Dem Congressman Fumes: 'F**k the President,' All Three Networks Ignore
Thursday's
network newscasts and Friday's morning shows all ignored the report
that an unidentified Democratic House member muttered, "F**k the
President" during a closed door meeting on a compromise over taxes. Yet,
many journalists professed outrage when Congressman Joe Wilson yelled
"You lie" at President Obama in 2009.
ABC's The Note website
on Thursday afternoon explained, "An unidentified Democratic lawmaker
let slip his frustration at President Obama's proposed tax compromise,
apparently muttering "f**k the president," during a heated debate this
morning."
Yet, when GMA reporter Jon Karl covered the story on Friday, he
reported more sanitized details of conflict: "...Yesterday, you had the
House Democrats actually chanting, 'no, we can't' at a private meeting."
On
CBS's Early Show, news reader Jeff Glor followed a similar track,
allowing, "And during the meeting, some Democrats chanted 'Just say no.'
They insist on changes to scale back tax breaks for the rich." (This
line was also quoted on Thursday's CBS Evening News.)
Over on NBC's Today, Kelly O'Donnell described House Democrats simply
as "defiant." She added that opposition on the left to the deal was, "a
liberal rebellion against the White House over the tax cut compromise."
The only possible hint of an expletive used against the President came
when O'Donnell referenced a visit by Joe Biden to Capitol Hill.
According to O'Donnell, this "only stirred up emotions."
On Thursday's Nightly News she deemed the conflict a "family feud."
In contrast, on September 14, 2009, five days after Congressman
Wilson's outburst in front of Congress and Obama, Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer derided the Republican as "just one ugly sign of the mindless meanness that has settled over our politics."
On the September 15 Sunday Morning, commentator Nancy Giles condemned
Wilson: "That's the voice of Representative Joe Wilson of South
Carolina, not some drunk at open mic night, calling the President a
liar."
Obviously there's a difference between an unidentified representative
and a nationally televised embarrassing moment, but what if this mystery
representative had been a Republican?
- Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.