It was a wild week on the campaign trail, President Obama continued to take blows from the GOP, Romney told the country what he really thinks about the poor, the Republican-controlled House stomped on the First Amendment, a Pennsylvania teacher got a big surprise and The Ed Show covered it all.
With the GOP primary race in Florida heating up on Monday, the Romney and Gingrich camps continued their Romp in the Swamp, and a divided Republican party took desperate shots at President Obama. The most disparaging remarks of a new wave of “Obama Derangement Syndrome” came from RNC Chairman Reince Preibus. He compared the president to disgraced Italian ship captain Francesco Schettino, saying, “…we’re going to talk about our own little Captain Schettino, which is President Obama who’s abandoning the ship here in the United States…”
Ed spoke with Tulane professor Melissa Harris-Perry, who said that this sort of childish name-calling only works to make Obama look stronger as “the grown-up in the room…” As the November general election draws nearer, we’ll have to wait and see what other playground tactics the GOP unleashes.
In Psycho Talk, Ed got some help from the Muppets to debunk Fox News correspondent Steve Doocy’s claim that his own network has the most balanced coverage. With confirmation that the survey Doocy referenced was conducted by a paid Fox News contributor, Ed said that, “For Steve Doocy to say his show is unbiased? I guess we can call that pig-headed Psycho Talk.”
On Tuesday Ed took part in msnbc’s panel coverage of the Florida primary. After a blowout Romney win and a bizarre late-night pseudo-concession speech from Gingrich, Ed questioned whether Newt is actually gearing up for a possible independent run.
The Romney campaign’s (Louis Vuitton) baggage continued to pile up mid-week. Fresh off his double-digit victory in Florida, Governor Romney plainly stated on Wednesday morning that he is “not concerned about the very poor.” Ed talked with Democratic Strategist and NYU Professor Bob Shrum, who said Mitt’s remarks prove that “…this is an election between fairness and unfairness.”









