“I don’t know if he closed any kind of deal on immigration reform tonight,” Chris Matthews said. He expressed frustration that the president didn’t talk about a proposal that would have “teeth” and could actually reduce illegal immigration. When Rachel Maddow said that the president mentioned border security, Matthews called that “a Pat Buchanan solution.” “I’ve never believed in border security,” Matthews said. “It’s about worker permits, it’s about biometric ID cards, some way to stop illegal hiring — he never even mentioned it.”
Maddow and Matthews debated the scope of the president’s role in
Former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele praised Obama’s focus on jobs and the middle class. Steele also chided Republican members of Congress for not applauding more in places where he thought they should have.
MSNBC host Al Sharpton was pleased with the president’s speech. He praised Obama’s proposals regarding voting reform. “This sounds like pre-1994 South Africa,” Sharpton said regarding the tale of an elderly woman in South Florida who stood in line for hours waiting to vote in the 2012 election.
Finally, Lawrence O’Donnell chimed in and said that the strength of Obama’s speech was evident in the faces of Republicans who watched the speech. He said that Obama’s asking for a vote for his proposals would have shocked the Founding Fathers which he insisted would have provided the president the courtesy of a vote in Congress for his priorities.
O’Donnell concluded by saying that Obama should have turned to Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and asked him to explain in the moment why his gun control proposals could not get a vote. “Let him have the microphone,” O’Donnell said. “He would have nothing to say.”
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