a responsibility of government to make sure that our farmers are treated on the same basis as farmers in Europe and other markets that we compete with when the middle of the Doha round at the WTO talks. And if we find a way to bring down subsidies around the world, that will be good news. But with regards to energy -- and that's really the heart of what we're describing here -- one side of this is, of course, the fear. The fear of the fact that we face global warming. That we face serious competitive challenges globally unless we become serious with our getting prices of energy down. ROMNEY: But the other is the opportunity. It's a great opportunity for America to develop technology to lead the world in energy efficiency as well as energy production. And whether it's nuclear or liquefied coal, where we sequester the CO2, far more fuel-efficient automobiles -- by the way, where bureaucrats don't write the rules, but where business people come together and say, "Let's find a way to make sure that the American, the domestic industry can thrive." These are some of the incentives that have to be behind our policies with regard to our investments, the new technologies like ethanol. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Chris? 17:11:45 MATTHEWS: This is one of those 30-second down the line, gentlemen, questions. Polls show that Republicans are known as the party of national security and of moral values. But polls also show that voters look now at least to the Democrats to handle the economy. How are you going to win back their confidence? In order. Congressman Paul? 17:12:25 PAUL: Well, first, we have to have a sound economy, and we don't. We're overtaxed. We're over-regulated. And we work with a currency that is non-functional. And our prosperity is slipping. PAUL: And we are over-extended overseas -- you can't have a prosperous economy at home when you're spending all the money overseas. You can't even have a strong national defense if you're spending all this money overseas in wars that we're not winning. So, if we want a prosperous economy here, we have to change these policies and we can't be bailing out farmers and subsidizing ethanol -- this is just the wrong way to go. The taxpayers pay for the subsidiaries, and then they pay for higher prices when they buy the gasoline or buy the food; it never works. MATTHEWS: Governor? 17:12:45 HUCKABEE: The American people have always believed that the American dream was a lie for them. Most of us here today, probably every one of us are living better than we ever dreamed we would when we were kids. But when I ask the question of how many of you think your kids and grandkids are going to be living better than you, rarely does a hand go up. HUCKABEE: A lot of what has to happen is a restoring of the resilience of optimism in this country, and part of that is making sure that they understand that we understand we've got big problems that need big ideas, things like a total overhaul of our tax system and people who are running this country who grew up the hard way with a struggle, who understand what it's like to not be sure that the next day is going to necessarily be a great and prosperous one. MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 17:13:22 MCCAIN: The American people no longer have trust or confidence in our government. Our failure at Katrina, our failures in Iraq, our failures to get spending under control. And we've got to restore that trust and confidence. If we're going to have real immigration reform, we're going to have to have trust that we will secure the borders. The American people want us to stop the outrageous wasteful spending, which has caused our Republican base to become disenchanted and disillusioned. 17:13:54 We're going to have to do some -- make some decisions and make some hard choices. The American people are read to accept them. MCCAIN: But they want for us to be straight with them, and they want straight talk, that they will know the challenges and they will rise to meet them. MATTHEWS: How do the Republican win back confidence on the economy, Governor Romney? 17:14:10 ROMNEY: First, by being confident, not going out with the message of doom and gloom and of all the problems we have, but instead pointing out that the future's going to be even brighter than our past. And I'm entirely convinced of that. This nation has everything it needs to succeed around the world and at home. We have the heart of the American people, which is sound and alive and well. We have technology, innovation, capital. We need to have leadership that'll tell us the truth and actually lead. And vis-a-vis meeting with most likely Hillary Clinton, I can't wait to talk about the fact that I spent my life in the economy. I understand how jobs come and why they go. I know how to get a health care plan not just talked about, but actually implemented. I know how to make sure that we keep our taxes down and our spending down. I know how to help American companies do business around the world and stop those foreign companies from coming in here unfairly. ROMNEY: That's what I've done throughout my career. 17:14:39 I can't wait to debate with her, because I've done it. She's just talked about it. MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? 17:15:04 THOMPSON: I think we need to tell the American people the truth. Congress' approval rating now is about 11 percent. I don't think anybody believes anything coming out of Washington anymore. I think we need to tell them the truth that our security is on the line, that our economy is on the line, the our prosperity is on the line. We're going to have to do some things differently. We're probably going to have to spend more than 4 percent of our budget because we're spending right now on our military. We're bankrupting the next generation and those yet to be born. Those are truthful things that the American people, I think, have an intuition about. We need to own up to it. It's not all gloom and doom. We want to live in a world and a country that's free, and free markets. People accept responsibility, people who play by the rules and work hard can expect to live the American dream. If they need help in this country they get help and those that can help themselves are expected to do so. MATTHEWS: Mayor? 17:15:59 GIULIANI: How about division of a robust, strong America, an America that looks at energy independence from the point of view of, not only are you we going to develop it for ourselves, but this is exactly what we could be selling to China and to India. They need energy independence more than we do. How about an America that fixes its health care system in the right way, so we can actually sell that abroad? America -- the possibilities for America in this global economy are endless, if we don't put a lid on ourselves. Hillary Clinton, the governor mentioned, wants to put a lid on us. She wants to put a lid on our growth. We want to give people freedom. I'll give you an example. Hillary, the other day -- remember the Hillary bond program? She's going to give out -- she's going to give $5,000 to every child born in America, with her picture on it. (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: I think, right, right? OK, OK, OK. (LAUGHTER) I challenged her on it. I challenged her. She has backed off that. She has a new one today. This one is, she's going to give out $1,000 to everybody, to set up a 401(k). The problem is, this one costs $5 billion more than the last one. MOREn GIULIANI: So, I don't know -- Hillary is filled with endless ways to spend... MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Hunter? GIULIANI: ... and we're going to have to control that. 17:17:08 HUNTER: Chris, you know, we've got -- American families have watched $75,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore, $60,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore. They understand that something's wrong. And we've talked a little bit about the deficit about $160 billion this year. The trade deficit is $800 billion this year. And the one thing that we can do to restore confidence in the Republican party is be good businessmen and good leaders. Let's get rid of the bad trade deals and let's bring back to the table our trading competitors and make deals that give our guys sitting there at the kitchen table with their families a fair shot at a good job and give those small businesses that have been outdone by China's cheating on trade a good chance at winning for a change. That's what we can do. MATTHEWS: Senator, thank you. 17:17:55 BROWNBACK: I think real plans like an optional flat tax we can do, personal Social Security accounts, and being optimistic. This is the most powerful nation in the history of mankind. Right now, less than 5 percent of the world's population, yet 20 percent of the world's economy, a third of the world's military spending. Forty percent of our research and development budget around the world is in this country. I mean, this place rocks. (APPLAUSE) And I think we need to be optimistic and upward looking at what this nation.. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman? 17:18:25 TANCREDO: You want to raise wage rates in the United States. You want to reduce taxes in the United States. You want to re- encourage people to think about us doing the right thing as Republicans. Do this: Stop illegal immigration into this country -- will do all of these -- those things. And I'll tell you something else we need to do. I have never voted with Republicans than I have since we've been in the minority; it's incredible. We're fighting the Democrats now on tooth and nail on every single thing -- SCHIP -- great. You know what? Standing on principle is a good idea. Too bad we didn't do it when we were in the majority. Lets think about this now. Stop pandering. Stop pandering to all of these special interest groups. Do what's right regardless of whether or not people all agree with you when you take... MATTHEWS: All right. TANCREDO: ... you know, this kind of put your finger in the wind. do what you believe in. Stop pandering; they'll believe in us. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: We have a special interest to hear from. Right now we're taking a commercial break. 17:19:11 COMMERCIAL BREAK 17:20:16 END OF TAPE
CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE
[CNBC / MSNBC GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES DEBATE] [DEARBORN, MICH USA] FTG FOR COVERAGE OF THE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE IN DEARBORN, MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR MITT ROMNEY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KANS) REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR MIKE HUCKABEE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER NEW YORK CITY MAYOR RUDY GIULIANI PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE DUNCAN HUNTER (R-CALIF) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE TOM TANCREDO (R-COLO) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REPRESENTATIVE RON PAUL (R-TEX) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER SENATOR FRED THOMPSON (R-TENN) PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN (R-ARIZ) 15:53:44 WALKOUT / VS OF CANDIDATES WALKING OUT 15:54:31 PAN LEFT AND RIGHT ACROSS CANDIDATES ON STAGE 16:00:31 BARTIROMO: Hi there. I'm Maria Bartiromo of CNBC. On behalf of the Michigan Republican Party and the University of Michigan-Dearborn, welcome to the first presidential candidates debate focused on the economy. We're coming to you from the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center here in Dearborn, in the heart of the American auto industry, a fitting backdrop to the economic issues facing the American people. MATTHEWS: And good evening from me. I'm Chris Matthews of MSNBC. Joining Maria and me in questioning the presidential hopefuls this evening will be John Harwood, chief Washington correspondent for CNBC, and Jerry Seib of the Wall Street Journal. We have a lot of ground to cover today, so in the interest of time, let's get right to it. Maria? BARTIROMO: OK, Chris. Senator Thompson, this is your first debate in the election. We welcome you. THOMPSON: Thank you. BARTIROMO: And we kick off with you. THOMPSON: Thank you. 16:01:59 BARTIROMO: The economy is America's greatest strength. In a recent poll by the Wall Street Journal and NBC News, two-thirds of the American people said that we are either in a recession or headed toward one. Do you agree with that? And, as president, what will you do to ensure economy vibrancy in this country? 16:02:12 THOMPSON: I think there is no reason to believe that we're headed for a recession. We're enjoying 22 quarters of successive economic growth that started 2001 and then further in 2003 with the tax cuts that we put in place. THOMPSON: We're enjoying low inflation. We're enjoying low unemployment. The stock market seems to be doing pretty well. I see no reason to believe we're headed for an economic downturn. As far as the economic prosperity of the future is concerned, I think it's a different story. I think if you look at the short term, it's rosy. I think if you look at a 10-year projection, it's rosy. But we are spending money we do not have. We are on a mandatory spending lockdown that is pushing us in a direction that is unsustainable. We're spending the money of future generations, and those yet to be born. That has to do with our mandatory spending problem. Everyone knows that we have to address that. And it's the fundamental and foremost challenge, I think, facing our country economically. BARTIROMO: Senator, you painted a very nice picture. The Dow and the S&P 500 today at new highs -- tonight -- record numbers. BARTIROMO: And, yet, two-thirds of the people surveyed said we are either in a recession or headed for one. Why the angst? THOMPSON: Well, I think there are pockets in the economy that, certainly, they're having difficulty. I think they're certainly -- those in Michigan that are having difficulty. I think you always find that in a vibrant, dynamic economy. I think that not enough has been done to tell what some call the greatest story never told, and that is that we are enjoying a period of growth right now and we should acknowledge what got us there and continue those same policies on into the future. BARTIROMO: Governor Romney, here in Detroit, Michigan, alone, one in every 29 homes went into foreclosure in the first six months of the year. 16:04:01 Whose job is it to fix this problem? The government or private enterprise? 16:04:12 ROMNEY: It's everybody's job. It's inexcusable that Michigan is undergoing a one-state recession, that the rest of the country is growing and seeing low levels of unemployment, but Michigan is seeing ongoing, high levels of unemployment, almost twice the national rate. ROMNEY: Industry is shrinking here, jobs are going away. This is just unacceptable. And, therefore, everyone's going to have to come together to solve the problem. 16:05:25 And that means, from the president's standpoint, the president's going to have to stand up and say -- you know what? -- to the auto industry: The door's always open. We're ongoing to work with you and make sure that you have a listening ear and someone who will participate with labor and with management. Number two, we're going to make sure that we invest in technology and research. A lot of that relate into energy, fuels, automotive research like material sites to help boost Michigan once again. We're going to have to fix the schools, as Newt Gingrich pointed out. 22 percent of Detroit kids don't -- excuse me, 22 percent graduate from high school. That's unacceptable. We're also going to have to do a better job keeping our taxes down. Jennifer Granholm has made a big mistake by raising taxes. I was, frankly, a little nervous to -- about being here tonight. I figured she was going to pot a tax on the debate before we got finished. (LAUGHTER) ROMNEY: So... (APPLAUSE) And we're going to have to go to work, as well, to make sure that there's a level playing field around the world, as we compete, to make sure that American goods are pushing into other markets, but goods coming overseas aren't getting an advantage, as they do now, with embedded taxes. There's a lot we can do to strengthen Michigan. And in some respects, what Michigan is seeing, the entire nation is going to see, unless we take action now to get Michigan stronger. BARTIROMO: Thank you. 16:05:48 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, the private equity firms are making billions of dollars. I guess it's a mystery to me -- and you can explain it, as a New Yorker -- where these billions of dollars come from; where were they before; and is there any downside to this amazing bonanza in the hedge fund and the private equity firms? 16:06:07 GIULIANI: Well, I mean the market is a wonderful thing. GIULIANI: I mean, the free market is our -- one of our greatest assets. And the leading Democratic candidate once said that the unfettered free market is the most destructive force in modern America. I mean, just get an idea of where the philosophy comes from. The free market is the asset that has allowed us to -- the sky's the limit. The reality is, that what we have to do is look at the fundamentals. A president can't be a economic forecaster. A president's not going to be any better an economic forecaster than you are a baseball forecaster -- and I'm not a particularly baseball forecaster this afternoon. (LAUGHTER) So the reality is a president has to work on the fundamentals. What are the fundamentals? Keep taxes low. Keep regulations moderate. Keep spending under control. GIULIANI: That's an area where we need a lot of help. And make sure you do something about legal reform so that our legal system doesn't -- it's 2.2 percent of our GDP now, is spent on all these frivolous lawsuits. It's double any other industrialized nation. If we don't get control of that, that's another way in which we're going to eat up our future. 16:07:20 So we got a prospect on the Democratic side of overspending, overtaxing, over-regulating, and over-suing, and I think you need a Republican alternative to that, which is an emphasis on the pillars of growth that I mentioned. MATTHEWS: Just to test your forecasting ability, Mr. Mayor, will Torre keep his job? (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: God willing. MATTHEWS: OK. 16:07:37 GIULIANI: Joe Torre is the best manager in the history of the Yankees, at least in the modern era. So -- and he's my friend. MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Paul, I think you have questions and concerns about the bonanza in the hedge fund industry. Do you? 16:07:50 PAUL: Yes. I think this is not a consequence of free markets. What's happening is, there's transfer of wealth from the poor and the middle class to the wealthy. PAUL: This comes about because of the monetary system that we have. When you inflate a currency or destroy a currency, the middle class gets wiped out. So the people who get to use the money first which is created by the Federal Reserve system benefit. So the money gravitates to the banks and to Wall Street. That's why you have more billionaires than ever before. Today, this country is in the middle of a recession for a lot of people. Michigan knows about it. Poor people know about it. The middle class knows about it. Wall Street doesn't know about it. Washington, D.C., doesn't know about it. But it's because of the monetary system and the excessive spending. As long as we live beyond our means we are destined to live beneath our means. And we have lived beyond our means because we are financing a foreign policy that is so extravagant and beyond what we can control, as well as the spending here at home. And we're depending on the creation of money out of thin air, which is nothing more than debasement of the currency. It's counterfeit. And it is a natural, predictable consequence that you're going to have people benefit from it and other people suffer. 16:09:02 PAUL: So, if you want a healthy economy, you have to study monetary theory and figure out why it is that we're suffering. And everybody doesn't suffer equally, or this wouldn't be so bad. It's always the poor people -- those who are on retired incomes -- that suffer the most. But the politicians and those who get to use the money first, like the military industrial complex, they make a lot of money and they benefit from it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Congressman 16:09:29 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, what about that? How are you going to win the middle class back? Wall Street executives are making millions of dollars every year, paying tax rates of 15 percent, while the average guy out there is paying 30 percent in taxes. Is this system fair? 16:09:43 MCCAIN: Everybody is paying taxes and wealth creates wealth. And the fact is that I would commend to your reading, Ron, "Wealth of Nations," because that's what this is all about. MCCAIN: A vibrant economy creates wealth. People pay taxes. Revenues are at an all time high. What's the problem? It's not just here in Michigan. It's in the heartland of America. We're losing industrial jobs and we're not taking care of those who are left behind. Every town hall meeting that I have people say, "I don't know if I'm going to have health insurance or now." We're going to have to bring costs under control of health care if we're going to assure people that they're going to have retirement and they're going to be able to have the much needed medical care that they are -- need, as they grow older. The fact is that Social Security is going broke. The fact is that Medicare is going broke. That's a little straight talk and we've got to fix it. And we have to get spending under control and we Republicans who came to power in 1994 to change government, government changed us. 16:10:46 MCCAIN: And unless we get spending under control and eliminate all this waste and pork-barrel spending, the latest is this public works, $21 billion worth of pork barrel projects in public works, which the president should veto. Another one he should veto is the SCHIP program, which he should say, "Take the 'C' out of, because now it's for everybody, like every other entitlement program." And, by the way, a dollar a pack increase for cigarettes? So we want to take care of children's health and we want everybody to smoke? I don't get it. And we've got to get wasteful spending under control. (APPLAUSE) 16:11:25 BARTIROMO: So you're saying, Senator -- so you're saying the system is fair? 16:11:31 MCCAIN: Sure, it's fair. Should we -- because the bulk of the taxes are paid by wealthy people. Should we reform our tax code, which is completely broken, which no one understands, no living American understands? Absolutely, we should fix our tax code. MCCAIN: And we should fix it immediately. And we should have Congress either vote up or down on a freer, fairer, simpler tax code. (APPLAUSE) And I believe that Americans deserve that. (APPLAUSE) 16:12:01 MATTHEWS: Great transition. Governor Huckabee, tell us about your fair tax. You're going to get rid of the IRS. You're going to have a, basically, consumer tax. Won't that discourage spending? The American economy seems to always be driven by people buying things, maybe, they can't even afford. If you put a tax on spending, as opposed to income, won't that encourage people to hoard their money, rather than spend it... HUCKABEE: Now, Chris... MATTHEWS: ... and hurt the economy 16:12:21 HUCKABEE: You know Americans better than that. Nothing's going to discourage them from spending money. (LAUGHTER) Just go to any shopping center on Saturday. You'll find that people aren't having to be begged to go spend money. No, the fair tax does something that is absolutely phenomenal for the economy: It untaxes productivity. HUCKABEE: It untaxes those things which we export. It means that for the first time in a long time in this country, instead of exporting our jobs, we'll actually be exporting products that we make in America, and we'll be able to make sure that there's a level playing field. It ends the underground economy that right now makes it so that folks like us end up paying taxes, but drug dealers don't; illegals don't; prostitutes and pimps, they don't. But we do. You know, a lot of people are going to be watching this debate, they're going to hear Republicans on this stage talk about how great the economy is. And, frankly, when they hear that they're going to probably reach for the dial. I want to make sure people understand that for many people on this stage the economy's doing terrifically well, but for a lot of Americans it's not doing so well. The people who handle the bags and make the beds at our hotels and serve the food, many of them are having to work two jobs. HUCKABEE: And that's barely paying the rent. And you know what else? They don't think that they can afford for their kids to go to college. They're pretty sure they're not going to be able to afford health insurance. And so I hope, in the course of this, we can talk about how a fair tax really lifts up everybody, including those at the bottom of the economic spectrum and untaxes the poor people in our culture 16:13:56 MATTHEWS: Congressman Hunter, do you agree with that: the idea of replacing the IRS -- the income tax, a direct tax -- with an indirect sales tax? 16:13:59 DUNCAN: I'm a sponsor of the fair tax. But let me tell you, Chris, what is missing from this economy: 1.8 million jobs that have moved to communist China from the United States, including over 54,000 jobs from Michigan. You know, a couple of years ago, when our guys were getting hurt with roadside bombs in Iraq, I tried to find one steel company left in America that could still make high-grade armor steel plate to put on the sides of our Humvees to protect against roadside bombs. HUNTER: I found one company left that could still do that. And as you go down through the array of military systems that we need for our security we find that more and more of those have gone offshore. So this is also a security issue. You know, in Willow Run, just a couple of miles away, we made a bomber every 60 minutes during World War II. We made tens of thousands of tanks in Michigan. Today, we could not do that because we've fractured the great industrial base of this country and we pushed it offshore with bad trade deals. And I would say to my colleagues and Senator Thompson and the other senators, you all voted for "most favored nation" trading status for Communist China. That set the groundwork for 1.8 million high- paying manufacturing jobs moving offshore, going offshore, some of them never to return. HUNTER: And what I would do is pass the Hunter-Ryan bill which would put countervailing duties on the Chinese when they cheat. They are cheating on trade right now. I'd bring those jobs back home to the United States and I would connect up the middle class of America with the Republican Party one more time. 16:15:37 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, do you want to respond to that question or that comment by the congressman about Chinese trade? 16:15:42 THOMPSON: Free and fair trade as been good for America; responsible for millions of jobs in this country. We cannot turn our back on that. I was one of the strictest advocates of imposing restrictions on the Chinese for their behavior in terms of exporting dangerous materials to other countries and tying some of trade policies to what they did in that regard. They have still not done enough. They have devalued their currency which puts them in a favored position as far as our manufacturers are concerned. THOMPSON: But in terms of turning our back on free trade, that's not the direction to go in. It's meant too much for our country. And every country in the history in the world that's ever turned its back on free trade has suffered for it as a consequence. BARTIROMO: Ladies and gentlemen, we ask you, please, to refrain from the applause so that we can get as much time as possible with the candidates. Thank you so much. 16:16:30 Senator Brownback, are you prepared to say, categorically, that under a Brownback administration, there will not be a tax increase? 16:16:37 BROWNBACK: Yes. And I'd like to use the rest of my answer -- and time -- to talk about some other things. (LAUGHTER) Because, clearly, the last thing we need to do is raise taxes in this country. Currently, the country now, the average citizen works until the first part, the middle of May, just to pay their taxes. We're taxed to the max. And I think it's not enough just to say I'm not going to raise taxes. What should we go to differently? Because the current tax code really is an abomination. BROWNBACK: People don't understand it, it's manipulative, it's Washington trying to direct people's lives. So I put forward a proposal of an optional flat tax. And putting that on the table, saying, "OK, you can pick this -- if you want to stay in the code, go ahead, God bless you. But here's an optional flat tax." 16 countries around the world have gone to the flat tax. Nobody has gone back away from it, because it creates growth, it creates growth in the economy, and it increases revenue for the government. And we also -- we have to get spending under control. Here you've got to change the system. And I've been around it long enough to see that Republicans or Democrats in control, the system is built to spend. Our constituents come in all the time to my office and they say, "I'm a conservative, but could we have this bridge? How about this hospital?" They never say, "We've got too much federal money. Would you please cut it?" Nobody has ever told me that. So I think we need to take that BRAC military process for base- closing, apply it to the rest of government. 16:18:06 BROWNBACK: So you have an annual process for culling federal spending, that requires a vote of Congress. BARTIROMO: So name one program you would cut. 16:18:15 BROWNBACK: The advanced technology program would be a good one to start with. It goes toward high-end spending, corporate welfare programs. There's an abundance of those that we've gone at. I worked with Senator McCain; a number of us did. But cutting spending is tough to do because you've always got somebody pushing back and seeking more. That's why you've got to change the system, so that it regularly requires a vote of Congress on things to cut. That's what will actually reduce spending. 16:18:41 BARTIROMO: Congressman Tancredo, same question: Are you prepared to say, categorically, that, under your administration, there will be no tax increase 16:18:47 TANCREDO: Absolutely. I'll take the oath. The fact is this, that when we talk about spending cuts, which everybody, I think, on this stage adheres to and certainly pays lip service to, we have to think about what exactly it is that pushes spending at the federal level. TANCREDO: And, believe it or not, it isn't even earmarks. I'm all for dumping them. It's OK with me. But don't think for a moment that if we did it tomorrow all of a sudden we'd have a balanced budget. Of course, we would not. Because the thing that pushes spending at the federal level is mandatory spending. It's two things, really: Medicare, Social Security. Now, you can cut the entire budget, the discretionary budget. You could cut the whole thing out and only come close -- well, you'd cut the deficit pretty significantly. But, frankly, you really want to do without funding for the armed services? And that's exactly what we're talking about in the discretionary side. It's about $700 billion out of the $3 trillion budget. If you want to control federal spending you must look at Social Security and Medicare. TANCREDO: And it's a dicey game. I know the president tried. I give him credit for at least getting out there, touching that third rail, getting burned by it. He did. Jumped back immediately. But the reality is this: If you don't do it, forget about all this talk about reducing federal spending, it's not going to happen. You better address Social Security. You better come up with a way to allow for private Social Security accounts, structurally rechange (ph) -- structurally fix both of those things, or forget the idea of ending deficit spending. 16:20:33 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani and Governor Romney, these are 30 second answers. You've been having a tit for tat on tax cutting. What's the difference between the two of you. Your Honor, first? 16:20:35 GIULIANI: I cut taxes 23 times when I was mayor of New York City. I believe in tax cuts. I believe in being a supply sider. I cut the income tax I think it was 24 percent. We got 42 percent more revenues. I see in the Wall Street Journal this morning an editorial that says: Can we take the good news that the tax cuts have actually worked to produce about $500 billion in additional revenue no one ever thought was possible. So it's something that I believe in from results. I cut taxes by over $9 billion. I didn't cut every tax. You can't possibly cut every tax, as I think Congressman Tancredo pointed out. You need money for police. You need money for military. But I cut, I think, as many taxes as you possibly could in that period of time. And George Will said I ran the most conservative government, from that point of view, in the last 40 or 50 years in the entire country. 16:21:23 MATTHEWS: Let's go to Governor Romney. Your difference with Mayor Giuliani on tax cutting? 16:21:26 ROMNEY: Well, we both agree with the need to cut taxes and have fought to do so. And I did so in my state, too. We both believe in cutting back on spending as well. ROMNEY: But if you want to cut taxes, you're going to have to cut spending. And the best tool that a governor has and the best tool the president has had is a line item veto. And Mayor Giuliani took the line item veto that the president had all the way to the Supreme Court and took it away from the president of the United States. I think that was a mistake. He also fought to keep the commuter tax, which was a very substantial tax, a almost $400 million tax on commuters coming into New York. And when it's all said and done, if you're a New York taxpayer, city taxpayer, your state and city tax combined can reach as high as 10 percent. And in our state, if you're a Boston worker, it's going to be more like 5.3 percent. 16:22:08 RSo we both worked real hard to get the taxes down, to get the spending down. But I'm in favor of the line item veto. I exercised it 844 times. Thank heavens we had the line item veto. And I'd like it at the federal government level as well. We need it. 16:22:21 MATTHEWS: Mayor Giuliani, respond. 16:22:23 GIULIANI: I mean, the difference is that under Governor Romney, spending went up in Massachusetts, per capita, by 8 percent. Under me, spending went down by 7 percent. The line item veto was unconstitutional. I took Bill Clinton to the Supreme Court and beat Bill Clinton. It's unconstitutional. What the heck can you do about that, if you're a strict constructionist? And, finally, the point is that you've got to control taxes. But I did it; he didn't. GIULIANI: I controlled taxes. I brought taxes down by 17 percent. Under him, taxes went up 11 percent per capita. I led; he lagged. MATTHEWS: Sir, rebuttal here. Final rebuttal. (CROSSTALK) 16:22:59 ROMNEY: It's baloney. Mayor, you've got to check your facts. No taxes -- I did not increase taxes in Massachusetts. I lowered taxes, number one. Number two, the Club for Growth looked at our respect to spending record. They said my spending grew 2.2 percent a year. Yours grew 2.8 percent a year. But, look, we're both guys that are in favor of keeping spending down and keeping taxes down. We're not far a part on that. The place we differ is on the line-item veto. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I had it, used it 844 times. I want to see Liddy Dole's (ph) line-item veto put in place. The president's proposal to have it put in place. I'm in favor of the line-item veto. I'd have never gone to the Supreme Court and said it's unconstitutional. MATTHEWS: Do you believe it is? ROMNEY: I do not believe the line item veto is properly structured. The president, just last year, introduced a line item veto that passes constitutional muster. Elizabeth Dole did the same thing. I'm in favor of the line item veto to make sure that the president is able to help get out pork and waste. Washington is finally going to have to have a reduction in spending. Republicans got spending out of control. 16:24:04 GIULIANI: You have to be honest people. And you can't fool all of the people all of the time. The line item veto is unconstitutional. You don't get to believe about it; the Supreme Court has ruled on it. So you can bang your head up against the stone wall all you want. I am in favor of a line item veto, expect you have to do it legally. And as the mayor of New York, if I had let President Clinton take $250 million away from the people of my city illegally and unconstitutionally, I wouldn't have been much of a mayor. So I took... (CROSSTALK) 16:24:31 GIULIANI: So I took President Clinton to court and I beat him. And I don't think it's a bad idea to have a Republican presidential candidate who actually has beat President Clinton at something. (LAUGHTER) MATTHEWS: OK, we've got to go to John Harwood. Thank you. (APPLAUSE) HARWOOD: As good as that fight is, I've got a question for Senator Thompson. (CROSSTALK) 16:24:48 HARWOOD: Senator Thompson, in the kind of dynamic economy that you mentioned lots of new jobs are created, but a lot of jobs are lost as well. The Bureau of Labor Statistic says three-fourths of manufacturing workers who lose their jobs and get new ones see their incomes go down. How would you explain to those people that their shrinking American dream is the price of progress, and what would you do to help them? 16:25:18 THOMPSON: Well, in a dynamic economy there are jobs lost and there are jobs gained, and so far there have been more jobs gained. And to put up barriers and say that so-and-so cannot lose a job would be the wrong thing to do in a free market economy. It's been so well for us. It's made us the most prosperous nation in the history of the world. But there's some things that you can recognize about the manufacturing industry and how important it is to us and how we can do something for the industry to help them hire more people and keep the wheels rolling. THOMPSON: Government policies, in terms of taxing and spending and regulation -- the manufacturing industry is, in large part, an international industry, nowadays, which means prices are set internationally. Manufacturers cannot do much about that, but they get hit with costs, domestically. We can do a lot about their costs, in terms of taxes and regulation. We have the second highest corporate tax penalty in the world. We need to do better than that. 16:26:18 We need to open up foreign markets. A lot of them are closing their markets to our people. Our people are not afraid to compete, if the markets are open and the currency's not devalued. 16:26:31 HUNTER: Yes, let me answer that. You know, Senator Thompson, there is one place where the federal government has a role in manufacturing. And that's ensuring that everybody's playing by the rules. Now, when Communist China devalues their currency by 40 percent, they undercut American products around the world. They undercut them so low that we can't even pay for the cost of materials and meet their prices. HUNTER: Now, that has put 1.8 million working Americans out of work. And that job, the job of enforcing those rules, is the president's job. That's what I intend to do. 16:27:06 MATTHEWS: Let me ask Senator McCain, you know, when a lot of us grew up, in the late '50s and early '60s, a young guy could come out of high school, marry his girlfriend from school, get a job at a big industrial plant making planes or making subways, and provide for a family with a middle-class income and his spouse wouldn't have to work. Will we ever go back to that world again? 16:27:23 MCCAIN: I'd like to say yes, Chris, but I think we are in the midst of a revolution that we haven't seen since the industrial revolution. A lot of people don't know that 50,000 Americans now make their living off eBay. We know that people have been left behind. We know that the tax code is eminently unfair. We know that one of the big problems right here in Detroit is that when they -- before they turn a wrench on a new care it's a $1,700 legacy cost for health care for their retired employees. MCCAIN: For Toyota, it's $200. We're going to have to fix health care. We're going to have to fix Social Security. And this line about it's just discretionary spending that's a problem -- the problem is, my friend, the American people no longer have trust and confidence in us that we will fix anything. As president, I'll fix them. 16:28:13 And the point is, that we need to have job retraining programs. We need to go to the community colleges. We even need, if you're a senior laid-off worker, who gets another job, to make up in compensation for the amount of money that's the difference between the job that they lost. We have to fix these programs. But, first, we've got to go to the American people with clean hands. We've got to tell them, we've stopped spending $3 million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. I don't know if that's a paternity issue or a criminal issue. (LAUGHTER) MCCAIN: I've got -- we've got to tell him that we will not spend $2 billion on an aircraft tanker which I was able to stop and save the taxpayers $2 billion because of this incredible, extravagant waste in defense spending today, which is the biggest part of our budget. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman Tancredo? 16:29:10 TANCREDO: I just want to quickly respond. I certainly can agree with the senator on one thing: that the government -- that the people of this country believe that the government is broken and hasn't fixed their problems to a large extent because of the senator's efforts in support of illegal immigration. That's one reason why they're concerned. And you're absolutely right. The government hasn't fixed the problem. And for every single illegal immigrant family in this country, it costs $20,000 -- it costs us $20,000, $20,000 in infrastructural costs. They pay about $10,000 in taxes. You really want to do something to restore the people's faith in government, do something about illegal immigration, don't just talk about it. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Jerry? 16:29:54 SEIB: Governor Romney, trade keeps popping up here so lets boar in on it a little bit. By one estimate, the U.S. has lost 5 million jobs to overseas trade since 1989 and the U.S. must borrow everyday $2 billion from overseas to pay for its imports. SEIB: President Bush says trade is still good for America. Are you a Bush Republican on trade? 16:30:07 ROMNEY: Well, I believe in trade, but I believe in opening up markets to American goods and services. And it's been calculated that the average family in America is $9,000 a year richer because we have the ability to sell products around the world. And a lot of people in this country make their living making products that go around the world. But it's also true that the people who negotiate these agreements -- the people who sit down with the Chinese and sit down the Mexicans and others are people, by and large, who spent their life in politics. And the politicians come together and try to understand how the economy works. I think I'm probably the only guy on the stage who spent most of his career in the business world. I understand how the economy works. I understand how if you make a certain adjustment in the agreement, it's going to have a huge impact on the United States. And so if, for instance, we agree to sit down with China, I understand that if we don't get real careful and protect patents and designs and technology, that what we tend to sell the most of, those kinds of things -- intellectual property -- is going to get stolen by the Chinese or by others; that we have to recognize agreements have to be in our benefit, not just in their benefit. ROMNEY: And so as I look across the agreements we've made, I recognize we're going to have to do a better job. We're going to have to have people who understand how the business world works, how the economy works, and make sure that the playing field really is level by having people who know something about the economy and that understand the business world being part of that effort. I want to make sure that the American worker gets a fair shake. We need to make sure that the Chinese begin to float their currency and they protect our designs and our patents and our technology. We need to make sure that the American workers don't have to carry the burden of extra taxes as we sell our products around the world. 16:31:41 The come here without that tax embedded. We can do a better job.ROMNEY: And I want to do a better job for the American worker. And by the way, this is key for Michigan. And for me, Michigan is personal. I'm going to go to work to help Michigan. BARTIROMO: Thank you, Governor. (APPLAUSE) 16:31:59 Mayor Giuliani, foreign acquisitions in the United States are headed for a record in 2007, and yet some money is still turned away. A Dubai company could not acquire our ports. A Chinese company could not acquire Unical. Has this company -- has this country become protectionist or are there serious, real national security concerns? 16:32:16 GIULIANI: Well, I think we're on a verge of going in one direction or another. I mean, for example, you want to get specific, the four trade deals with Peru, Colombia, Panama, South Korea that are in front of Congress right now, which the Democrats are trying to block, would be good deals for the United States. In three of the four of them, we would actually get to export more than we're importing. Why they would want to block this I can't understand. GIULIANI: We're already importing about 98 percent -- 90 to 98 percent -- from those countries. We would actually get to export more, and we would increase our exports. So, yes, we have to improve our free trade agreements. I think you've got to almost separate them into two different categories. ? 16:32:58 There's economic protection and then there's protection for safety, security, and legal rights. And I don't think we've done a particularly good job on the second, and we have to improve those agreements. But we can't throw out the baby with the bathwater. We can't say, because these agreements weren't perfect, because they have problems, because they have issues, we're going to turn our back on free trade. Our percentage of our economy that now depends on exports has gone up from 9 percent to 12 percent. We're a country that depends on exports. And we're also an entrepreneurial country. We're a country that should think about all these people that are coming out of poverty in China and India and elsewhere -- we should think of them as new customers. We should be thinking about, what can we sell to them: energy independence, health care? There's so much we can sell to them. Let's get back our entrepreneurial spirit, rather than having our head down. 16:33:46 BARTIROMO: So, yes or no: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? 16:33:49 GIULIANI: Sure, if they are -- if they are considered to be safe. If they pass safety and security clearances. Unfortunately, that deal was done so hastily, it was done so quickly, nobody can tell whether they could or they couldn't. But you just can't rule out foreign companies. There's a whole procedure you go through as to whether or not are they safe, are they secure? We cannot stop doing business with the rest of the world. If we do, this is one of the reasons our depression became a Great Depression, because we erected such high tariffs that we extended the depression from two or three years to 10 or 11 years 16:34:25 BARTIROMO: Very quickly, down the line, same question: Should a Dubai company be able to own 20 percent of NASDAQ? Congressman? PAUL: If there's no conflict with national security, certainly, yes, they should. BARTIROMO: This is the story: Dubai owning NASDAQ. Is there security interests? 16:34:32 PAUL: I don't think they're a threat to our national security, no. So they would be able to. 16:34:44 HUCKABEE: I think it really matters as to whether or not they're going to be -- there's going to be a fair trade. And the fact is, we don't have fair trade. And that's the issue we've got to address. Can they buy a company? Sure. But our real problem continues to be that an American company is having to pay an extraordinarily high tax on everything they produce, but the countries who are importing to us don't have the same border adjustability that we do. HUCKABEE: And that's why we're losing jobs here. That's why people in Michigan are going -- looking for something to do. And that's what has to change and it's not being changed. And this party is going to have to start addressing it or we're going to get our britches beat next year. BARTIROMO: Senator McCain? 16:35:20 MCCAIN: Yes, of course. They have to pass the required security requirements and everything like that. I'm a student of history. Every time the United States has become projectionist and listened to this siren song that you're hearing partially this stage tonight, we could pay at a very heavy price. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Acts in the 1930s were direct contributors to World War II. It sounds like a lot of fun to bash Chinese and others, but free trade has been the engine of our economy in the last half of this year; it will continue to be. MCCAIN: And free trade should be the continuing principle that guides this nation's economy. BARTIROMO: Governor? 16:35:57 ROMNEY: Of course, you let a country invest in the United States. Because we're going to have to stop thinking always in terms of defense and trying to keep other people out. The key is that America can compete around the world and win, and we do in product after product, service after service. We're the best in the world. But we have to make sure that as we enter into agreements with other nations we make sure that those agreements are in our benefit as well as theirs. Usually that's the case, but not always. And in some cases it's not. We're going to make sure that our goods and services are sold around the world, that they're not held up, that our technology is not stolen. And we're going to make sure that America gets the best shake in these agreements. And, heck, you got to realize this country can compete with anyone in the world, has before, will always. We do not (inaudible) and put a motor on ourselves. We put down the drawbridge and say, "Let's go out and compete." BARTIROMO: Senator? 16:36:45 THOMPSON: The answer is yes. THOMPSON: Dubai would own 20 percent of NASDAQ. But NASDAQ under this deal, as I understand it, would gain more than 30 percent of the Dubai company. It all depends on national security issues. Doesn't seem to be one there. But we should look at all these deals carefully because we have a vast infrastructure. A great portion of it is in private hands. There's no way, frankly, we can protect it all. So we need to do everything that we can to make sure that we're doing all that we can to protect the infrastructure we've got and scrutinize these deals number, first and foremost, from a national security stand point. BARTIROMO: Congressman Hunter? 16:37:26 HUNTER: No, because I don't trust them. And I don't trust them because a few years ago Dubai while an American Customs agent was trying to stop them, set for delivery a set of nuclear triggers to an anonymous recipient in Islamabad, probably for the A.Q. Khan network. That went directly against American interests so I would not do that. And to all my colleagues who talk about the joy of free trade, that requires one thing: good business deals. HUNTER: We've made the only business deal in the world with 132 other competitors where they get to have a rebate on their taxes and then put a block up of 15 to 20 percent tariff against our goods and we don't get to do the same thing. That's why we have a trade deficit with countries that have higher labor rates than the United States. So we're short on good businessmen, and I would junk those bad trade deals, bring them back to the table. And I'd practice mirror trade. If a country wants to put a 15 percent tariff against the United States, they're going to see that reflected back at them. If they want to take it down to 1 percent, we'll take it down to 1. But there's not going to be a one-way street any longer. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Senator Brownback? 16:38:35 BROWNBACK: Yes. I think of the people on this stage, I'm the only one that's worked in the trade field. I was in the trade field as White House fellow in the first Bush administration. If this party walks away from free trade, we're going the wrong way as a party. BROWNBACK: And I think, to Congressman Hunter, who's a wonderful man, the United States is a low-trade -- low-tariff country. I think our average tariff, on anything that we have a tariff on, and most things we don't, is at 4 percent. So the negotiations we do are always with countries that have higher tariffs. And it's -- so the objective that we have is to get those down, and we've had a decent record. What we've got to do now, I think, is really focus in on China's currency manipulation and intellectual property... BARTIROMO: So the answer's yes? BROWNBACK: Yes. 16:39:23 TANCREDO: No, if -- I'll tell you, if Dubai wanted to buy Wal- Mart, I might think about it. (LAUGHTER) But if they wanted to buy something else that would have, in this case, certainly, more of an impact on our national security interests, I'd say, no, we'd have to think about that in a totally different way. It is exactly the same with regard to China. There are things that we should have thought of in the first place, when we passed the PNTR, which I voted against, along with Duncan Hunter. And I absolutely agree that trade is a great idea in many respects. TANCREDO: But when you trade with people who are your potential enemy, and they have shown a willingness to use that economic opportunity to actually increase their threats to the United States, I'm not for trading with them at all. 16:40:00 MATTHEWS: Governor -- I mean, Senator Thompson, let me ask you about an income tax issue. It gets batted around a lot in Washington, the alternative minimum tax. And here are the fiscal consequences. There's 20 million people about to be hit by that tax. It was meant to make sure rich people paid taxes, but now it's moving down because of inflation. If this tax isn't changed, 20 million people are hit by it. If we eliminate the alternative minimum tax, it costs the federal government $100 billion that has to be replaced, presumably, somewhere else. How do you deal with something like that? 16:40:28 THOMPSON: Well, in the first place, I don't buy the concept that any reduction in taxes is lost revenue to the government. The taxpayers haven't lost it. It's in their pocket. They know exactly where to find it. We shouldn't confuse the wealth of government with the wealth of nations. Just because the money's sent to Washington doesn't mean that the people are any richer. In fact, it's just the opposite is the case. As you pointed out, the AMT was designed for the -- to target the rich guy.THOMPSON: And when the Democrats start targeting the rich guy if you're a middle class guy, you ought to run to the other side of the house because you're going to get hit. They're not going to be on target. And this is another one of those cases. As you point out, we're going from about 4 million people covered now to over 20 million people. What we're going to have to do, though, is look at this as a part of a total picture. Generally speaking, lower taxes and lower tax rates grow the economy. It's been proven in the '20s, it was proven during the Kennedy administration, proven during the Reagan administration, and again during this administration. I would apply that same principle to the AMT. It ought to be phased out. 16:41:36 It think the responsible thing to do, though, until we get a handle on our mandatory spending side of the ledger is to index it for inflation and fix it for another year while we look at the budget in total. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Senator. We're going to break right now. 16:41:49 COMMERCIAL BREAK 16:45:34 MATTHEWS: We're branching out into other topics. Senator Thompson, all things considered, has the Bush policy toward Iraq been a good one? 16:45:37 THOMPSON: I think the policy we're engaged in now is the right one. Clearly, to me, we didn't go in with enough troops and we didn't know what to expect when we got there. But now we're showing signs of progress. I think we got to take advantage of the opportunities that we have there, now that we see a window of opportunity for things to turn around and us to stabilize that place and not have to leave with our tail between our legs. If we did that, it would make for a more dangerous United States of America. THOMPSON: I think we've got to come to terms with the nature of the threat that our country faces. 16:46:10 It is a global war; Islamic fascism has declared it upon us. They look at it as something that's been going on for a long, long time. They're perfectly willing for it to go on for a long time more, killing millions of innocent people in the process.They play by no rules and they are intent on bringing down Western civilization and the United States of America. So we have to understand what's necessary -- and the determination that we need to show to friend and foe alike that we'll do what's necessary to fight on any front that we have to fight on. This is a front in a much broader war, and I think the young people that I talked to coming back from understand that. In fact, sometimes it's strange to me to think that the average 20-year-old serving us in Iraq knows more about what it takes for our national security than the average 20-year veteran on Capitol Hill 16:47:00 BARTIROMO: Senator McCain, last week on the campaign trail you were critical of President Bush for the lack of asking for sacrifice for the American -- from the American people after September 11th; adding that, "Just go shopping," wasn't enough. What would you have asked? 16:47:14 MCCAIN: I would have asked Americans, when we were incredibly united -- part of that I give credit to my friend the mayor of New York City, and Americans were ready to serve a cause greater than themselves. I would have told them, first of all, consider the military, also the Peace Corps, also AmeriCorps, also neighborhood watches, also volunteer organizations that we would form up all over America -- that way we would all serve this nation. I'd just like to mention, I'm the only one on this stage that four years ago said this is a failed policy in Iraq, it's not going to work, its got to be changed. I was criticized by Republicans for my severe criticism of Secretary Rumsfeld. MCCAIN: I advocated the strategy that's succeeding, and thank God the American people are giving us a little window so we can let this thing succeed and not have happen, as the president of Iran recently said, the United States will leave Iraq and there will be vacuum and Iran will fill it. That's what's at stake here. 16:48:14 MATTHEWS: Congressman Paul, would you -- would we have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:48:20 PAUL: Probably not, but that should not be a reason. That's an old theory. It's mercantilistic, it's neo-colonialism, that you have to maintain your supply routes and your natural resources. But I think there's still a lot of those kind of people around. And they believe -- we were told -- it was about oil and jobs when it first started in 1990, and this is just a continuation of that war. Indeed, this war is a mistake; was a mistake to go in. PAUL: It's very costly. And it has a lot of economic ramifications. 16:48:52 We're going broke. We have this huge deficit. We're spending nearly $1 trillion with maintaining our empire overseas. And that's a cost. Right now, we owe foreigners $2.7 trillion. No wonder they have money to come back in here and buy stuff up, and then we object. But that has to do with our monetary system, as well as our foreign policy. So if we want prosperity, we have to change our foreign policy. We have to live within our means. But we can't maintain a reserve currency where all -- our greatest export today are paper dollars. We create money out of thin air and they still accept it as if it was backed by gold. And that is the reason all this money goes overseas. And at the same time, we finance all this military activity overseas, it's bankrupting this country. 16:49:39 And not only that; it's a threat to our personal liberties here and it's going to be a threat to our economy, because we are beginning to live beneath our means. PAUL: And that is a natural consequence when you live beyond your means. So we must change our policy, both overseas and domestically. 16:49:59 MATTHEWS: Do you believe that, Senator Brownback, that we wouldn't have gone to war in Iraq if we weren't so dependent on Middle East oil? 16:50:02 BROWNBACK: I don't believe that in the least. We went to Iraq -- on the war in Iraq -- what I voted for was the war on terrorism. And Afghanistan was where the Taliban was -- where Al Qaida was located. It was run by the Taliban. And we saw, in Iraq, what we thought was the mixture of terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. And it was in 2003. This was in close proximity to 2001 when we had the 9/11 crisis. And I wasn't about to trust that Saddam Hussein wasn't going to mix terrorists with weapons of mass destruction. Now, we haven't found the weapons of mass destruction. But that doesn't mean we leave. And I think the Bush administration has generally done well militarily. And I think the military has done a fabulous job. (APPLAUSE) BROWNBACK: I think we have done poorly on the political side. And this Friday Joe Biden and I are getting together in Des Moines and we're going to be talking about the political side, a three-state solution in Iraq. This is what ultimately is going to happen. You're going to have a Kurdish north, a Sunni west, a Shia south, within one country, federalism with a weak federal government, the federal government headquartered in Baghdad. Joe and I don't agree on hardly anything, but this is what we need to do to get the political equation. That's what has been poorly done by the Bush administration, starting with General Garner and moving on through the succession. It hasn't been well handled politically. We've got to get a better, bipartisan political solution. We can. 16:51:30 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson, Senator Brownback made the point that we haven't been able to find the WMD. You made a statement a couple of days ago, I believe, that alluded to the fact you believed that there were such weapons in Iraq. MATTHEWS: Do you believe they were there right before we got in -- they were moved out somewhere? 16:51:44 THOMPSON: No, I didn't say that. I was just stating what was obvious and that is that Saddam had had them prior. They used them against his own people -- against the Kurds. And of course, he had a nuclear reactors back -- I believe it was in '81 when the Israelis bombed that. And the Iraq Study Group reported that had designs on reviving his nuclear program which he had started once upon a time. So, there's no question that he had had them in times passed, and in my own estimation, there's no question that if left to his own devices, he and his son would still be running that place, attacking their neighbors and murdering their own people and developing a nuclear capability -- especially in looking what Iran is doing as their next door neighbor and long-time adversary. THOMPSON: And the whole place would be nuclearized. Saudi Arabia would probably respond to that. Other Sunni nations would respond to it. And you'd have an entirely nuclearized part of the world that we don't have now. That would be extremely problematic for us from an oil standpoint as well as a global stability standpoint. MATTHEWS: Thank you. 16:52:55 Governor Romney, that raises the question, if you were president of the United States, would you need to go to Congress to get authorization to take military action against Iran's nuclear facilities? 16:53:03 ROMNEY: You sit down with your attorneys and tell you want you have to do, but obviously the president of the United States has to do what's in the best interest of the United States to protect us against a potential threat. The president did that as he was planning on moving into Iraq and received the authorization of Congress... MATTHEWS: Did he need it? ROMNEY: You know, we're going to let the lawyers sort out what he needed to do and what he didn't need to do. But, certainly, what you want to do is to have the agreement of all the people -- leadership of our government as well as our friends around the world where those circumstances are available. 16:53:31 ROMNEY: But the key thing here is to make sure we don't have to use military action against Iran. That's what you hope to be able to do and that's why we're going to put a lot tougher sanctions on Iran -- economic sanctions, credit sanctions. We're also going to have to get serious about treating Ahmadinejad like the rogue and bafoon that he is. And it was outrageous for the United Nations to invite him to come to this country. It was outrageous for Columbia to invite him to speak at their university. 16:53:56 This is a person denied the Holocaust, a person who has spoken about genocide, is seeking the means to carry it out. And it is unacceptable to this country to allow that individual to have he control of launching a nuclear weapon. And so we will take the action necessary to keep that from happening. And I think each person on the stage, certainly in my case, I would make sure that we would take the action necessary to keep Iran from having a nuclear weapon 16:54:24 MATTHEWS: I guess I want to get to the basic constitutional view here of you gentlemen. I want to start with Congressman Hunter. The same question. If we get -- I'd like to get a number -- response. This couldn't be more important. Do you believe that Congress has to authorize a strategic attack, not an attack on -- during hot pursuit, but a strategic attack on weaponry in Iran -- do you need congressional approval as commander and chief? 16:54:38 HUNTER: Answer, Chris, it depends on one thing. First, I think the president does not need that if the target is fleeting. We live in this age of terrorists with high technology. And, if you have a very narrow window to hit a target, the president's going to have to take that on his shoulders. HUNTER: He's going to have to do it. He has right to do that under the Constitution, as the commander in chief of the military forces. If he has time, then certainly you want to go to Congress, as we did in Iraq, and get the approval of Congress. So it's a matter of whether or not the target is fleeting. And with respect to Iran, Iran is walking down the path to build a nuclear device. They've got now about a thousand centrifuges. They claim they've got 3,000. At some point, we may have to preempt that target. If we do, it should be done, hopefully, with allies, but perhaps by the U.S. alone. MATTHEWS: The same question down the line, gentlemen. It's so important. 16:55:28 Congressman Paul, do you believe the president needs authorization of Congress to attack strategic targets in Iran, nuclear facilities? 16:55:33 P PAUL: Absolutely. This idea of going and talking to attorneys totally baffles me. Why don't we just open up the Constitution and read it? You're not allowed to go to war without a declaration of war. Now, as far as fleeting enemies go, yes. If there's an imminent attack on us. We've never had that happen in 220 years. PAUL: The thought that the Iranians could pose an imminent attack on the United States is preposterous. There's no way. This is just... (CROSSTALK) PAUL: This is -- this is just war propaganda, continued war propaganda, preparing this nation to go to war and spread this war not only in Iraq, but into Iran, unconstitutionally. It is a road to disaster for us as a nation. It's a road to our financial disaster if we don't read the Constitution once in a while. MATTHEWS: Around the... (APPLAUSE) 16:56:26 Governor Huckabee, same question. Do you need Congress to approve such an action? 16:56:29 HUCKABEE: A president has to whatever is necessary to protect the American people. If we think Iran is building nuclear capacity that could be used against us in any way, including selling some of the nuclear capacity to some other terrorist group, then, yes, we have a right... MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: And I would do it in a heartbeat. MATTHEWS: Without going to Congress? HUCKABEE: Well, if it's necessary to get it done because it's actionable right now, yes. If you have the time and the luxury of going to Congress, that's always better. But, Chris, the most important single thing is to make sure. MATTHEWS: And if Congress say no, what do you do? (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: If Congress says no, what do you do, Governor? HUCKABEE: You do what's best for the American people and you suffer the consequences. But what you don't do is what you never do, is let the American people one day get hit with a nuclear device because you had politics going on in Washington, instead of the protection of the American people first. (APPLAUSE) 16:57:17 MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 16:57:21 MCCAIN: We're dealing, of course, with hypotheticals. If the situation is that it requires immediate action to ensure the security of the United States of America, that's what you take your oath to do, when you're inaugurated as president of the United States. If it's a long series of build-ups, where the threat becomes greater and greater, of course you want to go to Congress; of course you want to get approval, if this is an imminent threat to the security of the United States of America. So it obviously depends on the scenario. But I would, at minimum -- I would, at minimum, consult with the leaders of Congress because there may come a time when you need the approval of Congress. And I believe that this is a possibility that is, maybe, closer to reality than we are discussing tonight. 16:58:14 MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? THOMPSON: On this question? Yes, I think John has it right. I would add that under the War Powers Act, there's always a conflict between the Congress and the president as to the exact applicability of that when an engagement lasts for a particular period of time and when they must come before Congress. I don't think anybody running for president should diminish the power of the office before he gets there and take side in a hypothetical dispute. But I would say that in any close call, you should go to Congress, whether it's legally required or not. Because you're going to need the American people and Congress will help you if they're voting for it or if they support it, or leaders, especially in the opposite party, are convinced and looking at the evidence that this is the right thing to do, that will help you with the American people. THOMPSON: And we have learned that, over the long term in any conflict, we've got to have the strong support of the American people over a protracted period of time. 16:59:32 MATTHEWS: Just to bring it up to date on this, the political context -- you know, Mayor, that Hillary Clinton has proposed -- she's co-sponsored legislation to do just this: require the president to come to Congress for any decision to go to attack a nuclear facility in Iran. GIULIANI: It really depends on exigency of the circumstances and how legitimate it is, that it really is an exigent circumstance. It's desirable, it's safer to go to Congress, get approval from Congress. If you're really dealing with an exigent circumstance, then the president has to act in the best interests of the country. And the point of -- I think it was Congressman Paul made before -- that we've never had an eminent attack, I don't know where he was on September 11th. PAUL: That was no country. (APPLAUSE) That was 19 thugs. That had nothing to do with a country. GIULIANI: And since September -- well, I think it was kind of organized in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And if we had known about it, maybe -- maybe hitting a target there, quickly, might have helped prevent it. In any event, we've had 23 plots since September 11, where Islamic terrorists are planning to kill Americans, that we've had to stop. So imminent attack is a possibility, and we should be ready for it. 17:00:22 Now, you asked me about Hillary Clinton. At the last Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton was asked by Tim Russert whether she agreed with my position on Iran. I like that form of debate, by the way. Any time you want to do it that way, ask her if she agrees with my other positions as well. 17:00:36 But on Iran -- on Iran, what she said was, she was asked would you take a strong position that Iran will not be allowed to become nuclear and that we would use a military option, if we had to. And she didn't answer the question. GIULIANI: Well, you've got to answer the question. The answer is: Yes, we would. Iran is a greater danger than Iraq. Iraq cannot be seen in a vacuum. And we have to be willing to use a military option to stop Iran from become nuclear. If we're willing to do it, we have a much better chance of having sanctions for it. MATTHEWS: Thank you, Mayor BARTIROMO: Let me zero in on oil. 17:01:09 Mayor Giuliani, under your leadership, how will this country become energy/oil independent and strike the right balance between environmental conservation and oil exploration? 17:01:21 GIULIANI: You know, the question that Chris asked before, about whether or not we would have had to have gone to war in Iraq if we were energy independent and we didn't have to depend on Middle Eastern oil -- I mean, that is -- I think the answer is probably we should have and would have gone to war against Saddam Hussein anyway, but maybe not. And certainly, they'd have less leverage. And I think Iran would be a lot more of a paper tiger if we were more energy independent. So this is -- and you can go on and there are a lot of examples like that. GIULIANI: This is a matter of national security. You've got to support all the alternatives. There's no magic bullet here. Biofuels, nuclear power -- we haven't licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years. We haven't had a new refinery in 30 years. We're on hold. Hydroelectric power, solar power, wind power, conservation -- we have to support all of these things. We've got to support them in a positive way. And this is an area in which the federal government, the president has to treat this like putting a man on the moon. It is a matter of national security. 17:02:21 One of the ways to win the Islamic terrorist war against us is for us to be energy independent. 17:02:28 BARTIROMO: But where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling off the coasts of Florida, California? 17:02:32 GIULIANI: You don't draw the line anywhere. What you do is, you work with people to try to advance all of these technologies. You can't do everything. You can't do long-term damage to our environment. That would be a mistake. That would be an overreaction. You have to make sound judgments, and you have to advance these new technologies. Why the heck haven't we licensed a nuclear power plant in 30 years? GIULIANI: France is 80 percent nuclear. The United States is 20 percent nuclear, and we're going down to 15 percent. It comes because of inaction. It comes because we're not willing to stand up. And we're not willing to stand up sometimes to irrational fears and irrational special interests. 17:03:11 BARTIROMO: Senator Brownback, same question. Where do you draw the line? Do you support drilling exploration off the coasts of Florida? 17:03:17 BROWNBACK: I think that you go in every place that you can to find resources. I put forward a proposal for us to be energy secure, not independent, energy secure in 15 years. I don't think it's realistic for us to say that we can be independent of every country around the world on oil supplies or energy supplies in the near future given our dependence and given the nature of what the global economy is like. But I think one of the key answers is right here in Detroit. We've got to get more electricity involved in our car fleet. There's a Chevy Malibu parked out front here that's a hybrid flex fuel. They've got hybrid cars; they've got flex fuel cars. I think that's a big part of the answer. I'd like to see us move forward with getting those first 20 to 30 miles off of electricity that you plug into at night. BROWNBACK: That's technology. We're putting forward tax credits and incentives to try to move that forward. That's something Detroit here needs to grab on, and is. And that can move us forward as an industry and as a country. BARTIROMO: But on the issue of exploration, you said yes to the coast of Florida. And do you say yes to ANWR? BROWNBACK: I voted yes for ANWR. And I would support those, in other places, environmentally sound. We have to do it in an environmentally sound fashion. BARTIROMO: Congressman? 17:04:37 TANCREDO: You bet. I would agree to exploration off the coasts. I mean, it's -- how fair is it, today, that, Louisiana is producing all the oil that California and other countries are consuming, and they refuse to allow the exploration of oil off the coasts? I'd say, you know, if you won't allow it, you can't use it, the stuff that we're getting from Louisiana. (APPLAUSE) Now, the other thing is this. When we talk about deficits, our trade deficits, by the way, it's not importing, you know, toys from China that causes it. The biggest chunk of our trade deficit is due to one thing and one thing oil -- only. It's oil. That's where all the dollars flow. And where do they flow? To countries that want to kill us. So, yes, you better drill every place you can here, and you better figure out every way to reduce your dependency on foreign oil. BARTIROMO: John Harwood? 17:05:32 HARWOOD: Senator McCain, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips, this past year, earned a combined $72 billion in profits. Is that too much? Should the oil industry pay higher taxes, or should it be required to use some of those profits to help solve our energy problems? 17:05:34 MCCAIN: I would hope that they would use those profits to further the cause of alternate energy, nuclear power, of a lot of other ways that we have to employ in order to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil. 17:06:14 By the way, I wouldn't drill off the coast of Florida unless the people of Florida wanted to. And I wouldn't drill off the coast of California unless the people of California wanted to. And I wouldn't drill in the Grand Canyon unless the people in Arizona wanted to. HARWOOD: But you wouldn't require the oil industry... MCCAIN: I would do those things. What's that... HARWOOD: You would not require the oil industry to use its profits to help pursue alternative energy? MCCAIN: I would not require them to, but I think that public pressure and a lot of other things, including a national security requirement that we reduce and eliminate our dependence on foreign oil and we stop the contamination of our atmosphere which is -- in climate change, which is real and is taking place. MCCAIN: And we have now a confluence of two national security requirements. One is to address the issue of climate change, and nuclear power is a very big part of that. And it's also a requirement to not allow Chavez in Venezuela, Putin in Russia and the president of Iran to dictate world events, bully their neighbors and use oil as a weapon which would probably further terrorism and endanger this nation's national security. (APPLAUSE) 17:07:03 (UNKNOWN): Governor Huckabee, the federal government has spent years and billions of dollars promoting ethanol but the result has been a glut of ethanol and gas prices that are still at record levels. Wouldn't it be better to just let the free market determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or not? 17:07:21 HUCKABEE: But the accelerated pace at which we get there is critical for national security, as well as for our own economic interest. The fact is, we keep talking about 15-, 20-, 30-year plans; that's nonsense. If we don't start saying we'll do this within a decade, we're never, ever going to get there. And we need to approach it the same way that a car does at the Nascar pit-stop -- you rush in, you get it done because you have to. We're in a race. We're in a race for our lives against people who want to kill us. And a lot of the reasons that we are entangled in the Middle East is because our money buys their oil, that money ends up coming back to us in the way of Islamo-fascism terrorists. 17:08:04 We've got to come to the place where everything is on the table: nuclear, biofuels, ethanol, wind, solar -- any and everything this country can produce. We once had a president who said, "Let's go to the moon in 10 years," and we were there in eight. HUCKABEE: And we did that when we started with the technology of bottle rockets, when we got the thing launched. And we all saw that we can do it. But we can't do it when we create this sense of: We'll wait until another generation. We can't wait until another generation. Instead of running it like Nascar, we've been running it like taking the family station wagon in for letting Goober and Gomer take a look at it when they get time, under the shade tree. (LAUGHTER) So it's critical that for our own interest, economically and from a point of national security, that we become energy independent and commit to doing it within a decade. 17:08:53 (UNKNOWN): Senator Thompson, let me ask you to respond on ethanol. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes sense... 17:08:56 THOMPSON: First of all... (UNKNOWN): ... or should the market? THOMPSON: ... I want to explain for my friends here who Goober and Gomer are. (LAUGHTER) Excuse me. HUCKABEE: (OFF-MIKE) they watched Andy and Opie. (LAUGHTER) (UNKNOWN): It's a southern thing, I guess. Should the government determine whether ethanol makes economic sense or should the free market make that determination? THOMPSON: Ultimately, it'll be the free market, but I think, like the governor says, I think that we're in a situation now where we've got to use everything that's available to us. I think renewables and alternatives are a part of that picture. I don't look for it to last forever. When the industry gets up and running and on its feet again, I don't see the need for what we're doing now. But you have to look at the bigger picture. Most economic downturns over the last 25 years have been preceded by a spike in oil prices. There's probably plenty of oil out there for the indefinite future. But price is an issue. And that brings in the whole question of the importance of stability in the world. The United States, since the end of World War II, has been a force for stability and democracy, which helps bring about stability, for a long, long time. Our policies with regard to places like the Middle East and Iraq right now are very important with regard to the very issue we're talking about, because instability and crises in the wrong parts of the world are going to cause dramatic results in the upward movement of oil prices, and that could be devastating to our economy. 17:10:26 BARTIROMO: Quick follow up. Governor Romney, you said government shouldn't get involved in business and free markets, but yet we subsidize farmers to the tune of $26 billion last year. Will the government end up bailing out farmers again? 17:10:36 ROMNEY: I believe in domestic supports for our agriculture industry. I don't see our food supply being the same kind of jeopardy situation that our energy supply is in. And clearly, there's a responsibility of government to make sure that our farmers are treated on the same basis as farmers in Europe and other markets that we compete with when the middle of the Doha round at the WTO talks. And if we find a way to bring down subsidies around the world, that will be good news. But with regards to energy -- and that's really the heart of what we're describing here -- one side of this is, of course, the fear. The fear of the fact that we face global warming. That we face serious competitive challenges globally unless we become serious with our getting prices of energy down. ROMNEY: But the other is the opportunity. It's a great opportunity for America to develop technology to lead the world in energy efficiency as well as energy production. And whether it's nuclear or liquefied coal, where we sequester the CO2, far more fuel-efficient automobiles -- by the way, where bureaucrats don't write the rules, but where business people come together and say, "Let's find a way to make sure that the American, the domestic industry can thrive." These are some of the incentives that have to be behind our policies with regard to our investments, the new technologies like ethanol. BARTIROMO: Thank you. Chris? 17:11:45 MATTHEWS: This is one of those 30-second down the line, gentlemen, questions. Polls show that Republicans are known as the party of national security and of moral values. But polls also show that voters look now at least to the Democrats to handle the economy. How are you going to win back their confidence? In order. Congressman Paul? 17:12:25 PAUL: Well, first, we have to have a sound economy, and we don't. We're overtaxed. We're over-regulated. And we work with a currency that is non-functional. And our prosperity is slipping. PAUL: And we are over-extended overseas -- you can't have a prosperous economy at home when you're spending all the money overseas. You can't even have a strong national defense if you're spending all this money overseas in wars that we're not winning. So, if we want a prosperous economy here, we have to change these policies and we can't be bailing out farmers and subsidizing ethanol -- this is just the wrong way to go. The taxpayers pay for the subsidiaries, and then they pay for higher prices when they buy the gasoline or buy the food; it never works. MATTHEWS: Governor? 17:12:45 HUCKABEE: The American people have always believed that the American dream was a lie for them. Most of us here today, probably every one of us are living better than we ever dreamed we would when we were kids. But when I ask the question of how many of you think your kids and grandkids are going to be living better than you, rarely does a hand go up. HUCKABEE: A lot of what has to happen is a restoring of the resilience of optimism in this country, and part of that is making sure that they understand that we understand we've got big problems that need big ideas, things like a total overhaul of our tax system and people who are running this country who grew up the hard way with a struggle, who understand what it's like to not be sure that the next day is going to necessarily be a great and prosperous one. MATTHEWS: Senator McCain? 17:13:22 MCCAIN: The American people no longer have trust or confidence in our government. Our failure at Katrina, our failures in Iraq, our failures to get spending under control. And we've got to restore that trust and confidence. If we're going to have real immigration reform, we're going to have to have trust that we will secure the borders. The American people want us to stop the outrageous wasteful spending, which has caused our Republican base to become disenchanted and disillusioned. 17:13:54 We're going to have to do some -- make some decisions and make some hard choices. The American people are read to accept them. MCCAIN: But they want for us to be straight with them, and they want straight talk, that they will know the challenges and they will rise to meet them. MATTHEWS: How do the Republican win back confidence on the economy, Governor Romney? 17:14:10 ROMNEY: First, by being confident, not going out with the message of doom and gloom and of all the problems we have, but instead pointing out that the future's going to be even brighter than our past. And I'm entirely convinced of that. This nation has everything it needs to succeed around the world and at home. We have the heart of the American people, which is sound and alive and well. We have technology, innovation, capital. We need to have leadership that'll tell us the truth and actually lead. And vis-a-vis meeting with most likely Hillary Clinton, I can't wait to talk about the fact that I spent my life in the economy. I understand how jobs come and why they go. I know how to get a health care plan not just talked about, but actually implemented. I know how to make sure that we keep our taxes down and our spending down. I know how to help American companies do business around the world and stop those foreign companies from coming in here unfairly. ROMNEY: That's what I've done throughout my career. 17:14:39 I can't wait to debate with her, because I've done it. She's just talked about it. MATTHEWS: Senator Thompson? 17:15:04 THOMPSON: I think we need to tell the American people the truth. Congress' approval rating now is about 11 percent. I don't think anybody believes anything coming out of Washington anymore. I think we need to tell them the truth that our security is on the line, that our economy is on the line, the our prosperity is on the line. We're going to have to do some things differently. We're probably going to have to spend more than 4 percent of our budget because we're spending right now on our military. We're bankrupting the next generation and those yet to be born. Those are truthful things that the American people, I think, have an intuition about. We need to own up to it. It's not all gloom and doom. We want to live in a world and a country that's free, and free markets. People accept responsibility, people who play by the rules and work hard can expect to live the American dream. If they need help in this country they get help and those that can help themselves are expected to do so. MATTHEWS: Mayor? 17:15:59 GIULIANI: How about division of a robust, strong America, an America that looks at energy independence from the point of view of, not only are you we going to develop it for ourselves, but this is exactly what we could be selling to China and to India. They need energy independence more than we do. How about an America that fixes its health care system in the right way, so we can actually sell that abroad? America -- the possibilities for America in this global economy are endless, if we don't put a lid on ourselves. Hillary Clinton, the governor mentioned, wants to put a lid on us. She wants to put a lid on our growth. We want to give people freedom. I'll give you an example. Hillary, the other day -- remember the Hillary bond program? She's going to give out -- she's going to give $5,000 to every child born in America, with her picture on it. (LAUGHTER) GIULIANI: I think, right, right? OK, OK, OK. (LAUGHTER) I challenged her on it. I challenged her. She has backed off that. She has a new one today. This one is, she's going to give out $1,000 to everybody, to set up a 401(k). The problem is, this one costs $5 billion more than the last one. MOREn GIULIANI: So, I don't know -- Hillary is filled with endless ways to spend... MATTHEWS: OK. Congressman Hunter? GIULIANI: ... and we're going to have to control that. 17:17:08 HUNTER: Chris, you know, we've got -- American families have watched $75,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore, $60,000-a-year jobs being pushed offshore. They understand that something's wrong. And we've talked a little bit about the deficit about $160 billion this year. The trade deficit is $800 billion this year. And the one thing that we can do to restore confidence in the Republican party is be good businessmen and good leaders. Let's get rid of the bad trade deals and let's bring back to the table our trading competitors and make deals that give our guys sitting there at the kitchen table with their families a fair shot at a good job and give those small businesses that have been outdone by China's cheating on trade a good chance at winning for a change. That's what we can do. MATTHEWS: Senator, thank you. 17:17:55 BROWNBACK: I think real plans like an optional flat tax we can do, personal Social Security accounts, and being optimistic. This is the most powerful nation in the history of mankind. Right now, less than 5 percent of the world's population, yet 20 percent of the world's economy, a third of the world's military spending. Forty percent of our research and development budget around the world is in this country. I mean, this place rocks. (APPLAUSE) And I think we need to be optimistic and upward looking at what this nation.. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: Congressman? 17:18:25 TANCREDO: You want to raise wage rates in the United States. You want to reduce taxes in the United States. You want to re- encourage people to think about us doing the right thing as Republicans. Do this: Stop illegal immigration into this country -- will do all of these -- those things. And I'll tell you something else we need to do. I have never voted with Republicans than I have since we've been in the minority; it's incredible. We're fighting the Democrats now on tooth and nail on every single thing -- SCHIP -- great. You know what? Standing on principle is a good idea. Too bad we didn't do it when we were in the majority. Lets think about this now. Stop pandering. Stop pandering to all of these special interest groups. Do what's right regardless of whether or not people all agree with you when you take... MATTHEWS: All right. TANCREDO: ... you know, this kind of put your finger in the wind. do what you believe in. Stop pandering; they'll believe in us. (APPLAUSE) MATTHEWS: We have a special interest to hear from. Right now we're taking a commercial break. 17:19:11 COMMERCIAL BREAK 17:20:16 END OF TAPE