CyberAlert -- 07/16/2001 -- Bush Stole Election
Bush Stole Election, Not Really; Bring GOP to Center; Schieffer Urged McCain Presidential Run; Nets Didn't Hesitate to ID Packwood 1 For details about the previous two counts
downplayed or skipped by the CBS Evening News, go to: Saturday's World News Tonight on ABC also ran a short item on the Times story and on Sunday's This Week ABC gave George Stephanopoulos nearly four-and-a-half minutes to review the story even though he conceded up front that it uncovered nothing that would have altered the outcome: "The bottom line of this exhaustive account, which comes it at more than 13,000 words, is that Bush won several hundred votes which didn't comply with Florida law, but there's less than a one percent chance that these ballots, on their own, would have swung the election toward Gore." The night before, Russ Mitchell led the July 14 CBS Evening News by implying the GOP strategy discovered by the Times "may have been the deciding factor in winning the White House," as if the Republican effort to count overseas military ballots was some just uncovered secret. After a lengthy report, CBS's Bobbi Harley admitted that even the expert consulted by the Times found "there was only a slight chance that throwing out those questionable overseas ballots would have put Al Gore in the White House." Mitchell opened the July 14 broadcast by highlighting what would appear in the New York Times the next day: "More than eight months after election night, there's new fallout from the presidential election of 2000. The New York Times reports in tomorrow's edition that the questionable counting of overseas ballots in Florida may have gained some crucial votes for George W. Bush. Bobbi Harley has more on the war of strategy last fall that may have been the deciding factor in winning the White House." Harley: "Florida election law is clear
when it comes to overseas ballots. They must be postmarked, signed and
witnessed. But the six-month-long investigation by The New York Times has
found hundreds of those ballots in last year's presidential election did
not comply but were counted anyway." If you are interested in seeing how it took the New York Times so long so say so little, you can read their massive July 15 story: http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/15/politics/15BALL.html The House Republican leadership is just too conservative for the sensibilities of Time Washington Bureau Chief Michael Duffy. On Friday's Washington Week on PBS, he pleaded: "Is there just no, no moderation at all? Is there something that can bring them back to the center?" Just after a discussion about conservative
opposition to Shays-Meehan, on the July 13 show Duffy asked Washington
Post reporter Juliet Eilperin: "The thing I'm curious about is why
Dick Armey and Tom DeLay just seem to steam ahead with a conservative
approach. They've been like this for a couple of years. Is there just
no, no moderation at all? Is there something that can bring them back to
the center? Can George Bush do it?" I want know why Time magazine steams ahead with a liberal tilt. Is there just no moderation at all? Is there something that can bring them back to the center? What is the "most successful piece of legislation" in the past 25 years? By the reasoning of Wall Street Journal Executive Editor Al Hunt it wasn't anything pushed or signed by President Reagan, or anything somewhat right of center acceded to by President Clinton, such as welfare reform. No, it was Clinton's 1993 tax hike. On Saturday's Capital Gang on CNN, even
after National Review's Kate O'Beirne pointed out how "there
would be no surplus if there hadn't a Republican Congress where early in
the Republican takeover they did care about fiscal restraint," Hunt
rhetorically asked host Mark Shields: Yes, tax cuts cause innumerable problems while tax hikes can be credited with anything positive which occurs. One good thing about the network interest in Chandra Levy is how it has not left as much time for crusading for "campaign finance reform" and fawning over John McCain. But on Sunday morning Tim Russert offered a hint of the Washington press corps' concern about wanting to know "who is to blame" for Thursday's Shays-Meehan loss while CBS's Bob Schieffer squeezed in a commentary to put out a trial balloon about how McCain should run for President. Schieffer recommended a campaign theme: "Both parties are so beholden to the big-money interests, it will take someone else to clean up the mess." -- Meet the Press, July 15. After plugging several segments related to Chandra Levy, Russert opened the show with an appearance by Senator John McCain: "But first, John McCain's crusade for campaign finance reform has been derailed. Who is to blame? In the legislation now dead?" -- Bob Schieffer devoted all of his Face the
Nation to Chandra Levy, except for his end of show commentary which he
dedicated to arguing that the House rejection of McCain's pet cause
gives him a good reason to run for President: But it's what members of the media are hoping for. The weekday CBS Evening News has yet to mention the Chandra Levy/Gary Condit story, never mind informing viewers that he's a Democrat, but back in 1992 the weekday CBS Evening News immediately aired a full story on sexual harassment charges against "Oregon Republican Bob Packwood." This year, not until the fourth story on the CBS Evening News, on a weekend, did the show identify Condit's party affiliation. CBS certainly has no internal consistency. During the week The Early Show regularly covers the Chandra Levy/Gary Condit case, but not a syllable has aired yet on a weekday edition of the CBS Evening News. But on weekends, the CBS Evening News covers the story and this past weekend all but the final commentary on Face the Nation dealt with the Levy situation. Friday night the CBS Evening News under Executive Producer Jim Murphy and anchor Dan Rather ignored Levy, but found time for stories on how anthrax is killing deer in Texas, another shark attack update and even 19 seconds to recount how the guy who threw a dog into an oncoming car received a three year prison sentence. Saturday night, July 14, the weekend editions of the CBS Evening News arrived at their fourth story, but anchor Russ Mitchell avoided labeling Condit as he set up the piece: "Representative Gary Condit's attempt to quiet speculation about his conduct in the investigation of missing intern Chandra Levy by taking a lie detector test may have backfired..." Deep within the subsequent story, however, reporter Lee Cowan uttered the first CBS Evening News identification of Condit: "D.C. police had asked to conduct their own polygraph test of Gary Condit, a California Democrat who police sources say admitted to an affair with Levy...." As the MRC documented last week in a study, from when the Levy story first broke onto the networks on May 14 "through July 11, ABC, CBS and NBC morning and evening news programs aired a total of 179 stories about Gary Condit -- 121 full-length reports or interviews, plus 58 brief anchor-read items. MRC researchers reviewed each story, and found that Condit was labeled a 'Democrat' only 14 times, or in fewer than eight percent of stories." To read the study, go to the July 12 Media
Reality Check: But back on Monday, November 23, 1992, the day after a Sunday Washington Post story had first revealed claims by several women that Senator Bob Packwood, a liberal Republican, had accosted them with unwanted touching and kisses, all three broadcast network evening shows ran full stories which identified Packwood as a Republican. -- The weekday CBS Evening News has yet to
even mention the allegations swirling around Condit, but on the Monday,
November 23, 1992 show, the day after the Washington Post story, Dan
Rather introduced a report: "One of the better known names in the
U.S. Senate is caught up in accusations of sexual harassment. And with a
record number of women Senators coming into the new Congress, this could
be an early test of how much politics in the Senate is destined to change.
Chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer has the story." -- This year ABC's World News Tonight took
until its seventh story to identify Condit as a Democrat, but Peter
Jennings showed no such hesitation in 1992, intoning on the Monday,
November 23, 1992 show, after a story about Clinton campaigning for
Georgia senatorial candidate Wyche Fowler: -- Not until its 12th story this year did the NBC Nightly News call Condit a Democrat, but on November 23, 1992, after an item about Paul Tsongas being hospitalized, Tom Brokaw announced: "A sitting Senator meanwhile is out of sight tonight. Oregon's five-term Republican Senator Robert Packwood issued a statement through his office, but otherwise would not respond to a long list of sexual misconduct charges." +++ So you can see how the CBS Evening News is capable of reporting on and listing the party of elected officials involved in charges of misconduct, today the MRC's Web team will post a RealPlayer clip of the above-quoted excerpt from the November 23, 1992 CBS Evening News. Go to: http://www.mrc.org Correction of the week, brought to my attention by an alert CyberAlert reader. From the July 13 Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "Several stories in recent days about U.S. Rep. Gary Condit have failed to mention he is a Democrat representing a district in California." If only the networks realized that error. Neither Sunday's NBC Nightly News story, nor stories Saturday or Sunday on ABC's World News Tonight, identified Gary Condit as a Democrat. -- Brent Baker >>>
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