NBC: Proposed 'Explosive' Jeremiah Wright Ad Would Put 'Race Front and Center'
On Thursday's NBC Nightly News, anchor Brian Williams decried a pitch
to use President Obama's former radical left-wing pastor Jeremiah Wright
in a campaign ad: "...there was an explosive headline this
morning. The New York Times reporting that a Republican super-PAC was
considering an expensive anti-Obama ad campaign that would have put the
issue of race front and center in the campaign..."
Williams conveniently skipped over Wright's vicious anti-American rhetoric
in several sermons, preferring to cast the story in racial terms. The
only soundbite featured of Wright in the segment was brief and again
described in racial terms, as correspondent Peter Alexander explained:
"...the plan for a short film to publicize Wright's racially incendiary
sermons, including this remark following 9/11." The soundbite that
followed showed Wright ranting: "America's chickens are coming home to
roost."
Alexander
began his report by hyping the suggested ad as some sort of scandal for
Republicans: "Mitt Romney tried to distance himself from a conservative
super-PAC's proposal for a explosive $10 million ad campaign..."
Williams and Alexander also used the story to go after campaign
finance. Williams warned: "...it's the latest evidence of the potential
power of big money this year in politics." Alexander similarly declared:
"On a day the Romney campaign wanted the focus to be on its raising
more than $40 million last month, a reignited debate over how super-PACs
can both help and hurt a campaign."
A sound bite was featured from Darrell West of the liberal leaning
Brookings Institution: "Voters do not distinguish between ads coming
from the campaign versus the super-PACs, so candidates run the risk of
being held accountable for bad things that these super-PACs do."
On FNC's Special Report on Thursday, columnist Charles Krauthammer condemned the media's "appalling double standard"
on the issue, given that it was "okay for the Washington Post to run a
five thousand word front page story on a prank that Romney, at the age
of 15, committed." A story which NBC and others happily promoted.
ABC's World News and the CBS Evening News made no mention of the
Reverend Wright ad suggestion on Thursday, only Nightly News felt it
warranted coverage.
Here is a full transcript of Alexander's May 17 report:
7:05PM ET
BRIAN WILLIAMS: In presidential politics, there was an explosive
headline this morning. The New York Times reporting that a Republican
super-PAC was considering an expensive anti-Obama ad campaign that would
have put the issue of race front and center in the campaign and linked
the President to some of the more controversial statements by his former
pastor, Jeremiah Wright. Tonight, Republicans, including Mitt Romney,
are trying to distance themselves from that strategy. But as NBC's Peter
Alexander reports, it's the latest evidence of the potential power of
big money this year in politics.
PETER ALEXANDER: Campaigning today in Florida, Mitt Romney tried to
distance himself from a conservative super-PAC's proposal for a
explosive $10 million ad campaign designed to renew attention on
President Obama's ties to his controversial former pastor, Reverend
Jeremiah Wright.
MITT ROMNEY: I want to make it very clear I repudiate that effort. I
think it's the wrong course for a PAC or a campaign. I hope that our
campaigns can respectively be about the future.
ALEXANDER:
A leaked copy of the 54-page proposal, titled "The Defeat of Barack
Hussein Obama," first reported in today's New York Times, was presented
this week to the super-PAC funded by billionaire Joe Ricketts, whose
family owns the Chicago Cubs. The proposal refers to President Obama as
"the metrosexual black Abraham Lincoln" and reveals detailed storyboards
that lay out the plan for a short film to publicize Wright's racially
incendiary sermons, including this remark following 9/11.
JEREMIAH WRIGHT: America's chickens are coming home to roost.
ALEXANDER: In a statement to NBC News today, the super-PAC insists the
ads won't air, adding the proposed campaign, "Reflects an approach to
politics that Mr. Ricketts rejects and it was never a plan to be
accepted." Still, on a day the Romney campaign wanted the focus to be on
its raising more than $40 million last month, a reignited debate over
how super-PACs can both help and hurt a campaign.
DARRELL WEST: Voters do not distinguish between ads coming from the
campaign versus the super-PACs, so candidates run the risk of being held
accountable for bad things that these super-PACs do.
ALEXANDER: Romney today tried to cast himself as the one taking the
moral high ground, characterizing his new ad out tomorrow as positive
and criticizing the Obama campaign for what he called "character
assassination." Peter Alexander, NBC News, Washington.
-- Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Kyle Drennen on Twitter.