***MRC CyberAlert:
From Chicago***
Quote
of the Day | Another Day of Questions from the Left
Liberal Delegates | Poor Hillary, Wondering If It's
Worth It | Networks Worry Democrats Not Liberal
Enough | For Second Day, Focus is on Evils of Welfare
Reform | Sidebites: Dole's Harsh, but not
Clinton; Another Gumbel Shot at the GOP
QUOTE
OF THE DAY
"We were just reminded in
that moving film that we saw here of your lifelong work as an advocate for
children's causes. And yet, late last week, your husband signed a welfare
reform bill that as you know, Senator Patrick Moynihan and other welfare
experts are saying is going to throw a million children into poverty. Does
that legislation threaten to undo so much of what you've worked for over
the years?"
-- CNN's Judy Woodruff to Hillary
Clinton, August 26 interview
Another
Day of Questions from the Left Liberal Delegates, But Party's Too
Conservative
Viewers of last night's network
coverage could have learned how Democratic delegates are outside the
mainstream, but they heard nothing about controversies like abortion, as
the networks again worried Clinton had gone too far right.
-- CBS and CNN attempted to make
Hillary Clinton the martyr of harsh San Diego attacks and ask her welfare
questions from the left.
-- Network reporters worried that
the party has become too conservative as they grilled Democrats for not
opposing the welfare reform bill.
-- ABC, CNN and PBS mentioned the
liberal nature of the delegates at least once, but not NBC or CBS in prime
time. "We know from our survey that these delgates are far to the
left of the mainstream just as the Republicans were to the right of the
mainstream," ABC's Sam Donaldson declared last night. Unions also got
brief attention. Tom Brokaw referred to "a very unusually high
representation of labor down on the floor" and on CBS Dan Rather also
noted the labor angle.
-- Three networks mentioned
tobacco funding of the convention, but none noted the hypocrisy of
Democrats taking money from an industry they rail against. On CNN in prime
time Bill Schneider explained that the NRA and tobacco lobby are the
"least popular" special interests "and those are the two
that the Democrats are going to try to showcase as linked to the
Republican Party." On World News Tonight yesterday ABC's intrepid
Brian Ross cited a brunch cruise for delegates "put on by the Brown
and Williamson tobacco company" and how "Philip Morris has the
most extensive operation with the same group of back room operatives who
ran things in San Diego." NBC's Tom Brokaw referred to a
tobacco-sponsored event where delegates wore "Keep the FDA off the
farm" buttons.
-- Only two reporters questioned
the authenticity of Democratic claims to moderation. During the PBS-NBC
joint broadcast, Lisa Myers asked a delegate: "You have a President
who talks like a Republican, you have a platform that is so centrist that
some critics say it's a con job. Is this essentially, though, a liberal
party?" CNN's Judy Woodruff asked Bob Kerrey if Clinton will go left
after the election.
After scant attention Sunday,
Democratic suppression of abortion debate fell completely off TV screens.
In all of Monday's prime time coverage no reporter or anchor raised the
topic, though Bob Casey, the pro-life former Governor of Pennsylvania,
gave a speech at another Chicago location on the party's intolerance.
In 1992, then-PBS anchor Judy
Woodruff gave a soft convention interview to Hillary Clinton in July, but
blistered Barbara Bush in August in Houston with a welter of accusatory
questions about the inappropriateness of Bush campaign tactics. On last
night's Inside Politics on CNN, Woodruff devoted her interview to
eliciting Hillary Clinton's responses to Republican attacks:
-- "Let me take you back to
San Diego. Bob Dole said it doesn't take a village, a collective, the
state, which he said has made mistakes in raising children, it takes a
family. Is this something that is going to become a major issue in this
fall campaign?"
-- "Also in San Diego,
former president George Bush told the delegates he `worked hard,' I'm
quoting here, `to uphold the dignity and the honor of the presidency, to
treat it with respect. And then he added, quote, `it breaks his heart,
when the White House is demeaned, the presidency diminished.' Does that
hurt coming from your immediate predecessor?"
-- "He then went on, Mrs.
Clinton, he made a point of saying that his wife, Mrs. Bush, quote,
`unquestionably upheld the honor of the White House.' Is that an insult to
you?"
-- When Mrs. Clinton failed to
answer sharply enough, Woodruff insisted: "But he was clearly drawing
a contrast there...you're not hurt?"
Stories of Mrs. Clinton's
rough-house approach to politics, such as her reported role in firing and
lodging criminal accusations against seven workers of the White House
Travel Office, did not prevent CBS This Morning co-host Jose Diaz-Balart
from also presenting the First Lady as the beleaguered martyr of
unfortunate Republican attacks:
-- "In the San Diego
Republican convention, you were the subject of much conversation, and I
think the target, I think many would say, of some very serious
attacks."
"Do you ever, seriously, in
the White House, when all the doors are closed, do you ever say `Is this
worth it'?"
Diaz-Balart also asked the First
Lady two welfare questions from the left:
-- "One thing you care very
deeply about is children, and even your supporters that work for
children's rights have criticized President Clinton's decision to okay the
welfare reform bill. What were your conversations with him when he was in
that period of really making a determination?"
-- "What would you say to
the people in the Children's Defense Fund [the liberal group she used to
chair] who have criticized it? What is your response to them?"
Woodruff also peppered the First
Lady with welfare reform questions, all six of them from the left. Here
are three, another is the quote of the day.
-- "Your close friend,
Marian Wright Edelman of the Children's Defense Fund, said the President's
signing and this is a quote, 'makes a mockery of his pledge not to hurt
children,' she said, 'it will leave a moral blot on his presidency and the
country that will never be forgotten.'"
-- "But if the bill is so
flawed, why sign it? Why not work to fix it, and sign it later?"
-- "Eleanor Roosevelt, whom
you admire, mentioned her again just now, said that much of the time she
kept her disagreements with the President to herself in private, but there
were times that she felt it was important to disagree publicly. Does there
ever come a time with you, and if not welfare reform, then what?"
Last night network correspondents
worried how wise it has been for Bill Clinton and the Democratic Party to
have moved to the right and, in so doing, abandoned their liberal
princples. Tom Brokaw placed the party, which fought Republican efforts to
slow the rate of growth of government, to the right of center.
-- During PBS-NBC coverage,
Margaret Warner asked Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center: "Does
the President pay any political price for turning his back on traditional
liberalism, that is, among enthusiasm among traditional Democrats?"
-- Later during NBC's solo time,
Tom Brokaw interviewed VP Al Gore and then observed to NBC's Tim Russert:
"The Vice President was saying no no no, this is not forced on us by
the Republicans, we really always had this kind of thing in mind in the
first place. But since 1994 they have slid across the political spectrum
to really right of center. And they've got a guy by the name of Dick
Morris who's advising them on a daily basis how to be more
pragmatic."
-- On CBS, Dan Rather asked Jesse
Jackson: "Bill Clinton's been running pretty hard to the right, so
far that some Democrats now call him a `Republicrat.' Do you go that
far?"
-- Talking to Tom Hayden, Ed
Bradley of CBS wondered: "Senator Hayden, there are people who say
the Democratic Party has become very pragmatic in an effort to win this
election, they've given up their principles. Your response to that?"
For
Second Day, Focus is on Evils of Welfare Reform "Slightly
Terrified" of New Democrat Promises
Just as on Sunday, last night the
networks repeatedly pressed Democrats from the left on Bill Clinton's
signing of the welfare reform bill. A PBS reporter wondered if it meant
the dismantling of the "safety net that took so long to put
together."
-- CNN's Wolf Blitzer asked
Illinois Senator Carol Moseley-Braun: "How does it feel, tell us, you
voted against the welfare reform bill, you're now obviously very
supportive of the President, tell us do you feel that he sort of betrayed
some of those values that you expressed. How can you go forward now and
support him after his decision to sign that welfare reform bill into
law?"
-- HHS Secretary Donna Shalala
got it from the left during PBS-NBC coverage as Tom Brokaw inquired:
"If you were a poor single mother in a poor rural state in America,
without many resources, and you wanted to go to work, you want to do all
the right things, but there aren't many jobs for people who have real
skills, wouldn't you be slightly terrified looking into the next two
years?"
-- Earlier in the evening,
Elizabeth Farnesworth of PBS grilled White House Deputy Chief of Staff
Harold Ickes: "We're looking tonight at this whole question of who
the Democrats are. Did the President turn his back on fundamental
Democratic principles when he signed the welfare bill?" She also
forwarded a liberal argument: "Does it worry you that the welfare,
signing the welfare bill is unraveling the safety net that took so long to
put together?"
-- ABC's Jeff Greenfield
highlighted bewilderment in network ranks about the acceptance of
Clinton's retreat from liberalism on the issue. Interviewing Congressman
Charles Rangel, he asked: "Congressman it used to be said that when
the Democrats make a firing squad they form a circle, they love to rebel
against an incumbent President, and you have the welfare bill and the move
to the center. You're from one of the most liberal cities in the country,
why is the dog not barking in the night? Why are you staying with the
President given that discontent?"
Harsh or Enthusiastic?
Bill Clinton and Bob Dole
attacked each other on Sunday, but for CBS This Morning, only Bob Dole was
harsh. Sandra Hughes reported Monday: "Dole's big moment yesterday
came when he stormed Chicago, and launch-ed a harsh attack against the man
of the hour there, Bill Clinton."
But a few minutes earlier Bill
Plante reviewed Clinton's train trip, admiringly noting that "at each
whistle stop Mr. Clinton threw himself enthusiastically into campaign
mode, leaning deep into every crowd and lacing his remarks with partisan
fire."
So are the Democratic candidates
avoiding harsh personal attacks? On Good Morning America co-host Charlie
Gibson asked Senator Christopher Dodd: "You said the other day that
`I got the word out,' that I don't want to hear personal attacks against
the Republicans at this convention. Yesterday on his train trip the
President accused Republicans of blackmail to get their budget. Al Gore,
yesterday, accused the Republicans of ignorance and audacity, talked about
the two-headed monster of Dole and Gingrich. Dick Gephardt, the leader of
the House, of the Democrats, talked about Republican extremism, said
they're radicals. Talk about getting the word out?"
Gumbel's Gripe
Monday Bryant Gumbel couldn't
stop from taking one more shot at Republicans for an image he helped
create. Interviewing Chicago Mayor Richard Daley on Today, he queried:
"The Republicans, as you know, took a lot of criticism for the
scripting of their convention and for presenting an image that was
contrary to their platform. How do you figure this convention is going to
be different?"
Ignoring Casey's Case
Former Pennsylvania Gov. Bob
Casey, banned from the Democratic convention podium for the second party
gathering in a row, gave an impassioned pro-life speech yesterday at
Chicago's Fischer Center. Despite a reported heavy media presence at his
speech (which he wanted to make at the convention), none of the networks
aired the Casey speech story on last night's evening news shows.
In his new book Fighting For
Life, Casey remembered the 1992 platform hearings: "There were many
Democrats, I said, who opposed our party's embrace of the radical
pro-abortion lobby. Often it seemed the Democratic National Committee had
become little more than an auxiliary of NARAL -- the National Abortion
Rights Action League."
On Monday's Nightline, ABC's
Chris Bury gave Casey 15 seconds of fame: "The Democrats in Chicago,
like the Republicans in San Diego, have tried to script any spontaneity
right out of the program. Pennsylvania Governor Robert Casey, whose strong
anti-abortion views defy the party's position, had to find cameras outside
the convention hall."
At Hillary's Side
As a CBS camera panned the United
Center last night it came upon a man standing beside Hillary Rodham
Clinton. Dan Rather identified him: "The gentleman in the dark suit
to the right of the frame, who was just framed out, Les Moonves of CBS.
And the chant takes up `four more years.' The lady, the First Lady from
Chicago with the smashing smile, is age 48. She and President Clinton have
been married for 20 years." Moonves's job with CBS? President of the
entertainment division.
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