Sunday, January 17, 2010

Bush, Clinton: Haiti response not about politics

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President Barack Obama, center, speaks as former Presidents Bill Clinton, left, and George W. Bush, right, listen in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010. Bush and Clinton have been asked by Obama to help with US relief efforts after the earthquake in Haiti.


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President Barack Obama, center, speaks as former Presidents Bill Clinton, left, and George W. Bush, right, listen in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010. Obama asked the former presidents to help with U.S. relief efforts in Haiti after the earthquake


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President Barack Obama, center, speaks as former Presidents Bill Clinton, left, and George W. Bush, right, listen in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010. Bush and Clinton have been asked by Obama to help with US relief efforts after the earthquake in Haiti.


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President Barack Obama, center, walks out of the Oval Office of the White House with former Presidents Bill Clinton, left, and George W. Bush, right, to deliver remarks in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010. Obama asked the former presidents to help with U.S. relief efforts in Haiti after the earthquake.


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President Barack Obama thanks former President Bill Clinton, Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, after speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. Obama asked former President George W. Bush and Clinton to help with U.S. relief efforts after the earthquake in Haiti.


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President Barack Obama walks with former President Bill Clinton, center, and former President George W. Bush, left, Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, as they leave the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington after speaking about Haiti. Obama asked Bush and Clinton to help with U.S. relief efforts after the earthquake in Haiti.


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Former President Bill Clinton listens to former President George W. Bush speak Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama asked Bush and Clinton to help with U.S. relief efforts after the earthquake in Haiti


Former Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton say the earthquake in Haiti offers a chance to put aside politics and help people in despair. Bush and Clinton appeared on five Sunday talk shows as part of their effort to lead private fundraising efforts for Haitian relief, including immediate needs and the long-term rebuilding effort. President Barack Obama asked them to lead the bipartisan effort.

"I'd say now is not the time to focus on politics," Bush said in an interview taped Saturday after the ex-presidents' visit to the White House. "You've got people who are ... children who've lost parents. People wondering where they're going to be able to drink water," Bush said. "There's a great sense of desperation. And so my attention is on trying to help people deal with the desperation."

Bush said that he doesn't know what critics are talking about when they claim Obama is trying to score political points with a broad response to Haiti's woes. The most vocal critic has been radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh who urged people not to donate and said he wouldn't trust that money donated to Haiti through the White House Web site would go to the relief efforts. He said people contribute enough by paying income taxes.

"I just think it doesn't do us any good to waste any time in what is in my opinion a fruitless and pointless conversation," Clinton said.

He added: "In a disaster of this magnitude there's no way that the government, which has other responsibilities as well, national security and other responsibilities - you just can't deal with this just with government money."

Clinton said a disaster like the earthquake in Haiti "reminds us of our common humanity. It reminds us of needs that go beyond fleeting disagreements." He said political debate is healthy in normal times, but it would be perverse in a time of disaster to let politics get in the way of helping.

He said the timing is important to fundraising efforts and long-term goals for Haiti.

"Everybody who's seriously followed Haiti over a long period of time believed that Haiti was had the best chance it has had in our lifetimes to break the chains of its past," he said, "to build a truly modern state, to have a more thriving economy, an honest and competent government, better health care, better education, more self-generated clean energy - the whole nine yards."

The former presidents appeared on ABC's "This Week," NBC's "Meet the Press," CBS' "Face the Nation," CNN's "State of the Union" and "Fox News Sunday."


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