This a CNN show, formerly Moneyline. News with a sort of business spin.
From the Aug. 13 transcript (emphasis mine):
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'K')ITTY PILGRIM (host):
Let's move on to oil. And oil really gyrated a lot this week on this news. The great worry is the insurgents will continue to attack the oil pipelines, although oil exports are flowing normally through the south at this point. Jim, your assessment on what this means for business.
JIM ELLIS (Chief of Correspondents for Business Week): Well, there's a lot going on in the oil markets right now. I mean, there's the real uncertainty of what's going on with Iraq and whether we're going to be able to continue the transmission of oils we've been doing so far.
Venezuela, there's an election there that's making a lot of instability to the markets. And also, the continuing drama in Russia because of Yukos, and the government trying to take over one of the largest oil producers there. It means $46 a barrel oil.
What that means is that the recovery, it's still rather fragile, could be sort of, snuffed out and also means that the administration, which wants confidence to be high, has a hard time keeping that up. At the same time the people see the oil bills going up.
RON BROWNSTEIN (Political Correspondent for the Los Angeles Times): That's really the double wave politically. On the one hand, you have the oil prices themselves, the gas prices that people experience, and then you also have the question of what this is doing to the overall growth numbers: the job creation numbers and how that sort of rebounds on the president.
You know, I have been struck all year how much resonance John Kerry and other Democrats have received from their audiences, at least, on the idea of increasing energy independence. The President, obviously makes a different argument about increasing domestic production, but this whole question of whether our national security is overly compromised by reliance on Mideast oil, is one that I do think really does hit a lot of American voters.
PILGRIM: Well, a very compelling argument. Oil up $10 since the beginning of this year. Karen?
KAREN TUMULTY (National Political Correspondent for Time Magazine): Then of course, this week we saw the Saudis announce that they were going to open up the spigot and this was what everyone thought could possibly slow this increase down. And all we saw was it jump up even faster.
It does appear increasingly like the entire economic recovery could be completely bound up in these oil prices. And even as the news in the Middle East is looking more dire, when you talk to voters, you do find that their top concern by a long shot remains the economy.





