EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Obama talks to the Tribune

By ED RONCO, Tribune Staff Writer

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Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., addresses a rally at South Bend Washington High School

Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., addresses a rally at South Bend Washington High School Wednesday April 9, 2008 in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond)

By Beth Boehne

SOUTH BEND — Sen. Barack Obama spent 10 minutes with The Tribune before his Washington High School appearance Wednesday night.

Here’s the transcript from that interview:

The Tribune: Senator Clinton has said that she’s coming back to the area on Saturday — it will be her second visit. Are we going to see you back here soon?

Sen. Barack Obama: Well, I’m just starting my first. We’re going to be campaigning actively in Indiana. We’ve got until (May) 6, which means that we’re going to be spending a lot of time here. This is going to be my first big road trip, multiple days, we’re going to hit a lot of towns, and I’m sure that we will do a second go-round across the state before the primary on May 6.

Tribune: A lot of issues facing people all over the country, and here in the Midwest, one of the big ones is home foreclosures. Indiana’s 10th in the country. Senator Clinton has the 90-day moratorium plan (where she’d halt foreclosures and negotiate set rates for borrowers), you have a plan of your own. What are you going to do about the problem?

Obama: Well, I’ve been working with (Sen.) Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and (Rep.) Barney Frank (D-Mass.) in the Senate and the House to put together a program where the Federal Housing Administration steps in, negotiates with the borrower and the lender. The borrower is going to get a fixed mortgage that they can pay and the lender is going to have to reduce their interest rates slightly, but will get any benefits if home values go back up, so the borrower will have to share some of the equity in the house if housing prices go back up. The point is both take a slight loss, but you stabilize folks in their homes, and that’s good for the entire community.

And it will only apply to people who are actually living in their homes. We don’t want to help speculators, we don’t want to help people who bought homes that they just plain couldn’t afford. What we want to help are those who are right in the margins, who’ve really been hurt because home values went down, or because they got drawn into deceptive loans and teaser rates that they just couldn’t end up sustaining over time.

Tribune: How do you keep (the subprime crisis and mounting foreclosures) from happening again?

Obama: I think the most important thing is to have a strong regulatory system in place. Two years ago, I put into place what I call the Stop Fraud Act which would prevent predatory loans, much better disclosure, a credit rating system so people would understand exactly what they were getting themselves into.

The mortgage lenders spent $185 million over the last several years preventing this kind of report from happening. I think the time is now right for us to go ahead and put that in place.

Tribune: Gas prices — certainly not a new issue this year but obviously a big one. You have proposed in a (television) commercial airing here in Indiana a profit windfall penalty (on oil companies). How do you impose that without the oil companies passing it along to consumers in the form of higher gasoline prices?

Obama: Well, look, I think that what we can do is to simply say — they’re making $11 billion worth of profits. Their profit margins right now are astronomical. Oil hit $112 a barrel on the world oil market. A lot of what we want to see is them reinvesting in refinery capacity, which would reduce prices over the medium term, but also renewable energies.

We haven’t seen enough investment in the kinds of biodiesel strategies that could benefit Indiana, benefit my home state of Illinois. We’ve seen a huge surge in corn-based ethanol, but that’s probably not going to be the long-term answer.

We need to start shifting to other biomass — switchgrass, animal refuse — and there are a whole range of ways that we could produce energy and fuel. But we haven’t made the investment and that’s why I want to put $150 billion into research over the next 10 years, to develop these new strategies.

Tribune: But how do you, in the short term, that windfall tax: How do you keep that from getting passed on at the pump?

Obama: Well, I don’t think the answer is necessarily a sweeping tax. It may be a penalty if they are making a certain profit above a certain amount and that goes into a fund that we reinvest in refinery capacity or clean energy.

The other thing I do want to make sure it does is that in providing immediate relief to consumers, the most important thing that we can do is provide a tax break to the middle class. I was the first candidate to propose tax cuts for the middle of the country: $75,000 a year for an average individual, offsetting some of their payroll tax. Senior citizens who are making $50,000 a year or less: exempting them from income tax on their Social Security payments.

That could mean an extra $1,000 in the pockets of the average family. That could, in the short term, at least, offset the extraordinary hike in gas prices that we’ve been seeing.

Tribune: In that same commercial, you’re at a gas station and you say you don’t take money from oil companies. Nobody takes money from oil companies, because corporations can’t give to campaigns. And critics have said that you do take some money from CEOs of those companies.

Obama: Well, what you said is not entirely true. Oil companies have PACs (political action committees). Oil companies have lobbyists. They organize and provide big bundles of money to candidates all across the board. And we don’t take money from PACs and we don’t take money from lobbyists. Not just from oil companies — we don’t take drug PAC money, we don’t take insurance PAC money, we don’t take bank PAC money or lobbyist money. So it’s true that I’ve received money from various people who might work in the oil industry, because we campaign nationwide, we get money from everybody. We’ve got 1,300,000 donors. But that would include a guy who works at the gas station at the corner who sent me $25 over the Internet.

Tribune: A poll conducted here statewide, and the Tribune was among the commissioners of that poll, puts you 3 points behind Senator Clinton, but that’s within the 5-point margin of error. What do those numbers tell you about the way you need to come into Indiana and campaign?

Obama: It’s close. It means we’ve got to campaign hard, and we feel pretty good about where we are. We had to spend more time in Pennsylvania because we were so far behind there, which gave Senator Clinton something of a head start in terms of campaigning across the state. And obviously she’s had former President Clinton and her daughter Chelsea campaigning as well.

We feel like we’re just getting known around the state. Obviously, in the northern part of the state that is part of the Chicago media market, I’m known and that gives me some advantage. In the southern part of Indiana, I’m not well-known at all, and so we’re going to have to do a lot more work south of Indianapolis to make sure that people have a sense of who I am and what I stand for.

If we continue with the message of pushing back against the special interests, providing health care to all Americans, tax breaks for the middle class, rolling back tax cuts for companies that ship jobs overseas, those are all things that I think the people of Indiana will respond to.

Tribune: Let’s talk about Pennsylvania for a minute. Polls are showing you gaining on Senator Clinton. Let’s say you don’t win Pennsylvania. How close is close enough?

Obama: Oh, you know, if you don’t win Pennsylvania then you don’t win Pennsylvania. My attitude is, I campaign in every state, and I try as hard as I can. Some states you win, some states you lose. But because we competed in every state, I think that’s part of the reason why we won twice as many states as Senator Clinton.

We don’t care whether it’s a primary, whether it’s a caucus, whether it’s a big state or a small state. We think all states are important and we’re going to campaign here in Indiana just as hard as we’ve campaigned in Pennsylvania or any place else.

I think that we have a chance of winning here and that’s all you can ask for.

Tribune: You’re here after 10 p.m., you’ve done other appearances late at night. I guess the question that some people might want to know is, how do you keep going, how does the campaign trail affect you as a person, and why the late night appearances?

Obama: I try to work out every morning. Sometimes it’s harder than others, but that’s helped. I draw energy from people, and meeting them and talking to them and hearing their stories.

When I start feeling sorry for myself, I think about some of the troops from right here in Indiana who’ve been deployed for 15 months in Iraq, and don’t see their families at all. It reminds you that there are people who are going through much more difficult tasks than I am and my job hopefully is to make sure that I’m doing a good job for them.

Saturday, Apr 12 at 11:51 PM Ildefonso Diamonte wrote ...

It has been very hard to put up with eight years of Bush and his last year seems like an eternity. With Obama I have something that keeps me going till next year.

Friday, Apr 11 at 7:56 AM JIMBO wrote ...

To Kathie and all the others who long for the Kennedy era to return, I think you left your brains in the mud at woodstock!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 4:22 PM Kathie wrote ...

Obama is the most level-headed, futuristic, problem-solver we have seen in politics for a long time. What I appreciate about him the most is that he inspires people. Government cannot solve all of our problems, but it should not be the cause of our problems either. I have not seen young people so involved in politics since the Kennedy's!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 2:29 PM vet wrote ...

To Clark Kent, Hope there isn't any kryptonite around for Billary to get her sweaty little hands on!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 1:53 PM Bob wrote ...

I went through all these pro-Obama comments and here is what people say about him: 1. leadership qualities 2. analytical capacities 3. vision 4. change that we need 5. honest 6. down to earth. There is no substance here. Nobody seems to really know what he is going to do.

Thursday, Apr 10 at 12:53 PM CLARK KENT wrote ...

I believe Obama can do all that he says. He is my brother (we have the same mom).

Thursday, Apr 10 at 12:04 PM Mike wrote ...

Alison and Kevin Mack and every other Obama fan out ther, All I hear Obama doing is telling people what they want to hear and making promises he can't possibly keep.... Come on, Obama and "HIS" White House??? Wake Up People!!!! Hillary isn't much better but definetly better.... The only honest one out there now that's telling the truth and not making promises he can't keep is McCain!!!!! And for those of you who're thinking I'm a racist, Obama isn't a black man... His mother is white!!!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 11:12 AM Marcia Vallet wrote ...

When we choose a President, we must be aware of the depth of leadership qualities, the analytical capacities, the vision. Barack Obama has all these strengths, and will guide us towards the positive, towards becoming a better nation, a more responsive and responsible government to its citizens. He has the determination to be wise and strong, clear-minded, fair, and calm but steady as a leader. He will be one of the greatest!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 9:21 AM TRUE FAN of OBAMA wrote ...

I can't wait until he is our next PRESIDENT. HE is the CHANGE that we need. Thank you Lord!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 8:37 AM Alison wrote ...

Roxey- I read this article too. Wake up America and vote for Barack obama. I would never ever ever vote for someone who lies about being under sniper fire in Bosnia. Case closed. A vote for Clinton is a vote for McCain. McCain clobbers her nationally but Obama beats McCain. Go read Rasmussen and Gallup, Roxey

Thursday, Apr 10 at 8:35 AM Anonymous wrote ...

Mr. Obama, please put together a budget showing all this extra money you're going to spend and the additional tax revenue and how this will affect the budget deficit. Then pass the numbers to an economist, so they can explain the damage it will do to the economy. We're currently in a borderline recession with under 6% unemployment. This would cause a depression with double digit unemployment.

Thursday, Apr 10 at 8:28 AM Kevin Mack wrote ...

It amazes me that people are even considering voting for Clinton or McCain over Obama. Obama is the most honest, down to earth politician who wants to build a better place for everyone. Why are critics so afraid of change? Clinton and McCain are just more of the same. And for the prejudice idiots who try to scare people with this nonsense of Obama being a muslim. It scares me that this kind of dirty politics exists in 2008. People with brains vote Obama.

Thursday, Apr 10 at 8:22 AM Sandra Rodriquez wrote ...

1 Million folks have contributed to Barack Obama's campaign for CHANGE a record. He won TEXAS! He has more pledged delegates. More popular votes etc etc. He will be the democratic nominee and that is a great thing for our country. I am an Iraq veteran and cannot forgive Hillary for her vote for the war we had no business in and has cost 4000 of my comrades their lives and maimed over 35,000 more. Visit your local Veterans hospital and see for yourself. Barack And Roll in 2008 YES WE CAN!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 7:39 AM get out obama wrote ...

Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden would be praying for an Obama victory because it would help the militants win in Iraq. Article by Citizen Wells 3/08, Obama has a dual citizenship with Kenya. Obama is an anti-Israel, pro-pan-Arabian Islamic-socialist who has ties to Marxist Libyan President Muamar al Gadaffi, and a Syrian tycoon, Antoin Rezko, Saudi Arabian Scheiks and Rezko's "close friend" Nadhami Auchi, the one who gave Obama fundraiser money (and helped to buy his mansion): Iraqi billionaire

Thursday, Apr 10 at 6:55 AM roxey wrote ...

I read this Barack Hussain Obama article. Wake up America. Please, please, please vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Thursday, Apr 10 at 6:47 AM Josh wrote ...

Why do I get this vibe that Mr. Obama is exactly if not more what we want and need in this difficult time? I hope this great nation will realize and feel the same way!

Thursday, Apr 10 at 4:50 AM alireza nasiri wrote ...

it is good web site

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