On the CBS
Evening News, Phil Jones charged that supporting a tax cut means Dole is
no longer concerned about the deficit. Jones also worried that criticizing
Clinton isn't the right strategy.
Jones reported:
"The former Senator argued that voters have a choice between two
different visions of government."
Dole: "He wants families to pinch their pennies so government can
spend more money. I've got a new idea. I want the government for a change
to pinch its pennies so the families will not have to pinch theirs."
Jones: "The ex-deficit hawk returned to the centerpiece of his
campaign, a 15 percent tax cut."
Dole: "I know the critics say you can't do this, you can't cut taxes
and balance the budget. What they're really saying is that they cannot do
it."
Jones: "Campaign aides claim they have private polls showing
President Clinton vulnerable on the tax issue. That's the reason for this
attack. But between now and election day the Republican nominee has to do
more than criticize. He's got to sell the Dole plan."
After showing
some of the same tax soundbites from Dole, on NBC Nightly News David Bloom
ran a clip of a new Clinton ad which criticizes Dole's Senate record,
emphasizing Dole's length of service. Bloom then charged:
"So now Dole who's complained about Clinton's campaign of fear is
taking a similar tack."
Dole: "Secrets, secrets. Remember the FBI files that went to the
White House."
Bloom: "With the election just six weeks away, calling Bill Clinton a
liberal might soon look tame. David Bloom, NBC News, Detroit."
Post reporter
Susan Schmidt's lead: "Hillary Rodham Clinton drafted a real estate
document that was used by an Arkansas S&L to 'deceive' federal
regulators in 1996 and pay more than $300,000 in questioned commissions to
one of her law firm's well-connected clients, a federal inspector general
concluded yesterday. The strongly worded report by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. inspector general found evidence that Clinton and her
former law partner Webster Hubbell were involved in dealings on behalf of
Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan that they have told federal
investigators under oath they cannot recall."
A USA Today
reporter agrees. In his "Politics" column on Monday, Richard
Benedetto wrote:
"As President Clinton's re-election campaign rolled through six
states in four days last week, it did so virtually unimpeded by a White
House press corps known for setting up roadblocks now and then....He was
left free to make a string of feel-good speeches that won great play in
the media and gave the desired impression that the Clinton campaign is on
a roll....
"In 1992, a tough White House press corps rightly kept President
Bush's feet to the fire on domestic issues he would rather have
downplayed. But the 1996 crew appears less aggressive with Clinton."
We're bringing
them to our side, one reporter at a time.