CyberAlert -- 08/14/2002 -- ABC's Snooty Summit Story
ABC's Snooty Summit Story; CNN's John King Raised "Accelerating" Tax Cuts; Reporter Dreamed of Bush Copying Clinton; Sawyer: Spend More, Just Not on Summit; "CEO President...Aligned with Corporate Greed"; Kurtz Rebuked Colleague on Labeling
On Tuesday's World News Tonight Moran ridiculed how Bush popped in on different sessions for short periods. Leading into three video clips of Bush getting up and walking out of the room, Moran noted: "The forum was designed to showcase Mr. Bush as a man who listens to the people, but the hectic schedule -- the President dropped into four different sessions in the morning for only about 20 minutes each -- meant he had little time for any kind of extended give and take." Moran also gratuitously asserted: "Mr. Bush was hob knobbing at the forum with, among others, Charles Schwab, who made $353 million cashing in stock options before the price of his company shares plummeted." Over on the NBC Nightly News, reporter Kelly O'Donnell refrained from such a shot as she played a soundbite of Charles Schwab being critical of Wall Street: "It's outrageous in my view what goes on in Wall Street on a consistent basis." Unlike ABC's Moran or CBS's Bill Plante, O'Donnell also took time to briefly relate some of the policies suggested: "An administration trying to signal it is engaged. Among the ideas floated: Increased deductions for investment losses, raise amounts investors can contribute in retirement accounts and encourage Wall Street to make the markets more candid." Substitute ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas introduced Moran's August 13 story: "In Texas today, President Bush held a widely-publicized forum about all the economic trouble. He met with various people in Waco, which is near his vacation home. The President is under increasing political pressure about the economy. ABC's Terry Moran joins us. Good evening, Terry." Moran began, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Good evening, Elizabeth. The White House has brought 240 people here from across the country to discuss the troubled state of the nation's economy and to help the President send a simple message about it: 'I care.' The forum was designed to showcase Mr. Bush as a man who listens to the people, but the hectic schedule -- the President dropped into four different sessions in the morning for only about 20 minutes each -- meant he had little time for any kind of extended give and take." Moran concluded: "The only new economic policy announced here is one that's likely to start a fight with congressional Democrats. The President said he would not spend more than $5 billion in homeland security money passed by Congress because, Elizabeth, he said it is larded with pork barrel spending at a time when fiscal restraint is needed."
Instead of following the usual media line and pressing both Republicans and Democrats to rescind the tax cuts, he came at Democrats from the left and Republicans from the right. King asked House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt and Senator Hillary Clinton about "repealing" the tax cuts, but he also pressed both OMB Director Mitch Daniels and Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill about "accelerating" the tax cut rollout. In the sequence of his guest interviews, his tax cut-related questions posed on the August 13 Inside Politics: -- King to Mitch Daniels: "Should a strong growth policy also include accelerating the President's tax cut? It was a ten-year tax cut passed last year, but much of those cuts actually don't take effect until the far out years, not in the first, second or third year. Should those be accelerated, in your view?" -- King to Dick Gephardt about Gephardt's idea for a Bush summit with Democrats: "You've been listening as Mitch Daniels makes his case. The President says no to a summit. He says it is not necessary. If you came to such a summit, what would you put
on the table? What is the Democratic plan? Should we repeal the Bush tax cut? Slow down its implementation?" King followed up on tax cuts: "You're the House Democratic leader, a leading Democrat in Washington, a potential candidate for President yourself. Dick Gephardt could step forward and say I believe this should be part of any new economic policy, and if you did that, would you include in there, Dick Gephardt, personally, a repeal or a slowdown of the Bush tax cut?" -- King to Hillary Clinton: "What is the Democratic alternative? This administration says the Democrats were blaming us for deficits, blaming us for the sluggish economy or certainly the anxiety among the American people. What would the Democrats do differently and for starters would you scale back the Bush tax cut passed last year?" -- King to Paul O'Neill: "One thing the President said today is that all of the recommendations to come out of this forum would reach his desk. I want to ask you about a few of those and whether you see any realistic possibility of the President proposing, either later this year or early next year, things like accelerating the tax cuts. For a picture and bio of John King: http://www.cnn.com/CNN/anchors_reporters/correspondents/king.john.html King's willingness to actually press guests about "accelerating" the tax cuts, in addition to pushing for the tax cuts to be rescinded or suspended, contrasts with NBC's Tim Russert as documented in a July 30 Media Reality Check by the MRC's Rich Noyes: "A Bias Blind Spot for Meet the Press Host; One-Sided Questioning: Russert Pushed Both Friends and Foes of Bush Tax Cut to Suspend Its Benefits." As Noyes observed: "While making tax cutters defend their views, Russert doesn't hit tax cut opponents with conservative arguments. Instead, he invites them to criticize the tax cut as he lobbies for its early demise." To read the Media Reality Check: http://www.mediaresearch.org/realitycheck/2002/fax20020730.asp
During the panel segment of the August 13 show anchored by Jim Angle, Connolly proposed: "To me, strikes me as a classic inside the beltway kind of spat and what's the point again in leaving town to emphasize how in touch you are with real people. You know, in politics, sometimes the best thing is to do the unexpected. And just imagine if President Bush had done this and had unemployed Enron workers there. And maybe some retirees who have lost their 401(k) accounts and have to go back to work. And really did, you know, as Bill Clinton would say, 'felt their pain.' That could have been surprising. That would have been the bold sort of move that Treasury Secretary O'Neill, back in 1992, called for at Bill Clinton's economic summit." This isn't the first time on TV that Connolly has hit Bush from the left for not caring enough about the downtrodden. After Bush's State of the Union address in late January, she packed five liberal agenda issues into one sentence on the Fox broadcast network: "I have to say that part of what also struck me, aside from how frightening much in this speech was, were the things that were missing. Very little with respect to minorities, the uninsured, the homeless, the elderly, Enron workers who have lost their life savings." For a picture of her and for how the Washington Post reprimanded her for once criticizing Al Gore, after ignoring her liberal shot at Bush: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020422.asp#3
MRC analyst Jessica Anderson caught this sequence of questions on the August 13 Good Morning America from Sawyer to O'Neill: -- "We have heard that the President is going to express some concern this morning down in Texas, and indeed, when you just look at the airline picture this morning -- US Airways, bankruptcy; United, said to be in trouble; American Airlines, laying off 7,000 people -- are you prepared to do what it takes to bail out the airline industry alone?" -- "But in the near term, are you ready to supply the hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars it would take to bail them out, if necessary?" -- "As you know, Mr. Secretary, there's been a lot of criticism by the opposition of this conference being held down in Texas. They are calling it a PR shenanigan, among other things, as you're flying in half the Cabinet staff, security, which is expensive, that the President's going to drop in for about 20 minutes to each of these sessions and be home by two o'clock this afternoon. Is that the case and how much is this costing?" Sawyer went on to ignore the pork-barrel spending in describing the bill Bush would soon announce he would veto: "Is the President going to say it's so bad that he's going to, for now, reject the $5.1 billion in terrorist assistance money the Congress has appropriated, which includes things like overtime for policemen?"
MRC analyst Brian Boyd observed this question from Clayson to White House economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey on the August 13 Early Show: "How difficult has it been, Mr. Lindsey, to convince the public that the President as a CEO President is not aligned with the corporate greed that we've been seeing in corporate America?" A poll found it's a lot easier for the public than the media. In an August 7 "Money" section story, USA Today reporter Susan page relayed: "In a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll taken July 26-28, an overwhelming 72 percent thought the experience Bush and Cheney had as corporate executives was a good thing. But the public was evenly split 42%-42% on whether it was a good idea or a bad one for a President to have former corporate executives in key jobs." The headline for that story: "Corporate credentials weigh down Bush's team." The subhead: "Former executives, once assets, become political baggage."
Reading Kurtz's weekly "Media Backtalk" chat from Monday, I stumbled upon how CyberAlert had been channeled in a question posed to Kurtz. The exchange in the August 12 session: "Washington, D.C.: Why does The Post insist on slapping the 'conservative' label on right-wing organizations and advocates, but rarely puts the 'liberal' label on left-wingers? It happened again in Sunday's story on Cornel West. The National Review and Shelby Steele were both identified as 'conservative,' while Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader and Al Sharpton weren't given any label at all. Is this forgetfulness or is there a double-standard?" Kurtz replied: "That's a problem. I think reporters need to be more careful about this sort of one-sided labeling. You could argue that everyone knows where Jackson, Nader and Sharpton stand while Steele is less well known, but this sort of imbalance does create the perception of unfairness." For the text of the entire session: http://discuss.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/zforum/02/mediabacktalk081202.htm Either on his or her own of via CyberAlert, the questioner had picked up on a disparity highlighted in the August 12
CyberAlert: In a 3,600 word profile of the far-left Cornel West, Washington Post reporter Lynne Duke managed to avoid even once using the term "liberal" as she applied no label Al Sharpton, Bill Bradley, Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader or Lawrence Summers, but was quick to tag National Review as a "conservative journal," Shelby Steele as "a black conservative scholar" and Martin Peretz as "a leading neoconservative." She dubbed West a "radical," but insisted he was "influenced" by the "conservatism of the church." CyberAlert readers sometimes wonder what they can do to combat liberal media bias. Well, here's an idea in action: Whenever reporters appear in online chat sessions confront them with a specific example of their bias or of bias by a colleague. They will either squirm out of it, or like Kurtz, stand up and acknowledge the problem. -- Brent Baker
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