CyberAlert -- 01/21/2000 -- "Squeezed by the Right" into Abortion Hardline
"Squeezed by the Right" into Abortion Hardline; "Below the Belt" Questions Thursday night the CBS Evening News managed to avoid issuing any ideological labels in a full report on the Gore-Bradley race, but then in the next story applied two conservative labels to Republicans in the very first sentence. They came in Bill Whitaker's story on how George Bush took "his hardest line so far on abortion" because he's "squeezed from the right in Iowa by his most socially conservative opponents." Similarly, NBC's David Bloom stressed how "under pressure from religious conservatives," Bush in Iowa "acknowledges for the first time today that the conservative judges he would appoint" might overturn Roe v. Wade. ABC's World News Tonight ignored Bush's abortion comments and ran only a piece about Iowa's Latino vote. ABC and CBS briefly noted Senator Bob Kerrey's
announcement that he would not run for another term, but NBC Nightly News ran
a full story from Andrea Mitchell. Anchor Tom Brokaw's introduction
displayed some angst over the loss of Kerrey: Now on to Bush and abortion. On the January 20 CBS
Evening News John Roberts checked in on the battle between the two Democrats
in Iowa, focusing on Bradley's hope to not lose too badly in Iowa and
Gore's latest counterattacks on him. Then anchor Dan Rather announced: Reporter Bill Whitaker began his story, transcribed by
MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth, by portraying Bush as a victim of a demanding
right-wing: "Squeezed from the right in Iowa by his most socially
conservative opponents, George W. Bush moved to fend them off today by taking
his hardest line so far on abortion and the Supreme Court decision legalizing
it." Whitaker moved on to Bush's battle with John McCain over taxes, before concluding from Bedford, New Hampshire with a bit of advocacy for another issue agenda: "While the candidates are going on about abortion and taxes, voters are saying they wanna hear about other things, like health care." NBC also zoomed in on abortion as anchor Tom Brokaw
intoned: David Bloom began: "Under pressure from religious
conservatives here in Iowa, who say Bush has not taken a forceful stand
against abortion, the Texas Governor acknowledges for the first time today
that the conservative judges he would appoint to the U.S. Supreme Court might
try to overturn the landmark abortion rights decision, Roe versus Wade." Bloom looked at how while Steve Forbes is tanking
nationally, in Iowa he's a real threat to Bush. Bloom returned to the usual
media mantra against any negative campaigning: Finally, thirteen days after ABC's World News Tonight and the CBS evening News quoted Gore campaign manager Donna Brazile's race-mongering insult of Republicans and Colin Powell, NBC Nightly News quoted it, sort of. But only after reporter Claire Shipman gushed about Brazile's "spiritual...sense of right and wrong" and "passion for justice." Back on January 7, ABC and CBS reported how Brazile
charged, in an interview with Bloomberg.com, "Republicans bring out Colin
Powell and J.C. Watts because they have no program, no policy. They'd rather
take pictures with black children than feed them." The next night, as
recounted in the January 10 CyberAlert, NBC finally got to the story, as
Claire Shipman gave it a few seconds in the middle of a January 8 piece on the
Democratic debate earlier in the day in Iowa, but she failed to quote Brazile
and thus deprived viewers of an understanding of her hostility: Thursday night, January 20, as part of the "Women
to Watch" in the campaign series on NBC Nightly News, Shipman profiled
Brazile. Over video of Brazile by a stove as she recounted a Psalm, Shipman
began: Just after Brazile explained that Gore hired her in
order to implement a "lean, mean, aggressive campaign machine,"
Shipman got to her earlier remarks. Though she more fully conveyed them,
Shipman still failed to quote them exactly: The visit by Senator Jesse Helms to the UN on Thursday fascinated ABC's Peter Jennings and the night before, though he had an anonymously attributed source as cover, Jennings had to be corrected by one of his reporters when he described a missile defense test as a "massive failure." -- Thursday night, CBS and NBC only briefly mentioned
Helms's UN appearance at the invitation of US Ambassador Richard Holbrooke,
but World News Tonight featured a whole story, which Jennings introduced: Later, Ted Koppel devoted Nightline to the Helms address to the UN delegates. -- On Wednesday night, January 19, Jennings turned to
John McWethy to explain what happened in the unsuccessful test of a missile
defense system. After McWethy relayed that "the flight went just
perfectly" until the last six seconds, Jennings inquired: "Yesterday
somebody said if this was regarded as a massive failure, this program might
not be going forward. How's it being described today?" Today and Good Morning America each ran short items Thursday morning, read by the hourly news reader, about Hillary Clinton being asked by a Buffalo radio talk show host about her faithfulness. Wednesday night on MSNBC's new 6p ET show, Decision 2000, MRC analyst Mark Drake noticed, Andrea Mitchell denounced the "rather rude question from some reporters about her, first of all, whether she'd been faithful to her husband, whether she'd ever had drug use." But on Thursday morning only CBS's The Early Show devoted an entire piece to the "below the belt" questions as MRC analyst Brian Boyd noted that Diana Olick extended the outrage expressed the night before on the CBS Evening News where Dan Rather lamented how "Mrs. Clinton came under a barrage of very personal questions about her personal life." News reader Julie Chen painted Hillary Clinton as a
victim: From Washington, Diana Olick bemoaned: "Well, the gloves are off but some veteran political reporters here in Washington say the latest questions hurled at Mrs. Clinton are below the belt. In the past few days she's been asked about the future of her marriage, her own fidelity, and if she's ever smoked pot or used cocaine. But what does all that have to do with being a Senator from New York? Not much, but it seems to have everything to do with campaigning today. It all started with a Marist College poll last week which showed a majority of New Yorkers wanted Hillary Clinton to go on the David Letterman show. The campaign took the cue. Then, in an apparent effort to be more media accessible she hosted an Internet chat room and took the leap into Buffalo talk radio." Olick played the audio of the offending radio exchange.
WGR Radio's Tom Bauerle asked Hillary: "Mrs. Clinton, you're going to
hate me, you were on television last night talking about your relationship
with the President, Bill Clinton. Have you ever been sexually unfaithful to
him and specifically the stories about you and Vince Foster. Any truth in
those?" Olick picked up: "So why did she answer it? Here's
what her likely opponent's campaign manager told us just before that radio
interview." It
took a liberal columnist to point out what the media could not see through
their biased prism. In a column run in the January 20 Washington Post, Richard
Cohen asserted: The media's beneficial treatment of Hillary was the topic of Thursday's MRC Media Reality Check fax report written by Tim Graham. He highlighted how the networks either ignored Hillary's appearance with the race-baiting Sharpton, or gave it a positive spin. But none condemned her. This fax report can also be read online by going to: The January 20 Media Reality Check: Why Should Hillary Hate the Press? Steve Roberts of U.S. News suggested a new method of dismissing the "conservative canard" of liberal bias on Sunday's Late Edition on CNN. "The two people in Washington who hate the political press the most are Bill and Hillary Clinton, which is a reflection of the fact that the coverage has been pretty tough on them." But other than doing the cruel work of reciting her nine-point deficit in the latest poll, the press have hardly earned the hatred. Last week, all the networks publicized her staged CBS appearance on David Letterman's Late Show. "The very serious candidate for the New York Senate was funny," CBS's Diana Olick raved. No one asked the question: When is she going to do serious interviews with real journalists instead of sending out aides? -- Hillary's Hate. Yesterday morning, Hillary agreed to a radio interview on Buffalo radio station WGR, and host Tom Bauerle asked: "Mrs. Clinton, you're going to hate me, you were on television last night talking about your relationship with the President, Bill Clinton. Have you ever been sexually unfaithful to him and specifically the stories about you and Vince Foster. Any truth in those?" Hillary replied: "I do hate you for that, because you know, those questions I think are really out of bounds, and everybody who knows me knows the answers to those questions." When Bauerle asked, "Is the answer no," she answered: "Well yes, of course it's no, but it's an inappropriate question." While ABC and NBC skipped the exchange last night [January 19], CBS got angry. Bob Schieffer complained the interview "underlines just how rough modern politics has become, says Washington Post media writer Howard Kurtz." Kurtz called the quiz "completely salacious, appalling, and shouldn't be part of what we call journalism." Schieffer testily concluded: "There is an old saying among reporters that there are no bad questions, just bad answers. But today even some veteran reporters are shaking their heads and wondering what will someone ask next?" CBS ignored Bauerle asking Hillary if she used drugs, "rough politics" they tried out on George W. Bush. CBS didn't explore Hillary's own standards, such as her asking in 1992: "Why does the press shy away from investigating rumors about George Bush's extramarital life?" -- Slumming with Sharpton. Then there's Hillary's Monday meeting with racist demagogue Al Sharpton, best known for falsely accusing white men of raping black teen Tawana Brawley, later exposed as a hoax. Sharpton has also been cozy with anti-Semitic blacks, and on Monday an associate ran down Jews while Hillary and Sharpton were in another room. CBS and NBC totally ignored the meeting. On CNN's Inside Politics, Maria Hinojosa gave it positive spin: "Mrs. Clinton even shared the stage with Reverend Al Sharpton, once the controversial outsider, now the consummate African-American insider." On ABC Tuesday, Good Morning America co-host Charles Gibson interviewed Sharpton and former New York Mayor David Dinkins. He asked Dinkins: "You sit next to Reverend Sharpton, and I don't know whether he would accept the characterization of himself as somewhat controversial, but does she cost herself Jewish votes, white votes, by coming to meet with him?" If Steve Roberts were right, all the media would be asking that. END Reprint of fax report Washington's priorities. The Washington media figure who last year maintained that Bill Clinton is "our first woman President," now thinks Ted Kennedy and Madeleine Albright will always outshine Michael Jordan. MRC analyst Paul Smith caught this sentence from CNN
reporter Kate Snow in a January 19 The World Today story on NBA legend Michael
Jordan taking and executive slot with the Washington Wizards basketball team: A liberal bias at ABC's Who Wants to Be a Millionaire quiz show? Who but a liberal following the stunts of left-wing environmentalists would think to formulate this question posed on the show this past Sunday: "Until mid-December 1999, where did protester Julia 'Butterfly' Hill live full-time for two years?" The answer, for $16,000: "In a redwood tree." But the contestant needed to use his audience survey "lifeline" to come up with the correct answer. Of course, network news viewers are also forced to be plugged into the latest liberal cause celebre. At least ABC viewers since World News Tonight ran a full story last month on Hill's mission. -- Brent Baker >>>
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