Go Home

Robin Roberts

7 documents found in 0 seconds.

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (144)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (1303)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Ann Romney says that her husband is "used to" passing up multi-million job offers and that the "poor guy" didn't even get paid for running the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

During an interview on Friday, Fox News host Brian Kilmeade noted that the former Massachusetts governor had gotten a job offer for $30 million a year after he lost the presidential nomination to Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) in 2008.

"How hard was the decision not to do that?" Kilmeade wondered.

"Well, we’re used to kind of passing offers up like that," Ann Romney explained. "For us, our life is not about making money. We’ve been very blessed financially. Our life is now about giving back."

"I always trust that Mitt can always make another dollar," she added. "Poor guy, he took no pay when he did the Olympics for three years and no pay when he was governor for four years."

Earlier this year, Ann Romney told Fox News that even though she is worth hundreds of millions of dollars, she didn't consider herself to be wealthy.

"You know, we can be poor in spirit," she said. "I don’t look — I don’t even consider myself wealthy, which is an interesting thing. It can be here today and gone tomorrow. And how I measure riches is by the friends I have and the loved ones I have and the people that I care about in my life. And that’s where my values are and that where my riches are."

The couple reportedly has a net worth of $250 million, but Ann Romney has repeatedly complained about having to release her tax returns as a part of her husband’s campaign for the Republican nomination.

“You all know that he’s been successful in business,” she told a crowd in Miami earlier this year. “Unfortunately that was made abundantly clear yesterday when our tax forms were released.”

The candidate's wife insisted to ABC's Robin Roberts in July that she and her husband had "given all you people need to know and understand about our financial situation and how we live our life"

And during an interview with NBC earlier this month, Ann Romney confirmed that there would be “no more tax releases given” by the wealthy couple, but she also insisted that “there’s nothing we’re hiding.”

“We have been very transparent to what’s legally required of us,” she told NBC’s Natalie Morales. “But the more we release, the more we get attacked, the more we get questioned, the more we get pushed. And so, we have done what’s legally required. And there’s going to be no more tax releases given.”

(h/t: Think Progress)



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (303)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (3548)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Anne Romney, the wife of GOP hopeful Mitt Romney, on Thursday insisted that she and her husband would not be giving voters any more information about their tax returns because they had "given all you people need to know."

"You know, you should really look at where Mitt has led his life, and where he’s been financially," Ann Romney told ABC's Robin Roberts. "He’s a very generous person. We give 10 percent of our income to our church every year. Do you think that is the kind of person who is trying to hide things, or do things? No. He is so good about it. Then, when he was governor of Massachusetts, didn’t take a salary for four years."

"We’ve given all you people need to know and understand about our financial situation and how we live our life," the candidate's wife added.

Regarding the Obama campaign's attacks on Mitt Romney's connection to jobs that were sent overseas by his former company, Bain Capital, Ann Romney said that "it was beneath the dignity of the office of the president to do something as egregious as that."

The Democratic National Committee on Wednesday apologized for a web video that featured a dancing horse to mock the former Massachusetts governor for not releasing his tax returns. The dressage horse, which is owned by the Romneys, will perform ballet at the Summer Olympic Games in London.

“It makes me laugh, it’s like, ‘Really?’” Ann Romney explained on Thursday. "There’s so many people out of work right now. And there’s this guy right here who has the answers for fixing the economy and all these attacks, they’re gonna try everything."

“Basically, my philosophy is they’re gonna fire the coach,” she predicted. “I already sort of know the answer. At the end of the day, they’re going to fire the coach because things aren’t going well.”

(h/t: Politico)



More reporters targeted by Egypt's pro-Mubarak mobs

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (176)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (428)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

ABC's Christiane Amanpour had her windshield broken while fleeing from pro-Mubarak "thugs" Wednesday.

In recent days, reporters -- including CNN's Anderson Cooper, who was hit on the head by thugs -- have become targets in Egypt. Western journalists have been roughed up by pro-Mubarak demonstrators, and reporters from around the world have been arrested or detained by Egyptian security forces.

Al Jazeera reported Sunday that six of their journalists were arrested.

"Special military units have just raided the hotel where our journalists from Al Jazeera English were operating," Al Jazeera reporter Clayton Swisher told ABC News.

Swisher said that while the reporters were later released, the government kept their news recording equipment.

On Wednesday, four Israeli journalists were arrested for allegedly violating curfew and entering Cairo on tourist visas.

But the situation may be the most dangerous for Western reporters.

CNN's Anderson Cooper explained Wednesday that pro-Mubarak forces had attacked him and his crew.

"We had, I mean, literally a mob of people surround us just, you know, I got punched in the head probably a good ten times or so," he said on CNN Wednesday morning.

"I know exactly who is attacking us, it's the pro-Mubarak forces, no doubt about it," he added.

ABC's Christiane Amanpour faced similar treatment Wednesday. While trying to talk to Mubarak supporters, she was threatened and told to turn back. Upon retreating, she had the windshield of her car broken with a rock.

"There's a real anti-Western reporter sentiment there," ABC's Robin Roberts noted Thursday. "Is there still that sense?"

"The pro-Mubarak supporters have been against the journalists," Amanpour replied. "Partly this is because the state television, some of the local press, the state press, has been blaming journalists. And a statement from the Foreign Ministry was issued overnight saying, this uprising against Mubarak, is, quote, a foreign conspiracy, led by international journalists. So, those people who been aggressive towards us are not the anti-Mubarak demonstrators. They're the pro-regime thugs and agitators that have been sent in to disrupt the protests."

CNN's Hala Gorani and CBS anchor Katie Couric also had to flee from pro-Mubarak demonstrators.

Serge Dumont, a Belgian journalist, was reportedly detained and beaten by men in plain clothes Wednesday.

As late as Thursday, there were reports that the Egyptian Army had begun to round up journalists, alleging it was for their own protection. Two correspondents from The New York Times were reportedly detained.

The Washington Post also reported having reporters arrested Thursday.

"We have heard from multiple witnesses that Leila Fadel, our Cairo bureau chief, and Linda Davidson, a photographer, were among two dozen journalists arrested this morning by the Egyptian Interior Ministry," foreign editor Douglas Jehl wrote.



The Utterly Predictable Sarah Palin

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (417)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (5939)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Robin Roberts asks Palin about the controversy surrounding her hunting on her reality show, the criticism from Aaron Sorkin, PETA and others. Sarah responded as expected.

Palin on GMA, "[I] would never shoot an animal for its fur or for fashion". In the background, a bearskin rug complete with head.

rug.jpg

So it goes.



Obama: 'I don't think about Sarah Palin'

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (351)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (2277)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

In an interview set to air Friday, ABC's Barbara Walters tried and failed to pull President Barack Obama into a debate with Sarah Palin.

"You may have heard that Sarah Palin told me just last week that she could beat you if she ran," Walters told Obama. "Could she?"

"You know, I don't speculate on what's going to happen two years from now," Obama replied.

"You will not tell me that you can beat Sarah Palin?" Walters pressed.

"What I'm saying is I don't think about Sarah Palin," the president confessed.

"Obviously Sarah Palin has a strong base of support in the Republican Party and I respect those skills," Obama continued. "But I spend most of my time right now on how I can be the best possible president. And my attitude has always been, from the day I started this job that if I do a good job and if I'm delivering for the American people the politics will take care of itself."

"If I falter and the American people are dissatisfied, then I'll have problems," he said.

But Obama didn't convince Good Morning America host George Stephanopoulos. "I don't think the president's telling the entire truth there," Stephanopoulos told ABC's Robin Roberts following a clip of the Obama interview. "He thinks a little bit about Sarah Palin."

Walters had gotten the debate started in an interview with Palin that aired earlier in the week.

"If you ran for president, could you beat Barack Obama?" Walters asked Palin.

"I believe so," Palin admitted.

While Palin told Walters she was undecided about whether to run in 2012, the British newspaper Guardian reported Sunday that her staff has been scouting for office space in Iowa.

"In the course of making arrangements for that tour, two aides organising Palin's visit to Des Moines on November 27 told locals they were looking into office space and other logistical needs for the coming year," the Guardian observed.



Alabama mayor: BP point man didn't keep promises

Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (497)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (994)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Tony Kennon, mayor of Orange Beach, Alabama, told ABC's Robin Roberts that BP's point man in the Gulf hasn't kept all of his promises. In millions of dollars worth of BP ads, Darryl Willis pledges to stay in the Gulf until all of the spill is cleaned up.

BP has put Willis in charge of the claims process. "BP has got to make things right, and that's why we're here," Willis says in the commercial.

But Kennon isn't a fan. "I've been in a meeting with Mr. Willis where he made promises and didn't follow through," said Kennon.

"Didn't even show the courtesy to return phone calls," Kennon complained.

"The ads are a lie with statistics. They're not doing anything like they're saying or promote through these ads," he explained.

BP is doesn't need a multi-million dollar ad campaign, according to Kennon. "I keep saying, they can save themselves $50 million just by doing the right thing. If they did that, we would be, by far, their best promo. We would send their praises to high heaven if they did the right thing," he said.



Get Adobe Flash player

DOWNLOADS: (155)
Download WMV Download Quicktime
PLAYS: (207)
Play WMV Play Quicktime
Embed

Scientists have said that up to twenty percent more oil could gush out after underwater robots cut off the the pipe at the top of the blow out preventer but BP's managing director tried to downplay the potential increase Tuesday. This next operation is being called the Lower Marine Riser Package (LMRP).

"There will be a little bit more oil," Bob Dudley said on the CBS Early Show.

Harry Smith was incredulous. "Well, twenty percent is not insignificant if thousands and thousands of barrels of oil are pouring out of there," said Smith.

Dudley avoided Smith's point. "I think you will see that these containment domes will work. We have four of them on the site depending on how the cut is to be able to lift it down by the end of the week here," Dudley replied.

The federal government has said that the actual flow rate could be as high as 19,000 barrels per day. A twenty percent increase would mean an additional 3,800 barrels per day.

BP initially estimated the flow rate at 1,000 barrels per day and then revised that estimate to 5,000 barrels per day.

White House energy policy advisor Carol Browner believes BP has a vested interest in underestimating the flow rate. "I think it's important for the public to understand that BP does have a financial interest in downplaying the size of the flow," Browner told ABC's Robin Roberts Tuesday.

"The American people need to know what the number is and this number will become an important piece of the litigation going forward because BP will be required to pay fines, a per barrel, per day fine of what they are leaking," she said.