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May 24, 2013
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NPR Plays Up the 'Enthusiasm' of 'Remarkable' Welcome of Obama in Ireland

By Matthew Balan | May 24, 2011 | 20:03

A  A
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On Tuesday's Morning Edition, NPR's Renee Montagne and Scott Horsley spotlighted the "warm welcome" President Obama received during his recent visit to Ireland. Horsley marveled at the "large crowds lining the street to welcome him," as well as the "enthusiasm with which they greeted the American president. This is something we really haven't seen in the U.S. for a couple of years."

Montagne turned to the White House correspondent, who is traveling with the President, to report on Mr. Obama's European visit. After devoting the bulk of the segment to the British portion of the trip, the NPR anchor asked about the commander-in-chief's stop in the Emerald Isle and set up Horsley's effusive reply:

MONTAGNE: Well, looking back a bit, President Obama certainly got a warm welcome in Ireland.

HORSLEY: Yes, Renee, it was really remarkable yesterday, traveling around Ireland both in the tiny village of Irish ancestor, Moneygall, to the capital of Dublin. Everywhere he went, there were large crowds lining the street to welcome him. And it wasn't just the number of people, but the enthusiasm with which they greeted the American president. This is something we really haven't seen in the U.S. for a couple of years, but he was still very warmly received in Ireland, and his message for the Irish was one that might resonate back home as well. He was telling them, despite there current economic troubles, Ireland and the U.S. have both weathered tough times before and come out better.

Earlier, the reporter acted as an apologist for the President's distant response to the deadly tornado in Missouri:

MONTAGNE: And, of course, the President has already called the governor of Missouri to be in touch about this disaster.

HORSLEY: That's right. That's part of the sort of delicate dance the White House is doing here. On the one hand, they want to show the European audience that the President is very much engaged during this trip. At the same time, for the folks back home, they want to let them know that he is monitoring developments across the Midwest- very much on top of the storm recovery effort. It's the sort of challenge that the President often has to do of doing more than one thing at a time.

The full transcript of Renee Montagne and Scott Horsley's segment from Tuesday's Morning Edition:

RENEE MONTAGNE: President Obama won't be in Washington for [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu's speech to Congress today. The President is traveling in Europe. Mr. Obama was in small town Ireland yesterday, celebrating his Irish heritage. Today, it's Buckingham Palace. The President arrived in London late last night, 12 hours ahead of schedule, to avoid a volcanic ash cloud moving from Iceland toward Ireland. And while there will be serious work in the coming days, today is one of pomp and ceremony.

NPR's White House correspondent Scott Horsley is traveling with the President, and we reached him in London. Good morning, Scott.

SCOTT HORSLEY: Good morning to you, Renee.

MONTAGNE: What is on the President's agenda today?

HORSLEY: Well, as you say, today is all about spectacle. This is a state visit with all the trimmings. There's the formal arrival ceremony at Buckingham Palace. The President will tour Westminster Abbey, lay a wreath at Britain's memorial for unknown soldiers, and then, he'll get to spend the night at Buckingham Palace after a state dinner hosted by the queen.

Before all this official business got underway this morning, though, Mr. Obama did take time to express condolences and promise federal assistance for the victims of the tornado in Missouri. He plans to visit Joplin, he said, right after this trip on Sunday.

MONTAGNE: And, of course, the President has already called the governor of Missouri to be in touch about this disaster.

HORSLEY: That's right. That's part of the sort of delicate dance the White House is doing here. On the one hand, they want to show the European audience that the President is very much engaged during this trip. At the same time, for the folks back home, they want to let them know that he is monitoring developments across the Midwest- very much on top of the storm recovery effort. It's the sort of challenge that the President often has to do of doing more than one thing at a time.

MONTAGNE: Right, and then, of course, tomorrow, after the dinner with the queen, the harder work of the Europe trip really gets underway, right?

HORSLEY: That's right. Tomorrow, there will be probably fewer photographs and more substance. The President has a bilateral meeting with the prime minister, David Cameron, and he gives a speech to Parliament, which has been called sort of the keynote of this whole European trip. One analyst has called this British portion of the trip a chance to put the 'special' back in the special relationship between the United States and the UK. The President, himself, went further today, in an op-ed article he co-authored with the British prime minister. They called it an 'essential relationship.' The UK and the rest of Europe have sometimes felt a little bit neglected by the United States. This is an opportunity for Mr. Obama to address that.

MONTAGNE: So, what kind of reception, then, do you expect Mr. Obama to get throughout the rest of this European trip?

HORSLEY: Well, the President remains popular here in Europe, more popular than some of the European leaders. But, you know, Europe has really had some big problems of its own to deal with: the persistent economic troubles. Ireland, where we were yesterday, has been forced to swallow stiff austerity measures. Britain has adopted austerity measures voluntarily. And America certainly has an interest in the health of the European economy. We all learned last year just how big an impact it can have, when some place like Greece suffers a debt crisis, and it has ripple effects on our side of the Atlantic. But there has been some question in Europe about the extent to which America really appreciates the economic challenges on this side of the ocean. Mr. Obama wants to say, yes, he gets it. He's rooting for Europe's economic success, but he also wants Europe to play a large role in international affairs.

MONTAGNE: Well, looking back a bit, President Obama certainly got a warm welcome in Ireland.

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HORSLEY: Yes, Renee, it was really remarkable yesterday, traveling around Ireland both in the tiny village of Irish ancestor, Moneygall, to the capital of Dublin. Everywhere he went, there were large crowds lining the street to welcome him. And it wasn't just the number of people, but the enthusiasm with which they greeted the American president. This is something we really haven't seen in the U.S. for a couple of years, but he was still very warmly received in Ireland, and his message for the Irish was one that might resonate back home as well. He was telling them, despite there current economic troubles, Ireland and the U.S. have both weathered tough times before and come out better.

MONTAGNE: Scott, thanks very much.

HORSLEY: My pleasure, Renee.

About the Author

Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Matthew Balan on Twitter.
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Comments

They are a bunch of drunks with livers nearing petrification

Submitted by Dave. on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 8:24pm.

LOL - They probably think he is Tiger Woods.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

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Look at it this way

Submitted by jon_torlin on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 8:55pm.

Look at it this way, Dave, one little town of 300 plus some 200 or more in visitors doesn't really represent the entire country which has a population of over 6 million.  Even in Dublin(where one of his limos got stuck with an embarrassing and well-recorded sounding crunch) which has half a million in their population, I'd say maybe (real iffy here) less than half care about this bogus potus.

He definitely doesn't have the rock star status he enjoyed in the beginning.  Plus his dissing the US's allies did not help matters.

After all, the whole damn thing is nothing more than a staged photo op while the US suffers its maladies(more happened and more on the way it seems) and his making the comment of "we'll come there Sunday" is so lame, it's ridiculous.  Other world leaders have ended their trips for disasters at home.  His staying on this trip makes him look incredibly boorish.

-Jon

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hoping for a different result

Submitted by MidAmerica on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 8:55pm.

obama fits right in over there in Europe because the people have been trained to believe their salvation will come from the government so they keep voting in people like obama who only make things worse.  Still it doesn't dawn on the everyday bloke what the real solution is and that is to take power away from government and give it back to the people.

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He must have been waving with

Submitted by Dan Diego on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 9:01pm.

He must have been waving with a Fed checkbook in his hand... Who wants a bailout?

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The Irish have never met a black man who doesn't . . .

Submitted by Galvanic on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 9:01pm.

. . . play soccer (football), so they were curious.

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Ireland!

Submitted by Newsbubba on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 9:04pm.

You want him?  You can have him!

Hell, your economy is already wrecked, the country is in the toilet, and you already have your own terrorist group!  This will be a job made in Heaven for this slack assed "community organizer."  Everything he had to work on in the USA, you have already done!  Being president of Ireland will be easier than going on welfare, yo.

Oh, you get Moochie as first "Lassie," too.  It's a package deal.

Comrade Bubba
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Wow that's right

Submitted by hbnolikeee on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 9:57pm.

he really fits in there, like a native. He should move there, now.

hbnolikeee
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What Good Crowd

Submitted by bmac32 on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 10:14pm.

Even for a small country that crowd was small. Of course the crowds here are larger, more people, but even the crowds here are getting smaller, people are waking up. They see first hand how everything they buy go up, loans for housing are hard to come by and that's with large amounts of homes on the market.

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What Good Crowd

Submitted by bmac32 on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 10:15pm.

Even for a small country that crowd was small. Of course the crowds here are larger, more people, but even the crowds here are getting smaller, people are waking up. They see first hand how everything they buy go up, loans for housing are hard to come by and that's with large amounts of homes on the market.

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NPR Plays Up the 'Enthusiasm' of 'Remarkable' Welcome of Obama i

Submitted by rickbren on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 10:29pm.

Ireland is "welcome" to keep him. . .

Repeal the Seventeenth Amendment.
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Paging St. Patrick again....

Submitted by Chris Norman on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 10:41pm.

St. Patrick had driven all the snakes from Ireland, then along comes Obama and the media....

Let's make the 2012 campaign: "The War on Error"
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So, I am

Submitted by Bob K on Tue, 05/24/2011 - 11:50pm.

supposed to be impressed because a small, insignificant country on the verge of bankruptcy rolled out the welcome mat. Since they are looking for bailout assistance from the U.S., what else would they do? When all is said and done, Irish citizens will not be voting in 2012.

Bob K
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His campaign

Submitted by jon_torlin on Wed, 05/25/2011 - 12:11am.

He must be confused as to who can vote for him and who can't, remember, he considered himself a citizen of the world.(anything but America, it seems like)  So he's trying to collect voters from other countries.  Not that it'll do him any good, but then again, that's why he's not coming back to America because of all the problems it has, especially the disasters.

-Jon

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warm welcome

Submitted by jessieH on Wed, 05/25/2011 - 10:24am.

Of course they gave him a warm welcome. They don't have to put up with him. They know he'll be gone soon. We still have another year of his b.s.

                                                                                                                                                                    

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