CyberAlert -- 02/07/2000 -- Giuliani's Liberalness
Giuliani's Liberalness; Celebrities Back Hillary; Hitting Reagan 7) That darn discriminatory bad weather: "Poor, Minorities Feel Brunt of Bad Weather." Correction: The February 3 CyberAlert quoted Peter Jennings opening World News Tonight: "The presidential campaigns and the hoards of reporters following them..." The word "hoards" should have been spelled "hordes."
-- On Inside Washington, carried on PBS stations around
the nation and on Washington DC's CBS affiliate, WUSA-TV, Newsweek Assistant
Managing Editor Evan Thomas asserted: Later, he added: "You could argue that no candidate since Bobby Kennedy in 1968, a long time ago, has so opened himself up to the press corps and so won over the press corps. The Bobby Kennedy press corps, and Jack [Germond] was on the plane, was pretty enthusiastic about Bobby Kennedy by the end of it. The difference of course was that Bobby Kennedy was pretty much always off the record on the airplane, you didn't report what was going on, whereas McCain, and this is an act of phenomenal political courage, will spend two, three, four hours on the record with reporters." -- The McLaughlin Group over the weekend looked at Bradley's attacks on Al Gore for lying. Panelist Lawrence O'Donnell offered up his own example of a Gore lie, recalling how in Time magazine last October Gore took credit for creating the Earned Income Tax Credit though it was created by Senator Russell Long before Gore entered Congress. Tony Blankley pointed out how Gore claimed he was a co-sponsor of McCain-Feingold, but he had left the Senate before the bill was proposed. At this point Newsweek's Eleanor Clift jumped to Gore's defense, arguing: "Braggadocio is a fairly common malady among politicians. And some of this stuff he has a perfectly adequate record, he ought not to embellish. And on the abortion question he ought to say yes I anguished over this. I think he is just so damned competitive that he has to stomp out the questions. But this is such minor stuff. To call this spectacular lies is really reaching."
Moderator Tim Russert began the show by interviewing Giuliani who managed a "Ginsburg," -- just like the feat pulled off once by the Lewinsky lawyer, Giuliani appeared on all five Sunday interview shows: ABC's This Week, CBS's Face the Nation, CNN's Late Edition, Fox News Sunday and NBC's Meet the Press. Russert seemed baffled by the idea someone might label "national health care" as "left-wing," but just like ABC's Cokie Roberts, he outlined how Giuliani shares many of Hillary Clinton's left-wing views. Russert put on screen a sentence from a Giuliani fundraising letter: "If she gets elected to the Senate, Mrs. Clinton will immediately become the champion of every left-wing cause you can imagine." Russert asked: "What left wing causes would Mrs.
Clinton champion?" Russert subsequently went through a list of issues with Giuliani and confirmed he favors offering prescription drugs to Medicare recipients, is for the registration of all handguns, wants to legalize gays in the military and opposes a ban on partial-birth abortions. On ABC's This Week co-host Cokie Roberts offered a fuller recitation of the same fundraising letter, though her version also included an "ultra" before the "left-wing" label: "She's the darling of the Left-Wing Elite. And if she gets elected to the Senate, Mrs. Clinton will immediately become the champion of every ultra left-wing cause you can imagine." Roberts told Giuliani: "I want to go through some of the causes that some conservatives would consider her left wing on: abortion, gun control, gay rights, the death penalty -- of course she's for the death penalty -- minimum wage, Family and Medical Leave Act, campaign finance. You agree with her on every single one of those."
On Friday the paper listed "celebrity Giuliani supporters" and "celebrity Clinton supporters," but to list more than one name in the Giuliani box USA Today had to stretch the definition of "celebrity," listing donations from politicians, such as Jeanne Kirkpatrick, Henry Kissinger, Christie Whitman, as well as William F. Buckley Jr., Mike Ditka and Richard Mellon Scaife. The only real celebrity as traditionally defined: Charlton Heston, who has pitched in $1,000 even though Giuliani hardly lines up with the NRA on gun control. Amongst the donors to Hillary Clinton listed in the February 4 article by USA Today reporters Martha T. Moore and Kathy Kiely are two women tied to CBS News: former CBS Morning News co-host Phyllis George and current The Early Show regular Martha Stewart, both of whom have given $1,000. Other $1,000 donor media figures on the list: TV talk show host Rosie O'Donnell and Talk magazine Editor Tina Brown, who by featuring an interview with Hillary in her premiere issue last August contributed much more to the campaign when ABC's Good Morning America featured segments with Brown and colleague Lucinda Franks gushing over Hillary's attributes. Here are the other actors, actresses and singers listed by USA Today as contributors to Hillary Clinton's Senate campaign according to FEC records: Candice Bergen, actress: $1,000
Interviewing Hillary Clinton's campaign manager, Bill de Blasio, on Friday's The Early Show, Gumbel repeatedly characterized Rudy Guiliani as "volatile," worried if she'll be able to avoid "embarrassing questions" and warned of the "venomous bias" in the New York press. After asking about poll numbers, Gumbel posed these questions to de Blasio, as taken down from the February 4 show by MRC analyst Brian Boyd: -- "Over the last month while Mrs. Clinton's favorable numbers have remained pretty much the same, those with a favorable opinion of New York's Mayor Rudy Giuliani have dropped considerably. Can you take credit for that or is he doing that to himself?" -- "Do you think that's the wildcard in the race? His volatile nature?" -- "Another issue, numbers show that almost half of New Yorkers polled, same poll, have some concerns about the carpetbagger issue. It continues to plague her, how's she get around it? I know she's got the house in Chappaqua." -- "Given some of the embarrassing questions she's already been asked, pollsters were asked if they thought marriage questions of the First Lady should be off limits. A whopping 75 percent said yes. Nonetheless, are you, is she expecting such questions to continue?" -- "Given Mrs. Clinton's high profile, given the Mayor's nature, given the venomous bias of some of the local papers, how ugly a race are we going to see?" -- "You said tough, that's not what I'm asking. How ugly a race are we going to see?" Speaking of the local "venomous press," a couple of weeks ago New York Post columnist Eric Fettman used some quotes from the MRC's CyberAlert and Media Reality Check to illustrate the major media's bias in favor of Hillary. He contrasted the lack of media indignation over personal questions to George H. W. Bush with the outrage over the Buffalo talk show host's questions to Hillary Clinton. Here are some excerpts from Eric Fettman's January 26 column, titled "A Fine Time for Outrage." Those Hillary supporters, led by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, who denounced those "cheap personal questions" that were thrown in Mrs. Clinton's face by an upstate radio shock jock are probably right -- albeit for all the wrong reasons.... Even within the news media, there was revulsion over Tom Bauerle's demands that Hillary Clinton answer his questions about infidelity and past drug use. CBS News veteran Bob Schieffer declaimed on-air that "amongst the reporters I've talked to, they all seem to agree that it was out of bounds. I haven't talked to a single reporter who thinks that was a proper question." Nor was Schieffer alone in such sentiments. "It's just out of bounds, it really isn't necessary," said Newsweek's media writer, Jonathan Alter, who called Bauerle's question about Hillary and the late Vince Foster "a real, real low." NBC's Andrea Mitchell was noticeably disturbed by the "rather rude questions from some reporters" who followed up Bauerle's themes. "Veteran political reporters...say the latest questions about Mrs. Clinton are below the belt," declared CBS correspondent Diana Olick. "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. What does all that have to do with being a senator from New York?" (As always, I'm indebted to the Media Research Center for monitoring TV newscasts and compiling these quotes.) Like Maloney & Co., Olick and her colleagues aren't wrong, of course. There is something profoundly humiliating about the political process having been reduced to a moral inquisition. But there's no blanket rule here, either. The fact that JFK shared a mistress with the head of the Chicago mob can't be considered irrelevant to his job performance as president. But you have to wonder why Maloney and the media have erupted in righteous indignation just now, when Hillary is on the hot seat. George W. Bush found himself besieged by reporters last year on the question of his possible past drug use, even though no one has presented any evidence whatsoever. Yet Steve Roberts of U.S. News and World Report told us that "we in the press have an enormous obligation to help the voters understand the...morality and the character" of candidates for high office, "and there is only one way we can do that, and that is to explore the judgments that they have made in the past." OK, so maybe when it comes to alleged cocaine use, that's a legitimate inquiry. But private, consensual sexual behavior has to be off limits, right? Tell that to Gov. Bush's father, the former President. In 1987, he was hounded by reporters investigating what turned out to be a fallacious rumor that he'd had an affair with a former staff member. CNN's Mary Tillotson asked the president flat out about the supposed affair during a live, nationally broadcast press conference, saying she was justified "because you've said that family values and character are likely to be important in the presidential campaign." Despite Bush's denial, NBC's Stone Phillips asked the same question later that day during an Oval Office interview. Did their colleagues tsk-tsk about rude, out-of-bounds inquiries? Of course not -- CNN Vice President Ed Turner defended Tillotson, saying "it's the role of the reporter to ask questions. What comes out of them determines the news value." And who, by the way, was pushing reporters to probe deeply into George Bush's rumored peccadilloes? Why, none other than Hillary Clinton! Talking to her friend Gail Sheehy for a 1992 Vanity Fair profile, Mrs. Clinton complained: "I don't understand why nothing's ever said about a George Bush girlfriend." As Sheehy writes in her new biography of the First Lady, Mrs. Clinton "purposefully planted a toxic tidbit in my tape recorder." What about the furor a few years back surrounding Mayor Giuliani's supposed affair with a top aide? Back then, reporters were taken to task for not pursuing the story: The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz called it "the story that every New York reporter believes but few have dared to hint at in print." On CNN, Kurtz added: "Ultimately, it seems to me that readers and viewers in New York were being deprived of something that was common knowledge in the journalistic community" -- although the Times' Maureen Dowd and others did their best to repair the problem. Where was the outrage about "cheap personal questions"? Where were the demands to "stop that type of interviewing"?.... Yes, it's time to move the news media out of the bedroom -- but it shouldn't be predicated on who's feeling the heat. END Excerpt
On Saturday night NBC Nightly News ignored the campaign while on ABC's World News Tonight John Yang looked at a new anti-McCain ad from Bush and McCain's appearance at the Republican convention in California. CBS reporter John Blackstone focused his Evening News story on how McCain and Steve Forbes addressed Republicans in California while attendees complained that Bush did not address them. CBS also featured a piece by Sharyl Attkisson on how in the Wen Ho Lee case the FBI reversed the assessment by three poligraphers who had decided Lee was truthful in his lie detector test. Back to Friday night, February 4, ABC's Dean Reynolds
outlined some questions he said are facing the Bush campaign: Introducing a story about back and forth during the day
between Bush and McCain, CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather rhymed: Well in advance of a McCain fundraiser this Thursday, on the NBC Nightly News Lisa Myers noted how McCain says he will take government back from special interests, "But in fact an independent analysis finds that McCain gets a higher proportion of his campaign money from Washington, one out of every ten dollars, than any other major candidate. He's having another big Washington fundraiser next week, and two-thirds of those listed as hosts are lobbyists, most with business before the powerful Senate committee McCain chairs."
In fact, as detailed in previous CyberAlerts, the numbers show that tax revenue grew faster than inflation during the 1980s and that despite supposed spending "cuts," non-Defense spending soared much faster.
Well, here's a real headline I caught over an AP story in suburban Washington's February 6 Fairfax Journal: "Poor, Minorities Feel Brunt of Bad Weather."
-- Appearing on the syndicated Roger Ebert & the
Movies show over the weekend, in an interview taped in late December Bill
Clinton revealed he can be turned on by a woman who's in black and white.
Ebert pointed out how Casablanca is one of Clinton's favorite movies, and
wondered: "What do you think is so timeless about it?" Apparently the stuff about love, honor and courage didn't rub off. -- In the new campaign video shown at Hillary Clinton's Senate announcement Sunday afternoon in Purchase, New York, she boasts: "I make a mean tossed salad." I can't think of any pithy comment that could top that.
For Friday night's CBS Evening News reporter Ray Brady
focused on a dire impact of America's high employment rate: How restaurants
can't find enough workers, a problem which inconvenienced a whiner Brady
showcased. Brady ominously opened his February 4 report: Brady demanded an explanation. Wallace Dooling of TGI
Friday's conceded: "We were understaffed that night in the restaurant.
The manager, it sounds like, was overwhelmed." But viewers soon inadvertently learned something else
about the complainer, Mike McConnell, as Brady filled in the larger picture in
an attempt to show a trend. After noting how McConnell claimed he's
encountering more and more bad service at understaffed stores, Brady stated: Brady went on to report that complaints to the Better Business Bureau are up, but viewers had learned that the guy is really a professional crank. And someone with enough free time so that a little waiting shouldn't matter. And you wonder why so many people are attracted to John McCain. He endured years of torture in a Vietnamese prison camp while the media now focus this on generation's biggest problem -- having to wait a few extra minutes to eat Shrimp Scampi. -- Brent Baker
>>>
Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon contributions
which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-deductible
donation. Use the secure donations page set up for CyberAlert
readers and subscribers: >>>To subscribe to CyberAlert, send a
blank e-mail to:
mrccyberalert-subscribe >>>You
can learn what has been posted each day on the MRC's Web site by
subscribing to the "MRC Web Site News" distributed every weekday
afternoon. To subscribe, send a blank e-mail to: cybercomment@mrc.org.
Or, go to: http://www.mrc.org/newsletters.<<< |