| "Texas Miracle" Just a "Mirage"?; West Wing Star Called Bush "Full of S**t" and Jesus Disappointed in Bush 1) ABC, CBS and NBC all jumped on
  a study disputing Bush's record on education. "A new report from the
  RAND Corporation, a non-partisan think tank, argues the so-called 'Texas
  miracle' in education is in fact overstated," declared NBC's David
  Gregory. Dan Rather asserted: "A new study out today questioned whether
  it's in fact a miracle or a mirage." 2) CBS dedicated a whole story to the battling Bush and Gore
  spending visions. John Roberts: "Under merciless attack as an old-line
  Democrat who believes big government is better, Gore today pledged that if
  elected he would freeze the size of the federal work force." 3) A Republican character joins The West Wing tonight just
  after star Martin Sheen told George magazine that George W. Bush is
  a "bully" who is "full of s**t." A co-star called Bush
  "proudly uninformed" and argued that Jesus would be displeased by
  Bush's promotion of the death penalty. 
  1  Just
      two weeks before the election a study from RAND Corporation researchers
      disputed George W. Bush's claims about improvements by minorities in
      Texas schools, but instead of dismissing such a questionably-timed report,
      all three broadcast networks ran full stories on it Tuesday night. They
      all at least briefly noted how the new report contradicted an earlier RAND
      study, but those caveats came within stories focused on discrediting
      Bush's record.
     Citing Bush's educational achievement boasts, CBS
      Evening News anchor Dan Rather cast doubt: "A new study out today
      questioned whether it's in fact a miracle or a mirage." NBC Nightly
      News anchor Tom Brokaw highlighted how "the Gore campaign was eager
      to publicize a new study from a highly regarded and non-partisan think
      tank that challenges some of the Governor's claims about education gains
      in Texas."     Democrats, CBS's Bill Whitaker admitted,
      "alerted the press to the report overnight and piled on today."
      The networks certainly didn't resist. Only FNC's Carl Cameron pointed
      out how the Gore campaign went beyond just "alerting" reporters.
      "Reporters received overnight packages from the Gore camp" with
      the report, Cameron observed on Special Report with Brit Hume.     For a rundown of how the ABC and NBC morning shows
      on Tuesday jumped on the report and an excerpt from the earlier RAND
      report which had praised Texas achievements compared to other states,
      check out the Tuesday CyberAlert Extra:http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20001024_extra.asp#3
     Tuesday night's Nightline followed Bush's day on
      the campaign trail and reaction to the RAND study dominated two of three
      interview segments with Bush conducted by Ted Koppel.     Now to how the broadcast networks played the
      education report on Tuesday night, October 24. All three led with campaign
      news:     -- ABC's World News Tonight. After an initial
      story on where each candidate stands in the electoral college and their
      strategies, anchor Peter Jennings set up a full piece on the RAND report:
      "George Bush was defending his record on education in Texas. A
      research paper from the RAND Corporation which says that Texas students
      may do well on statewide tests but no better than average on a national
      test. The Texas Commissioner of Education said another RAND study cited
      remarkable gains."     Dean Reynolds noted how the Bush campaign questioned
      the timing of the report, but Reynolds made clear its potential damage:
      "Bush has built his campaign to a large extent on his record of
      improving education in Texas. Anything that cast doubt on his achievement
      at this stage in the race could be fodder for the Democrats."Indeed, in a
      soundbite Dick Gephardt suggested Bush's record is "all
      exaggeration."
     After running a clip from Bush Communications
      Director Karen Hughes insisting Texas leads in improving educational
      achievement, Reynolds moved on to how
      in campaign appearances Bush mocked Gore's targeted tax cuts and
      suggested that if Clinton campaigns for Gore it would mean "the
      shadow returns."     -- CBS Evening News. After the lead story on Bush
      versus Gore back and forth on the size of government (see
      item #2 for details), Dan Rather proclaimed: "Bush hit hard on
      another one of his main messages today, what his campaign calls the
      'Texas miracle,' especially what Bush says are big gains in education.
      But a new study out today questioned whether it's in fact a miracle or a
      mirage."     Bill Whitaker, as transcribed by MRC analyst Brad
      Wilmouth, began: "Just about every day, George W. Bush boasts of
      boosting test scores of Texas public school children and says as President
      he'd do the same for students nationwide."George W. Bush:
      "We're gonna challenge what I call the 'soft bigotry of low
      expectations.'"
 Whitaker countered:
      "But a report out today dropped like dynamite on his so-called
      'Texas miracle.' Researchers at the respected, non-partisan RAND think
      tank found while Texas students' scores were up on state tests, their
      scores on national tests were unremarkable, and the gap between whites and
      students of color was widening."
 Stephen Klein,
      author of the RAND study: "They're not like learning how to read in
      the broader sense, but instead they may be learning how to answer the
      reading kinds of questions that appear on the state test, and that kind of
      skill does not necessarily carry over into the national test."
 Whitaker stressed
      the impact: "It's a shot to the heart of a core Bush issue, his
      claim that under his leadership, student scores have soared, especially
      disadvantaged students. Today's report was so explosive the campaign,
      which hasn't had a press conference in weeks, shot back
      immediately."
 Karen Hughes:
      "The timing of this opinion, this fourteen-page opinion paper,
      conducted by four researchers, is highly suspect, and the conclusions are
      dead wrong."
 Whitaker:
      "While both Bush and Al Gore called for testing, Bush would use
      annual Texas-style tests to determine whether schools get federal funding.
      Democrats were so eager to give his Texas record a black eye, they alerted
      the press to the report overnight and piled on today."
 Tom Daschle:
      "This so-called 'Texas miracle' is nothing more than a tall Texas
      tale."
 Whitaker concluded:
      "Now Bush staffers say that this earlier report from the same think
      tank gave Texas high marks and imply that today's record is politically
      motivated, a charge RAND researchers vehemently deny."
     -- NBC Nightly News. The RAND report led the
      broadcast after a few words about tight poll standings. Tom Brokaw
      announced:"Good evening.
      Texas Governor George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore were working the
      geographical middle of America today from Arkansas and Tennessee and
      Louisiana up to Illinois, stepping up the tone and content of their
      attacks on each other with just two weeks to go. The latest Reuters/MSNBC
      overnight tracking poll has Gore opening now a small three-point lead over
      Bush [45 to 42], a bounce as they call it in the political business.
      Governor Bush today continued to hammer the Vice President on the issue of
      big government, and the Gore campaign was eager to publicize a new study
      from a highly regarded and non-partisan think tank that challenges some of
      the Governor's claims about education gains in Texas. NBC's Claire
      Shipman is with the Vice President in Louisiana tonight, David Gregory
      with the Governor in Tennessee. David, tell us about that Texas education
      story."
     Gregory did "tell us" about the education
      study, but Claire Shipman did not recount Bush's attacks on Gore as a
      big spending. Her story instead concentrated on how Gore is working to get
      out the vote from key constituencies.     Gregory started his story by pretending he somehow
      had no control over what NBC considered newsworthy: "Well, Tom, it
      became a distraction, I can certainly tell you that. Today the Bush
      campaign forced to defend what it has touted as the Governor's strongest
      credential, his education record in Texas. Bush has traveled to 115
      schools during the campaign boasting that the state's emphasis on
      accountability has led to a dramatic increase in student math and reading
      test scores. But a new report from the RAND Corporation, a non-partisan
      think tank, argues the so-called 'Texas miracle' in education is in
      fact overstated."Dr. Stephen Klein,
      RAND: "The question is should people trust the scores on the state
      test to indicate how much improvement has actually occurred in Texas. I
      think there's real questions about that trustworthiness."
     Gregory, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth,
      outlined the new findings, though he eventually acknowledged they
      contradict an earlier study by the same group: "The study shows that
      those positive statewide test scores Bush points to may be inflated.
      Researchers compared the Texas results to scores by Texas students on a
      national achievement test and found that Texas students did not score any
      higher than students in other states. The researchers suggest that
      teachers may be specifically preparing students for the state exam. The
      report also asserts that the achievement gap in Texas between white and
      minority students is not shrinking as Bush says, it's actually growing
      slightly. Today's report stands in contrast to an earlier, more broadly
      focused RAND study that compared national test results across all states.
      It singled out Texas as having improved dramatically. The author of that
      study reaffirmed his findings today, and Bush advisors who dismiss the new
      study as unscientific and politically motivated are happy to repeat
      them."Karen Hughes:
      "Texas consistently ranks at the top in every category of improving
      student achievement among all students from all races and all income
      groups."
 Gregory: "Top
      Democrats today used the new report to debunk Bush's crowning
      achievement."
 Senator Tom Daschle:
      "I think really this so-called 'Texas miracle' is nothing more
      than a tall Texas tale."
 Gregory concluded:
      "And an ironic footnote to today's scuffle, the study that shows
      Texas in the most favorable light of all is based largely on student test
      scores that pre-date Bush's tenure in office."
 
 		 2  ABC
          led Tuesday night with the rise in the number of toss-up states and
          CBS topped the Evening News with its estimate of an electoral college
          tie. ABC briefly noted how Bush and Gore traded charges on the size of
          government while CBS dedicated a whole story to that campaign theme.
          CBS's John Roberts asserted: "Under merciless attack as an
          old-line Democrat who believes big government is better, Gore today
          pledged that if elected he would freeze the size of the federal work
          force."
     Peter Jennings opened the October 24 World News
          Tonight by reporting the number contested states had gone up according
          to ABC analysis as "neither Mr. Bush nor Mr. Gore seem to be able
          to establish a commanding lead and hold onto it."     Linda Douglass looked at some unexpected trends
          in the 14 toss-up states, such as how Bush campaigned in Illinois, a
          state earlier written off by his team while Gore spent time in
          Arkansas, a state expected to have been in his column. She noted Gore
          is behind in West Virginia because miners mad at Gore over his
          environmental policies and Bush has not locked up Florida because
          seniors prefer Gore's prescription plan.     Labor leaders, she reported, are planning a $60
          million door to door campaign for Gore while the NRA is "waging
          its biggest campaign ever" on behalf of Bush.     Next, just before ABC's RAND story quoted in
          #1 above, Jennings reported how Bush accused Gore of planning to
          increase the size of government, but "Mr. Gore said he would not
          add one new federal employee if he's elected."     Dan Rather led the CBS Evening News with the
          battle over the surplus and a supposed electoral college tie:
          "Good evening. It's just two weeks now till America chooses a
          new President, and these could turn out to be among the most important
          pre-election facts and figures. With Vice President Al Gore and Texas
          Governor George Bush battling over who is better qualified to continue
          growing the economy and their very different budget priorities, the
          U.S. government today posted the third straight budget surplus, a
          record $237 billion for the fiscal year just ended. The eight-year
          Clinton-Gore administration takes some credit for this. Bush says they
          don't deserve it. And there is this number. CBS News now estimates
          Bush and Gore are flat even at 205 electoral votes each. It takes 270
          to be elected. A number of other polls have Bush with a slight lead.
          Both candidates were talking up their separate visions of the
          government's future today."     John Roberts relayed those visions in a
          remarkably balanced story transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
          "The two candidates traded fire today over how best to spend the
          record surplus and how much say the government should have. On that
          front, George Bush believes less is best, a message he took to
          Illinois today."Bush:
          "I'm running against a man who trusts Washington, D.C., to make
          decisions on behalf of Illinois folks."
 Roberts:
          "Al Gore argues that government needs to have a strong guiding
          hand but adds it can be done differently."
     After a Gore soundbite, Roberts noted:
          "Under merciless attack as an old-line Democrat who believes big
          government is better, Gore today pledged that if elected he would
          freeze the size of the federal work force."     Following a soundbite of Gore making that
          promise, Roberts turned to Bush: "An impossible task, claims the
          Texas Governor who figures Gore's spending plans will bloat the
          federal payroll."Bush: "He
          wants to increase the size and scope of the federal government more
          than Walter Mondale and Michael Dukakis combined. That's pretty
          big."
 Al Gore: "I
          know my opponent would like to run against a mythical big-spending,
          big government candidate, a cartoon image from campaigns past."
 Roberts
          concluded: "And indeed he's going to continue to do that. Today
          the Governor said that even though the new surplus numbers were in
          favor of what the fiscal policies of the Clinton administration have
          been they still would not cover Gore's spending increases. The Gore
          camp today instantly mocked that saying that if the Bush campaign
          wants to balance their budget, they need to come up with at least a
          trillion dollars more."
     Of course, it isn't the number of employees
          which matters most but the level of taxation and scope of regulation. 
 		 3  NBC's
          The West Wing tonight will introduce a Republican adviser to the staff
          of the Democratic President in an episode that will air just days
          after a magazine article quoted one star as asserting George W. Bush
          is a "bully" who is "full of s**t" while another
          star proclaimed Bush "proudly uninformed." That actor, who
          dubbed himself a "pinko liberal," also argued that Jesus
          would be displeased by Bush's promotion of the death penalty.
     The NBC Web site provided this summary for the
          October 25 edition of The West Wing airing at 8pm ET/PT, 8pm CT/MT:     "When a confident Sam is outmatched by a
          novice Republican adviser (Emily Proctor) on a political
          point-counterpoint television program, an impressed President Bartlet
          offers to hire her as assistant White House counsel despite her party
          affiliation, a bold move that sends shock waves through the resentful
          staff. Elsewhere, Toby and Josh attend a deadlocked White House summit
          between representatives of pharmaceutical companies and the leaders of
          AIDS-ravaged African nations."     The West Wing cast assessments of Bush came in a
          November George magazine cover story by Sharon Waxman about the show.     Joining Waxman's article in a section quoting
          Martin Sheen, who plays The West Wing's President "Josiah Bartlet,"
          Waxman recited his lack of appreciation for anyone not liberal:     "'I think he's a bully. I don't think
          he has any heart. That scares me,' says Sheen heatedly, hunched over
          some melting frozen yogurt in a mess tent on location in downtown Los
          Angeles. The show has set up in a parking lot for a shoot at a
          veterans' hall. It is Sheen's sixtieth birthday and he is wearing
          a T-shirt that reads, 'What's Next?' -- the mantra of his
          television character."He's not
          done. 'I've seen him. I've watched him -- he's like a bad comic
          working the crowd. He's too angry. He talks too loud. He's acting
          compassionate. It's not real. It's not there.'
 "Pause. 'I think he's full of shit,
          frankly.'
 "Sheen is not too hot on Republicans in
          general. He says: 'If a Republican showed me a heart, I'd respond
          to that heart. I have not seen much heart coming from
          Republicans.'"
     Waxman moved on to Bradley Whitford, who plays
          Deputy Chief-of-Staff "Josh Lyman." She recounted:     "Sheen is not the only rabidly
          anti-Republican cast member. Listen to Whitford, who offhandedly
          describes himself as 'a white-bread
          pinko liberal.' Whitford is livid that during one of the primary
          debates, Bush dared to name Jesus as the political philosopher
          who has influenced him the most."'You
          offer up Jesus Christ in a debate -- and then you execute more people
          than the other governors combined?' Whitford rages, lounging in his
          trailer between takes.
 "'Do you
          really believe that Jesus, who himself was killed because of the death
          penalty, would be pro-death penalty? I think Bush is a hypocrite, and
          I think he's proudly uninformed.'"
     To read the entire George magazine piece, go to:http://www.georgemag.com/xp6/George/Features/1100/WestWing.xml
     For how a Dr. Laura character was demonized on
          the last episode, go to the October 19 CyberAlert which documented how
          Martin Sheen as the President attacked her misleading "Dr."
          title and sarcastically compared her claim that the Bible says
          homosexuality is "an abomination" to how it advocates
          slavery for his daughter and that his mother be burned. "You may
          be mistaking this for your monthly meeting of the ignorant tight-ass
          club." Go to:http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20001019.asp#7
     For how Sheen would be "enormously
          disappointed" if Bush won, but then hoped in that case his show
          would be a "royal pain in the ass," as well as how he
          described Bill Clinton as "terrific and heroic," go to:http://archive.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2000/cyb20001018_extra.asp#5 -- Brent Baker
  
     
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