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Media Research Center CyberAlert
Monday August 23, 1999 (Vol. Four; No. 146)

CNN Blamed GOP for Media's Bush Focus; Hypocrisy Over Broaddrick

1) On Bush, now Steve Roberts has decided "we in the press have
an enormous obligation to help the voters understand
the...morality" of presidential candidates. CNN's Chris Black
insisted "the Republican Party helped create the climate for
this."

2) To the consternation of Judy Woodruff, on CNN on Friday Bill
Bennett suggested the media's interest in Bush/drugs but not
Broaddrick "is pointing up the hypocrisy of a lot of the press."

3) Imus in the Morning's Bernard McGuirk demanded that NBC's
David Bloom explain why reporters are not pushing Clinton about
Broaddrick and drugs. Incredibly, Bloom scolded McGuirk for
raising "completely unsubstantiated" drug charges about Clinton.

4) Howard Kurtz zoomed in on how ABC is using George
Stephanopoulos as a reporter. ABC News President David Westin
hailed his "increasing strength and maturity."

5) "Reforms to Welfare Hurt Poor, Study Says" read the headline
but not until the sixth paragraph did the Washington Post
misleadingly credit "a nonpartisan research and policy
institute."


    > 1) Three noteworthy comments on the Bush/drug front from
Sunday's interview shows: Now Steve Roberts has decided that "we
in the press have an enormous obligation to help the voters
understand the...morality and the character of the people who
want to be President"; Chris Black insisted it isn't the media's
fault but the GOP's: "The irony is that the Republican Party
helped create the climate for this"; and Susan Feeney maintained
that "the press doesn't look at the polls when it decides what
questions to ask."

    The pursuit of George W. Bush on the drug issue dominated the
Sunday interview shows. It was the sole topic on CBS's Face the
Nation, ABC's This Week opened with it and Fox News Sunday
devoted two segments to the controversy. The latter two shows
also talked about it during their panel discussions.

    It consumed all of NBC's Meet the Press hosted by Brian
Williams, save an eight minute interview with Alan Keyes about
his campaign as part of the show's look at each candidate. After
opening with Orrin Hatch, Geraldine Ferraro, John Kasich and New
Mexico Governor Gary Johnson, Williams moderated a look at media
coverage with a panel that featured two Clintonites but no
conservative who might have raised the contrast with media
interest in Juanita Broaddrick or rumors about Clinton and
cocaine: NBC's David Bloom, The Washington Post's Dan Balz,
Time's John Stacks as well as Clintonites Paul Begala and David
Gergen (okay, Gergen's really more of a hired whore.)

    I'm out in Aspen, Colorado for a few days for the Progress &
Freedom Foundation's "Cyberspace and the American Dream"
conference, but managed to catch portions of the Sunday shows,
which without a VCR required quite an effort at channel switching
since the Denver stations carry all four broadcast network
interview shows at the same time, 9am. Thanks to Nexis and a Web
site I was able to find transcripts for the items that I noticed.

    -- On CNN's Late Edition panel discussion, after an
appearance by Jesse Jackson and Jerry Falwell, Steve Roberts of
U.S. News & World Report asserted:

    "Reverend Falwell was saying only present-day action should
be judged by the press. I just think that's wrong. I think that
we in the press have an enormous obligation to help the voters
understand the judgment and the temperament, and the morality and
the character of the people who want to be President and I think
there's only one way we can do that, and that is to explore the
judgments that they have made in the past."

    Where was Roberts in 1992?

    Bashing Dan Quayle for advocating morality and the character
to abstain from parenthood until you can provide a two parent
home. On the May 22, 1992 Washington Week in Review on PBS
Roberts denounced Quayle's Murphy Brown speech:

    "This was not an accident. This was not a casual speech. This
was a speech very much a part of the White House game plan, a
very deliberate attempt to use these family values, which are an
amorphous collection of ideas, but to use them as a wedge issue
to drive divisions in this country along cultural lines, along
social lines, and to some extent along racial lines."


    -- Forget media hypocrisy, CNN's Chris Black blamed
Republicans for how they beat up on Bill Clinton. On the August
222 Late Edition segment with Roberts, Black argued:

    "Well, the irony is that the Republican Party helped create
the climate for this. They're the ones, as Gary Bauer said this
morning on another one of the talk shows, that went nuts when
Bill Clinton said he didn't inhale, asking well, what does that
mean? So, in a way, the Republican Party has set a certain
standard. And now George Bush is being held to it."

    I don't know what Bauer said on Fox News Sunday, but I do
know that Clinton's answer was so odd that it naturally prompted
ridicule. More relevant, in 1992 the media did not pursue
questions about Clinton's past drug use beyond that one marijuana
claim. As noted in the August 20 CyberAlert, rumors about Clinton
and cocaine have been around for years and last week Gennifer
Flowers gave a first-hand account. To see a clip of Flowers
recalling what Clinton did when he was high on cocaine, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/1999/cyb19990820.html#3

    (Friday morning on ABC's Good Morning America Karla Davis,
MRC analyst Jessica Anderson noticed, concluded a story on Bush
with this odd bit of historical analysis: "Ultimately voters
decided that questions about whether President Clinton used drugs
were not important enough to keep him out of office." As noted
above, the media hardly pursued the issue.)


    -- Over on Face the Nation, Dallas Morning News Washington
bureau reporter Susan Feeney assured viewers:

    "I actually don't think it's going to go away. I agree with
the Governor when he says that, he looks at the polls and says
that people do not care about past drug use, but I don't think he
realizes that the press doesn't look at the polls when it decides
what questions to ask and when. I think it's inevitable that
reporters will push until there's an answer."

    The "press doesn't look at the polls"? I seem to recall
reporters incessantly highlighting how the public was tired of
the Lewinsky scandal and citing this "scandal fatigue" as the
reason they were not pursuing a particular new revelation.


    > 2) As outlined in the August 20 CyberAlert, reporters will
not raise the issue of their own hypocrisy in pursuing Bush on
the drug issue, even though no one has made a charge, while
ignoring an actual charge of rape against Bill Clinton more
recent than the time of Bush's supposed drug use. But, Bill
Bennett did on CNN Friday, much to Judy Woodruff's consternation.

    Bennett asserted on the August 20 Inside Politics: "This is
pointing up the hypocrisy of a lot of the press. There are no
allegations that he's used illegal drugs, no witness has come
forward. In the case of Bill Clinton you had the situation with
Juanita Broaddrick who accused Bill Clinton of rape twenty one
years ago, which is more recent than these allegations of drug
use by George Bush. You had five contemporaneous eyewitnesses and
the press said it had scandal fatigue. That's a very serious
charge, a much more serious charge, but the press decided to
abandon that. Now George Bush, Republican blood is out there, so
they're pursuing it...."

    Woodruff countered: "By the way, on the Juanita Broaddrick
question I think that some members of the press did pursue that,
but we don't really don't have time to get into that."

    Bennett: "Very few, very few. I'm mean you've got an army
pursuing this."

    Very few indeed. Two days after Broaddrick's Dateline
interview in February, CNN's Inside Politics did run a story
about feminist reaction followed by a related interview segment.
That and a mention earlier in the week by Howard Kurtz were all
the show did then on Broaddrick. The night Clinton was asked at a
press conference about Broaddrick, on March 19, CNN's The World
Today gave the issue a piddling 13 seconds.


    > 3) David Gregory shut down references to Juanita Broaddrick
on a second network last Thursday, but he couldn't stop the
sports news guy for Imus in the Morning, Bernard McGuirk, from
demanding that NBC's David Bloom explain why reporters are not
pushing Clinton about Broaddrick. When McGuirk noted how "there
have been rumors that the President has done drugs in the White
House in the past seven years or so," Bloom incredibly castigated
him: "With all due respect, Bernard, you're saying, you're
repeating those rumors completely unsubstantiated on a program
like this."

    -- On CNBC's Rivera Live on August 19 guest Grover Norquist
asserted: "I think there is a double standard here. There are
people who have testified that Bill Clinton has used cocaine and
the press has not hounded him on the question. There's a woman
who said he raped her and the press hasn't asked him repeatedly
the question."

    Substitute host David Gregory shot back: "That's not
accurate! That's not accurate!"

    Of course, it is accurate. See comments after the Imus item
below for more details as well as the August 20 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/1999/cyb19990820.html#1

    This was Gregory's second time in a few hours to shut down
talk of Broaddrick. As noted in the August 20 CyberAlert,
Thursday afternoon on MSNBC he cut off the RNC's Cliff May the
second he raised her name in an attempt to illustrate the media's
double standard.


    -- Friday morning, August 20, NBC's David Bloom appeared on
the Imus in the Morning radio show simulcast on MSNBC. Tipped off
by CyberAlert Massachusetts correspondent Eric Darbe, MRC intern
Ken Shepherd located when the show's Bernard McGuirk pressed the
NBC reporter who the day before demanded Bush explain his drug
history back to his 18th birthday.

    McGuirk suggested: "Well, what's good enough for the
presidential candidate is good enough for the President. And
there have been rumors that the President has done drugs in the
White House in the past seven years or so. How come no one is
going to ask him about those rumors? �And are they true? Did you
do drugs?'"

    Bloom replied: "First of all, I think that, I mean, with all
due respect, Bernard, you're saying, you're repeating those
rumors completely unsubstantiated on a program like this, I think
proves the point about why you don't want to go down this path.
And why we as journalists, at least I count myself in that
number, ought to not talk about things that we don't know whether
or not they're true or at least there's some basis for believing
they're true."

    Amazing. There is no allegation on the table against Bush,
but that didn't stop Bloom, who applied this reasoning: "Again,
my point is, I don't think we have a right to ask questions when
we don't have a shred of evidence other than a candidate's
refusal to answer the question that something is true. But as I
say, the Governor put this into play by saying, okay, those kind
of questions are legitimate. I don't think we should ask
questions of the President, of Gov. Bush, of any other Republican
candidate, of the Vice President unless we have some solid
basis."

    McGuirk pressed ahead: "With all due respect, how about the
Juanita Broaddrick rape question?"

    Bloom got agitated: "No, no, no, I think that's, as you well
know, NBC News took a long, hard time looking at that question
and when there was some basis for believing that her allegations
might be true, we then did the story and we asked the President
about it."

    McGuirk: "And he never answered the question�"

    Bloom: "That's true."

    McGuirk: "And then he got a pass on that."

    Bloom: "Well, no, you don't get a pass. What happens is, we
can't stand up, I mean, it's not right to stand up at every
single news conference month after month after month after month
and get the same no comment answer."

    McGuirk: "Unless you're junior Bush."

    Then Imus got into it: "Wait, shut up Bernard. David, we are
well aware of that, I don't think Bernard is entirely serious so
we were just trying to jerk your chain a little bit."

    Reality Check: Despite the fact NBC got a network exclusive
with its February 24 Dateline interview with Broaddrick, NBC
Nightly News has yet to air a single story on her charge. At a
March 19 press conference one reporter, Sam Donaldson, asked
Clinton about her allegation. Bloom handled the news conference
story for the March 19 NBC Nightly News but refused to mention
Broaddrick. Clinton has held several press conferences since, but
not one reporter has bothered to utter the name Juanita
Broaddrick.


    > 4) Washington Post media reporter Howard Kurtz focused
Monday on how ABC News used George Stephanopoulos as a reporter
for the Republican Iowa straw vote. Sound familiar? The August 17
CyberAlert relayed:

    "All weekend he [George Stephanopoulos] served as ABC's lone
analyst of the Iowa straw poll. MRC analyst Jessica Anderson
noticed that he appeared solo, without Bill Kristol, on both the
Friday and Monday Good Morning America as well as live from Iowa
on Saturday's World News Tonight. In addition, Sunday's This Week
opened with a live report from him..."

    Kurtz began his August 23 item:

    "During the Iowa straw poll, ABC News had an aggressive
reporter on the scene who covered the event for Good Morning
America, World News Saturday and This Week. His name: George
Stephanopoulos.

    "That's right, the same guy who helped run Bill Clinton's
campaign against George W. Bush's father in 1992, and who plotted
White House strategy against Elizabeth Dole's husband in 1996.
Stephanopoulos declared Bush, Dole and Gary Bauer to be the big
winners in Ames."

    Kurtz did add some fresh information about how the President
of ABC News praises the "increasing strength and maturity"
displayed by Stephanopoulos:

    "After 3 1/2 years of limiting Stephanopoulos to political
commentary, ABC has decided to give the former White House aide a
larger on-air role -- and cast him as more of a straight
journalist.

    "�We're all conscious of the sensitivity with him having been
part of the news in Washington,' says ABC News President David
Westin. �Are his past and his connections likely to affect his
reporting, or likely to be perceived as affecting his reporting?
You have to take it case by case.'

    "For instance, says Westin, �we wouldn't have him be the beat
reporter on the Gore campaign.' (Whew.) Hailing Stephanopoulos's
�increasing strength and maturity,' he adds: �There has been a
history of people not growing up in journalism becoming
journalists.' Westin cites NBC's Tim Russert, a onetime
Democratic operative, as an example."

    Another Democrat. Imagine the outrage if ABC News had George
Will or Bill Kristol serve as a reporter for a big Democratic
party event between Clinton and Bradley.

    Or, as the MRC's Tim Graham contended in an August 18 AP
piece on Stephanopoulos by David Bauder: "�I think conservatives
look at this administration like the Nixon administration,' Tim
Graham of the Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog
group, said. �I don't think the liberals would have abided by the
idea of an ABC News correspondent being (Nixon aide) Ron
Zeigler."

    > 5) A Washington Post reporter misleading described a left-
wing group as "a nonpartisan policy and research institute."

    "Reforms to Welfare Hurt Poor, Study Says," announced a front
page headline in Sunday's Denver Post. But good luck figuring out
who conducted the study and where they are coming from
politically. The Denver Post headline appeared over a Washington
Post story by Kathy Sawyer. In the Washington Post it ran on page
7 and carried this headline: "Poorest Families Are Losing Ground:
Female-Headed Households' Gains Erode as Welfare Reform Starts,
Study Says."

    Now, notice how she buried the basic who and why facts.

    Paragraph 1: "Welfare reform has depressed the income of some
of the nation's poorest families in recent years despite a robust
U.S. economy, according to a new study."

    Paragraph 2: "The report released yesterday cautioned against
�pronouncing welfare reform an unqualified success' even though
there have been dramatic declines in the welfare rolls and an
overall increase in employment and earnings among poor families.
It concluded that �too much emphasis has been placed on caseload
reduction and insufficient attention paid to income and poverty
outcomes.'"

    Paragraph 3: "One of the main problems, many analysts have
said, is that some families eligible for food stamps are not
getting them after they leave the welfare rolls, although it is
not clear why. In 1995, 88 percent of poor children received food
stamps, compared with 70 percent last year."

    Paragraph 4: "�I think we need a midcourse correction,' said
Wendell Primus, lead author of the study, which he called the
most comprehensive look to date at family income and child
poverty under the reforms."

    Paragraph 5: "A former official in the Department of Health
and Human Services, Primus resigned to protest President
Clinton's signing of the welfare bill three years ago today."

    Finally, in paragraph 6 we learn who issued the study: "The
study was released by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities,
a nonpartisan research and policy institute."


    Conservative groups can only dream of such unchallenging news
stories with such generic labeling that avoids ideology. -- Brent
Baker, in Aspen Colorado along with Daniel Schorr who flew on the
same plane with me from Denver to Aspen. I can't avoid the
liberal media.


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