Journalist, Heal Thyself
by L. Brent Bozell III
May 7, 1997
Am I dreaming? Has the whole world gone mad? Are the liberal
media really running down Congressman Dan Burton for a lack of objectivity,
and the use of selective editing?
Let's be clear here. These are not offenses if you're
working for this country's "objective" press. They're cherished
professional requirements. How could the liberal media get through the day
without tendentious bias and selective editing? If you take the coverage of
Dan Burton himself and his release of prison transcripts starring Webster
Hubbell, the shameless crook who was once the number-three law enforcement
official in America, these three media tactics emerge:
1. Changing the Subject. The subject should have been
Hubbell's statements on the tapes. Instead, reporters focused largely on the
allegedly violated privacy of the poor crook and his spouse, even though
ex-Associate Attorney General Hubbell was clearly aware that these
conversations were taped and became government property. For years now, the
media have presented Hubbell as a sympathetic victim of someone - Ken Starr,
House Republicans, even the Clintons. But Hubbell is just a thief, and a
stupid thief at that. First, he stole almost half a million dollars from his
law partners. (Where were the stories about them?) Then, the President's
buddies ponied up more than $700,000 for him after he was pushed to resign and
before he was slated to cooperate with the Whitewater grand jury. (Who said
crime doesn't pay?) Then, despite receiving more than $1 million in 1994, this
scoundrel cheated the public again by paying less than $30,000 in taxes, and
now stands charged with failing to pay nearly $900,000 in taxes, interest, and
penalties. The new Hubbell indictment notes that the Hubbells spent $750,000
on personal items between 1994 and 1997, including clothing, private school
tuition, and domestic help. But the media have ignored this, preferring to
make them look like victims impoverished by lawyers responding to
Clinton-hating investigators.
Let's not forget that Hubbell took the Fifth and refused to
testify before Burton's committee, and yet somehow Burton is the evil one.
Burton's Government Reform and Oversight Committee stands charged with
investigating potential lawbreaking, and is frustrated by 53 Democratic
fundraisers taking the Fifth, and 39 witnesses fleeing the country, not to
mention 19 committee Democrats who refused to immunize four witnesses cleared
by Clinton's own Justice Department. And yet the media focuses on the ethics
of Chairman Burton. Unbelievable.
2. Bad Public Relations Instincts. Burton, like Ken Starr
before him, was attacked by the liberal media as a P.R. bumbler. On
"Nightline," Ted Koppel began: "Tonight, the bumbling of the
Hubbell tapes. How evidence of a cover-up may be lost amid political
squabbling." Reporter Chris Bury seconded Koppel's amnesiac urgings:
"Now the tapes will be remembered less for what they reveal than for the
controversy they generated and the President once again has been blessed by
the bumbling of his enemies." That's awfully coy. Who fancies themselves
as the arbiters of what gets remembered and what's easily forgotten?
In truth, Burton did bumble in failing to expect the liberal
media to center their outrage machine on his conduct. (Of course, he could
have appeased the press and avoided the attacks by shifting the news focus
from investigating the President to pandering to liberal policy pipe dreams -
see Sen. John McCain.)
3. The "Even" Republicans. Watch out for that
pathetic breed the media identify as the "Even" Republicans. CBS's
Bob Schieffer charged the release of the Hubbell tapes disturbed "even
some Burton supporters." Schieffer concluded: "One Republican told
us it's gone beyond being a matter of concern in the House, this is a problem
now for all Republicans, Dan." Liberal critics constantly whine about
anonymous sources on the Clinton scandals, but wouldn't it be refreshing to
see this anonymous weasel actually named?
Not to be outdone by the other networks, CNN
President/Clinton golfing buddy Rick Kaplan scheduled an hour-long special on
Burton's offenses, which began with Bruce Morton comparing Burton to Oliver
Cromwell, the English despot. In the midst of this in-the-tank special, CNN
political analyst Bill Schneider complained: "I think the press was far
too quick to use these tapes without proper warnings that they were not
complete and they came from a partisan source." If that was true, the
network news shows ought to all begin every night with this disclaimer about
their own product.
But Schneider was wrong. As National Review's Ramesh Ponnuru
and John J. Miller reported online, journalists had access to the full tapes
as well as the committee's highlights: "In other words, the committee's
condensation was really a sort of guide to the highlights of the tape. And
even that condensation included passages put there at [liberal ranking member
Henry] Waxman's request." So who's more guilty of misleading the American
people with selective editing? Journalist, heal thyself.
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