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  • Archive for the ‘Interview’ Category

    Senator Cochran on Supertalk Mississippi TOMORROW

    Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

    Senator Cochran will be a featured guest on the Paul Gallo radio show on Supertalk Mississippi tomorrow morning.  Tune in to Supertalk on Thursday at 8:05 a.m. to hear Senator Cochran address issues such as McCain, Medicare, Oil Exploration, etc.

    Supertalk in your area:

    Jackson: WFMN-FM 97.3
    Hattiesburg: WFMM-FM 97.3
    Greenwood: WTCD-FM 96.9
    Oxford: WTMN-FM 105.5
    Corinth: WXRZ-FM 94.3 
    West Point: WKBB-FM 100.9
    Monticello-Brookhaven: WRQO-FM 102.1

    Talk to Power: Sen. Cochran on the Role of U.S. Troops

    Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

    Talk to Power continued…

    Talk to Power host Judy Woodruff interviewed Senator Thad Cochran in November of 2007 in response to hundreds of questions and comments from Yahoo readers.  Several topics were addressed. Today, the topic we are featuring is Senator Cochran’s view on the Role of U.S. Troops. Click here to read yesterday’s topic, “The Future of the GOP.”

    The Role of U.S. Troops:

    MS. JUDY WOODRUFF:  First of all, Senator Cochran, thank you very much for participating in Talk to Power.  We had a large number of comments come in from our viewers, our visitors to the Yahoo site, a large number of thoughtful comments.  We tried to choose a good cross-section, and I’m going to begin with Iraq because it is the question that keeps coming up.

    This is a reader who describes himself as a naval officer, and here’s what he wrote:  “All I hear about in the news is how we (reporters, politicians, civilians) want our troops to come home from Iraq.  What do you say, Senator, to the tens of thousands of military personnel currently serving our country that believe they are doing the right thing and are scared we are going to be forced to leave Iraq, making everything we and those who have fallen, pointless?” 

    SEN. COCHRAN:  Well, the first thing I would say is thank you.  Thank you for serving in the armed forces of our country.  I was a naval officer myself, so I understand the feeling.  I was lucky not to be involved in any combat operations, but nonetheless we were trained and ready to serve and ready to go wherever we were deployed, and I know that’s your situation too.  Thank you for being in uniform and protecting the security interests of our country.

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    Talk to Power: Sen. Cochran on the future of the GOP

    Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

    Talk to Power host Judy Woodruff interviewed Senator Thad Cochran in November of 2007 in response to hundreds of questions and comments from Yahoo readers.  Several topics were addressed including:

    The Future of the GOP
    The Role of U.S. Troops
    Saving Social Security
    No Child Left Behind
    The State of Education
    Defining Victory in Iraq
    Bringing the Troops Home

    Stay tuned this week for excerpts from this interview.  First, Senator Cochran addresses the Future of the GOP.  Read the transcript below.

    Future of the GOP

    MS. JUDY WOODRUFF:   From the South, and, again, in this vein, a reader writes:  “I am wondering about recent comments in the news media after the mid-term elections that the Republican Party will primarily be a Southern-based party.  Your recent election to minority leadership positions of primarily Southern senators plays this out.  Will the Republican Party be able to appeal to the broader nation in future elections, with this Southern-based leadership and outlook?  Will the Southern conservative values and perceptions be able to win broad appeal across the nation and return the party to power?”

    SEN. COCHRAN:  Well, it’ll be interesting to see about the transition and how much farther it goes in terms of realignment of states with political parties.  When I was growing up, we didn’t have any local Republican elected officials.  It just didn’t happen.  But back in the Civil War days, the Republicans were the ones who were reforming the federal government, and the Democrats were sort of the old Confederates from the Civil War, and it took a long time for that transition to be made. 

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