Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Albright: World 'looking at us as if we’ve lost our minds'


Albright: World 'looking at us as if we’ve lost our minds'

Fresh off a trip to the Middle East last month, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said Wednesday that she had a hard time explaining the state of American politics - and particularly the rise of Donald Trump - to her hosts. Appearing on Fox Business, Albright, a longtime supporter and friend of Hillary Clinton, praised the former secretary of state and senator as "somebody who knows how to reach not only across the aisle but across the ocean - and I think that's what we need and not a bunch of yelling, frankly." "One of the hard parts about being a diplomat, when you go abroad, you don't want to criticize your country, and so trying to explain what's going on to foreigners is hard,
POLITICO

Madeleine Albright: GOP 'sounds like children in a school yard'
CNN






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Former Secretary of State and longtime Clinton ally Madeleine Albright said, "Trying to explain what's going on to foreigners is hard" when it comes to the presidential election. | AP Photo


Albright: World 'looking at us as if we’ve lost our minds'

Fresh off a trip to the Middle East last month, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said Wednesday that she had a hard time explaining the state of American politics — and particularly the rise of Donald Trump — to her hosts.
Appearing on Fox Business, Albright, a longtime supporter and friend of Hillary Clinton, praised the former secretary of state and senator as "somebody who knows how to reach not only across the aisle but across the ocean — and I think that's what we need and not a bunch of yelling, frankly."
"One of the hard parts about being a diplomat, when you go abroad, you don't want to criticize your country, and so trying to explain what's going on to foreigners is hard, but they are looking at us as if we've lost our minds," Albright said.
Recounting her recent visits to Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, Albright commented that people were asking her, "What is going on in America?"
"And they were very nervous because I think that the messages coming out from Donald Trump are quite scary in terms of keeping people out of America and building walls and threatening and saying, we'll make them do whatever," she continued. "That is not the language of a commander in chief.”
Albright said that even she did not quite grasp the popularity of Trump, who won seven states on Super Tuesday, but acknowledged concern "about gridlock."
"And President [Barack] Obama has tried very hard to work with Congress that automatically kind of said they wouldn't do anything. And so, people look at what we're doing and wonder, I mean the American people, why nothing is happening, and I'm very upset about that myself," she said. "I believe in the importance of government and executive, legislative working together and the Supreme Court being involved. We are the world's greatest democracy and we are not behaving in a way that actually — compromise is not a bad word, you know.”

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