ABC on Thursday and Friday breathlessly hyped the "troubling" details of
Mitt Romney's "teenage bullying," events that ocurred 47 years ago. On
Friday's Good Morning America, co-anchor George Stephanopoulos, a former Democratic operative, introduced, "It's your voice, your vote and new questions today about whether Mitt Romney's teenage pranks went too far."
On Thursday, World News was the only evening newscast to actually lead with the story.
Reporter David Muir, who covered the story on GMA and World News, managed to use the world troubling twice in one sentence, insisting that the bully victim's family is "reacting to that troubling
account from those five grown men, all former classmates of Mitt
Romney, among them a lawyer, a dentist, a school principal all who
described a troubling scene." [MP3 audio here.]
On Thursday, Diane Sawyer hyperbolically proclaimed, "Five of Romney's
former classmates have come forward to tell the same story, accusations
creating a firestorm and Romney is forced to respond."
The story first appeared on the Washington Post's
website, Thursday. On Friday's GMA, Muir made no mention of the fact
that, as reported in the Post, the witnesses to this alleged bullying
"mostly lean Democratic."
On World News,
Muir touted the incident as "supreme bullying." He asked one of the
witnesses, Phillip Maxwell, "...Is he a Democrat, is he a Republican?"
Maxwell insisted he has "voted for both" parties.
In comparison, back on May 2, 2012, Sawyer glowingly read love letters Barack Obama read to a young girlfriend: "Oh, we were all so romantic when we were young."
As for the Post, which devoted 5000 words to Romney's teenage mischief, the paper in 2008 had no interest in Barack Obama's cocaine use when he was a young man.
[Thanks to MRC intern Jeffrey Meyer for the video.]
A transcript of the May 11 GMA segment can be found below:
7:01
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: A lot of news on the presidential campaign
trail yesterday. Mitt Romney is now accused of being a bully back in
high school. A new report came out yesterday. Accusations that he helped
pin down a classmate and chop his hair off. The bully's family [sic] is
speaking out right now. The question is how much does it matter? How
much will it matter? We're going to get into that.
7:07
STEPHANOPOULOS: We're going to get to the race for president now. It's
your voice, your vote and new questions today about whether Mitt
Romney's teenage pranks went too far. The candidate apologized yesterday
after one report that he bullied a classmate by pinning him down and
chopping off his hair. ABC's David Muir covers the Romney campaign.
And, Dave, I know you've been talking to people who were there. And
overnight the bullied boy's family spoke out as well.
DAVID
MUIR: Yeah, the family is speaking out, George, reacting to that
troubling account from those five grown men all former classmates of
Mitt Romney, among them a lawyer, a dentist, a school principal all who
described a troubling scene. The group, they say, including Mitt Romney
pinning down a fellow student and cutting off his hair because he was
different. Mitt Romney's apology comes after five of his former high
school classmates described the same incident to the Washington Post:
the targeting of another boy because most of them thought he was gay,
holding him down and cutting off his long hair he dyed blond. One of
those former classmates Phillip Maxwell now a lawyer telling ABC News,
"It's something you don't forget. When I saw the look on his face, it
was a look I'll never forget. When you see a victim, the sense of trust
betrayed in this boy who was perfectly innocent for being different."
Maxwell said he and Romney were among the boys who held the boy down and
that Romney was holding the scissors. "I saw it with my own eyes. It
was a hack job, clumps of hair taken off." When Romney was asked if he
remembered the incident, if he knew the boy was gay-
MITT ROMNEY: You know, I don't remember that incident and I'll tell
you, I certainly don't believe that I thought the fellow was homosexual.
That was the furthest thing from my minds back in the 1960s.
MUIR: Romney is now apologizing.
ROMNEY: There is no question but that I did some stupid things when I
was in high school and obviously if I hurt anyone by virtue of that, I
would be very sorry for it and apologize.
MUIR: For months now, Romney's pranks have been considered a selling point for the campaign. His wife Ann-
ANN ROMNEY: He's always playing jokes. I still look at him as the boy
that I met in high school when he was playing all the jokes and really
just being crazy, pretty crazy.
MUIR: Meantime, another former classmate now defending Romney, saying what happened in high school was likely a joke too.
GREGG DEARTH (Cranbrook class of '65): My suspicion is that they
jokingly said, "Hey, let's go cut his hair" and went down the hall and,
you know, you hold the scissors close to his ear and you make a lot of
snipping sounds and you may traumatize the guy a little or scare the guy
a little, but no harm, no foul.
MUIR: Overnight when ABC News met up with one of the sisters of the
alleged victim, showing her the Washington Post account, her eyes welded
up with tears saying even if it did happen her brother probably
wouldn't have said anything. Later, the family issuing a statement,
saying "the portrayal of John is factually incorrect and we are
aggrieved that he would be used to further a political agenda." John
Lauber, the student who these men say was targeted, died of cancer in
2004. And, George, one of the men in this account said he ran into
Lauber in the airport years later. Saw him, went up to him and
apologized. And he said Lauber said to him, "this is something I carried
with me my entire life."
-- Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.