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"I thought the comment was both unfortunate and unpresidential," Gheit said. "This is tea party territory." Most of them recovered later in the day, but BP shares closed down 5 percent. Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs recently assured skeptical reporters that he'd personally seen the president express "rage" over the spill. When pressed for details, Gibbs spoke of Obama's "clenched jaw" and an order at a staff meeting to "plug the damn hole." In a separate interview with The Associated Press, Gibbs said Obama does not intend to "get mad just to get mad," that that wasn't his style. Instead, Gibbs depicted Obama's disposition as "reserved Midwestern," calm in a crisis even when furious about the problem. "He got this from his grandmother," Gibbs said. Obama isn't the first president or vice president to use locker room talk, and it always comes off as a little jarring. Vice President George H.W. Bush said after a 1984 vice presidential debate with Democrat Geraldine Ferraro, "We tried to kick a little ass last night." As president six years later, he said of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein: "If we get into an armed situation, he's going to get his ass kicked." "If Kennedy runs, I'll whip his ass," President Jimmy Carter said at a dinner with congressman in 1980, referring to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's preparations for a Democratic challenge. President Ronald Reagan once told his staff, "I've had it up to my keister with these leaks." GOP presidential nominee and then Texas Gov. George W. Bush at a 2000 Labor Day rally in Illinois told running mate Dick Cheney that a certain New York Times reporter was "a major league a---" and Cheney responded, "Oh yeah, he is, big time." The men involved in those incidents generally thought their comments were private. Obama clearly knew he was talking to the world. Wayne Fields, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis who studies presidential rhetoric, said Obama's comments "feel out of character" and in response to "lots of pressure right now to be a part of the rhetoric of plain speaking and anger
-- which isn't his style." Part of Obama's attraction, Fields said, "was that he wasn't going to be swept away by forces beyond his control. His remarks on the "Today" show sounded a note of frustration. I think the
'clenched jaw' is a much better approach for him to take."
[Associated
Press;
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