President Obama’s former Chief of Staff, Bill Daley, told Andrea Mitchell Reports Monday that the importance of one-on-one talks between Obama and Speaker John Boehner, like the one they engaged in on Sunday, can’t be overstated if a fiscal deal is to be reached.
“It really is the president and the Speaker who will do this deal,” Daley told Mitchell. “Having seen the two of them in the past when we went through the 2011 negotiations, they have respect for each other. They like each other. They will be able to do a deal together.”
Daley served as President Obama’s Chief of Staff during the 2011 debt-ceiling showdown. The debacle brought the country within days of default and resulted in the country’s first credit downgrade by Standard & Poor.
Congress has three weeks to strike a fiscal deal – otherwise a series of severe, automatic spending cuts are scheduled to take place. “We need this to be done shortly to give the country and the world confidence that our system can work again,” Daley told Mitchell.
Daley also commented on one of the most anxiously-awaited cabinet nominations: that of Secretary of State. Of Susan Rice, the current U.N. Ambassador frequently thought to be a front-runner for Hillary Clinton’s successor, Daley said, “She is extremely well qualified. The president knows that. He is not going to be forced into a decision by virtue of the chatter that’s out there in the street and the politics, and I think he is going about it in a deliberate way.” Rice’s critics have threatened to de-rail her confirmation process, if nominated, over statements she made to Sunday talk shows in the days following the September 11 Benghazi embassy attack, when she said preliminary intelligence showed the violence was the result of a spontaneous protest rather than a pre-planned terrorist operation. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair John Kerry is also considered a front-runner.
Since then, criticism has been hurled at Rice almost daily. Asked whether the delay to name Clinton’s successor is hurting Rice as a possible nominee, Daley told Mitchell, “Once a nominee is named, you basically go into a very silent period. So if either Ambassador Rice or Senator Kerry were nominated, they would have to go into a very quiet period” until confirmation hearings took place, which Daley said wouldn’t take place until January. “There would be no comment, no visibility by either one of them. So I don’t think that’s so much of an issue because neither one of them would be out there doing some defense of themselves or some arguments against them.








