"Controversial" Kyoto "Rollback"; Tax Cut "Bankrolled" on Backs of Kids; ABC Ecstatic McCain Might Win; Turner Mocked Reagan
1) A Senate resolution rejected the Kyoto treaty 95-0 and
Clinton never submitted it for ratification, but CBS and NBC painted
Bush's decision to not push ratification as, in Dan Rather's words,
"another rollback, another reversal in U.S. environmental
policy." Tom Brokaw cited "another controversial decision on the
environment." Campbell Brown bemoaned how Bush had pulled "the
U.S. out of a landmark international...treaty."
2) Dan Rather characterized Bush's budget which passed
in the House as including "his big tax cut plan, partly bankrolled,
critics say, through cuts in many federal aid programs for children and
education."
3) "Few thought campaign finance reform would get
even this far," exclaimed ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas to Linda
Douglass who held out hope that the media dream will be realized:
"People on both sides of this fight are now saying that John
McCain's legislation appears to have a very good chance of
passing." NBC's Lisa Myers explored the evils of soft money which
makes Senator Zell Miller feel like "a cheap prostitute on a busy
day."
4) The ABC News/Washington Post poll which found that 58
percent think Bush's tax cut plan is "about right" or
"too small," a finding World News Tonight ignored, also
determined that twice as many of those who said the Bush plan was
"about right" in size "prefer" that it be bigger as
think it should be smaller.
5) Ted Turner's latest: North Korea poses "about as
much threat to us as an ant does to an elephant. I mean, anybody that's
worried about North Korea is really, really sick." He made fun of
Ronald Reagan as the "conqueror of Grenada," denigrated missile
defense as "the dumbest thing I ever heard of" and charged:
"The military industrial complex backed this administration to the
hilt and they're getting paid back with big contracts."
1
The Senate
voted 95 to zero in a resolution against considering the ratification of
the Kyoto treaty to lower carbon dioxide emissions and, as FNC's Jim
Angle uniquely recalled on Wednesday night, back in 1997 then-"Vice
President Gore, who signed the treaty, said the administration wouldn't
even ask the Senate to ratify it without changes." Indeed, the
Clinton administration never sent the treaty to the Senate for
ratification.
But if you relied on CBS, CNN or NBC newscasts
you'd have thought that by announcing how the administration would not
push for ratification of the treaty President Bush was leading an
extremist crusade against the environment. You'd have no idea about such
overwhelming rejection of the treaty by Democratic Senators or how even
the Clinton administration realized it was considered non-viable on a
bi-partisan basis. Instead, CBS and NBC painted the Bush decision as
another "controversial" attack on the environment as they
relayed how Democrats assailed Bush.
"President Bush is ordering another
rollback, another reversal in U.S. environmental policy," intoned
CBS's Dan Rather. John Roberts put it in apoplectic terms, implying Bush
alone is risking the survival of humans: "Global temperatures on the
rise, glaciers retreating, storms more frequent and severe, a looming
crisis, say many scientists, of the Greenhouse effect. Yet claiming
potential harm to the economy, the White House today confirmed it will
abandon the global accord to curb emissions of carbon dioxide." Oh,
and one more thing: "Tomorrow the Chancellor of Germany will be at
the White House to ask the President just what the world's largest
polluters plans to do about global warming."
NBC's Tom Brokaw referred to "another
controversial decision on the environment from the Bush
administration." Reporter Campbell Brown portrayed the decision as
exacerbating a broken campaign promise: "After first promising during
the campaign to set limits on carbon dioxide emissions, a key contributor
to global warming, then reversing his campaign promise, the President
today takes the reversal a step further, pulling the U.S. out of a
landmark international global warming treaty."
Neither ABC's World News Tonight or
MSNBC's The News with Brian Williams mentioned the topic on Wednesday
night. On CNN's 8pm EST Wolf Blitzer Reports, Blitzer read this short
item:
"Democrats and environmentalists are
blasting Mr. Bush for abandoning an international treaty aimed at curbing
global warming. The 1997 Kyoto Treaty calls for industrial nations to
reduce pollution. The President today said he refuses to implement the
pact because it does not bind developing nations to the same
restrictions."
More detail on the full stories run Wednesday
night, March 28, on CBS and NBC:
-- CBS Evening News. Dan Rather set it up:
"President Bush is ordering another
rollback, another reversal in U.S. environmental policy. This time it
amounts to abandoning support for an international treaty designed to
reduce emissions linked to global warming. CBS's John Roberts has more
about the heat this is generating, environmental and political."
Roberts proposed a dire forecast, as
transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Global temperatures on the
rise, glaciers retreating, storms more frequent and severe, a looming
crisis, say many scientists, of the Greenhouse effect. Yet claiming
potential harm to the economy, the White House today confirmed it will
abandon the global accord to curb emissions of carbon dioxide, the number
one Greenhouse gas."
Christine Whitman, EPA Administrator: "And
there isn't a single industrialized country in the world that has
endorsed that particular treaty."
Roberts put the decision into a larger image of
an anti-environment administration: "It is the latest rollback of
Clinton era environmental standards from water quality to mining
regulations. The White House may even give free reign back to snowmobiles
in Yellowstone Park."
Horrors. Out of control snowmobilers.
Roberts then played a clip from Democratic
House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt: "The new President came to town
saying he would change the tone and change the climate in Washington. I
guess we didn't realize it was the actual climate that he wanted to
change."
Without bothering to mention the rejection of the
treaty by over 40 Democratic Senators, Roberts relayed the Democratic spin
of the day: "Democrats and environmentalists put on a show on Capitol
Hill today, warning the President not to reverse another Clinton rule that
keeps sixty million acres of national forest off limits to development or
go ahead with plans to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge."
Bill Meadows, Wilderness Society President:
"The American people are asking for a change. We do not want these
regulations rolled back, and we're gonna make this a political
issue."
Roberts measured appropriate policy against a
liberal activist standard: "The White House rejects charges it is
environmentally unfriendly, pointing to new regulations on diesel
emissions and its intent to crack down on pollutants that cause acid
rain."
Whitman: "This is an administration that's
going to surprise everybody with how much progress we're going to
make."
Roberts concluded by again endorsing the liberal
premise that man is fueling global warming, as he warned: "It's not
just Democrats and environmental groups that are piling on. Tomorrow the
Chancellor of Germany will be at the White House to ask the President just
what the world's largest polluter plans to do about global
warming."
-- NBC Nightly News. Tom Brokaw announced:
"Now to another controversial decision on the environment from the
Bush administration today, which announced that the President considers a
worldwide treaty on global warming worthless. The United States, after
all, was a leading force for that 1997 Kyoto Treaty, which is aimed at
limiting Greenhouse gases that are thought to be a major cause of global
warming. NBC's Campbell Brown joins me now from the White House with
this latest battle."
Brown portrayed the move as a further
abandonment of a campaign promise: "Tom, tonight the White House is
calling the global warming treaty bad for the economy, but the decision to
abandon it is giving new ammunition to Democrats. After first promising
during the campaign to set limits on carbon dioxide emissions, a key
contributor to global warming, then reversing his campaign promise, the
President today takes the reversal a step further, pulling the U.S. out of
a landmark international global warming treaty."
Without telling viewers how every Senate Democrat
who voted had voted for the resolution condemning the treaty, Brown played
the same soundbite as had CBS from Gephardt: "The new President came
to town saying he would change the tone and change the climate in
Washington. I guess we didn't realize it was the actual climate that he
wanted to change."
Brown painted Whitman as a victim: "An
embarrassing decision for Bush's EPA administrator, who sources say was
essentially left out of the loop, and only weeks earlier, based on
Bush's campaign pledge, was telling U.S. allies Bush supported limits on
carbon dioxide emissions. And yet Whitman is now taking the heat for the
President on this and other controversial decisions. Today on Capitol Hill
defending the EPA's move to postpone setting new standards for
cancer-causing arsenic in drinking water, while promising the environment
remains an administration priority."
Following the same Whitman clip as CBS ran
("This is an administration that's going to surprise everybody with
how much progress we're going to make"), Brown's conclusion also
matched the theme with which Roberts ended:
"The outcry over the President's decision
on global warming is not just coming from Democrats, but also U.S. allies,
and the President is expected to hear more complaints tomorrow when he
meets with German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder."
Now contrast the CBS and NBC spins with the
angle from which FNC approached the same story. Tony Snow, filling in as
anchor of Special Report with Brit Hume, conveyed basic facts skipped by
the other networks:
"President Bush is following through on a
campaign pledge by putting a spike in an initiative strongly linked to Al
Gore. The Environmental Protection Agency has announced that the United
States will not implement a 1997 global warming treaty signed in Kyoto
Japan. The Senate had voted 95 to nothing against the Kyoto Accord anyway
and the President's move simply seals the deal or non-deal. Despite all
this some Democrats are vowing to fight."
Reporter Jim Angle explained how the treaty
would not force reductions on big countries like China, but make the U.S.
cut carbon dioxide output drastically by 2008. Following clips of Gephardt
and Joe Lieberman blasting Bush's decision, Angle pointed out:
"The administration is formally abandoning
the agreement, but officials argued they aren't killing the treaty, that
it died a natural death some time ago and they're just burying it."
Senator Don Nickles outside the White House:
"The Senate has already spoken on the Kyoto treaty and we had 95
votes that said that we wouldn't ratify the Kyoto treaty because it
didn't apply to all countries."
Angle elaborated: "In fact, the vote was 95
to nothing. No wonder Vice President Gore, who signed the treaty, said the
administration wouldn't even ask the Senate to ratify it without
changes."
Al Gore in 1997: "We will not submit this
agreement for ratification until key developing nations participate in
this effort."
2
Dan Rather
used House passage of Bush's budget as another opportunity to expound on
how Bush's tax cut plan is being financed on the backs of children.
Rather asserted the March 28 CBS Evening News:
"On Capitol Hill, the Republican-controlled
House voted mostly along party lines tonight to pass President Bush's
federal budget blueprint. This includes his big tax cut plan, partly
bankrolled, critics say, through cuts in many federal aid programs for
children and education."
3
"Few
thought campaign finance reform would get even this far," exclaimed
an ecstatic World News Tonight anchor Elizabeth Vargas to Linda Douglass
who confirmed "that is absolutely true" before she held out hope
that the media dream will be realized: "People on both sides of this
fight are now saying that John McCain's legislation appears to have a
very good chance of passing."
Douglass declared that "if this passes
the President has indicated that he will sign it." But NBC's David
Gregory offered more insightful analysis of White House strategy as he
observed: "By pledging not to veto the bill, Mr. Bush can call the
Democrats' bluff." NBC Nightly News also ran a full piece by Lisa
Myers on the evils of soft money in which Senator Zell Miller claimed to
feel like "a cheap prostitute on a busy day." As she did the
night before, Myers again referred to "a system many Americans find
corrupt."
Some notes about Wednesday night, March 28,
coverage of campaign finance by ABC, CBS and NBC:
-- ABC's World News Tonight. Fill-in anchor
Elizabeth Vargas was excited about prospects for more regulation and
limits on free speech: "In the Senate, another major victory for John
McCain's efforts at campaign finance reform. Senators passed an
important amendment to his legislation. It raised the amount of so-called
hard money a person can give politicians in a calendar year. We're
joined now by ABC's Linda Douglass on Capitol Hill. Linda, few thought
campaign finance reform would get even this far."
Douglass agreed: "That is absolutely
true. Everyone is surprised by this. People on both sides of this fight
are now saying that John McCain's legislation appears to have a very
good chance of passing. This is a bill, of course, that would ban huge
unregulated contributions from corporations and labor unions,
contributions McCain says are corrupting. What they voted to do today was
just raise those individual limits of contributions that go to campaigns
that are already regulated by the government. So this was a big hurdle.
They may vote on all of this tomorrow. There are other battles ahead, but
if this passes the President has indicated that he will sign it."
-- CBS Evening News. Bob Schieffer employed
campaign finance "reform" advocacy language in describing soft
money: "Dan, the campaign to outlaw this soft money, the unregulated,
unrestricted backdoor contributions to political parties, took an unusual
and ironic twist today. In order to smooth the way for getting rid of soft
money, reformers agreed to raise the limits on individual contributions to
individual candidates."
-- NBC Nightly News. David Gregory explained
how Bush promised to sign reform if it passes, but that the White House
doubts Democrats will support McCain-Feingold in the end: "By
pledging not to veto the bill, Mr. Bush can call the Democrats'
bluff."
Ari Fleischer, White House Press Secretary:
"In the past people had free votes, they knew that they could posture
on campaign finance reform because it didn't matter. Those days are
over."
Gregory added: "Especially since Democrats,
who finally have matched the Republicans at fundraising, need soft money
more than ever. In the end campaign finance could again get bogged down in
Congress and the White House believes the Democrats could be behind its
demise. But then at least the President wouldn't be blamed for killing
it."
Next, Lisa Myers looked at the evils of soft
money fundraising, what Tom Brokaw called the "addiction to that form
of campaign cash."
Myers focused on Georgia Democratic Senator
Zell Miller and how he feels that over his forty year career in politics
he's moved from "shaking hands to shaking people down" with an
implied promise to look after their interests. He told Myers that when
spending hours making phone calls asking for money he feels like "a
cheap prostitute on a busy day."
Myers concluded: "Everyone agrees that if
the Senate vote were secret soft money would stay by a big margin. But the
vote isn't secret and many Senators are afraid to be seen supporting a
system many Americans find corrupt."
4
The ABC
News/Washington Post poll released Monday night which found that 58
percent think Bush's tax cut plan is "about right" (48
percent) or "too small" (10 percent), a finding World News
Tonight ignored on Monday night, also determined that 63 percent give a
"high priority" to a tax cut. But on Tuesday's Good Morning
America Antonio Mora, who also skipped the support for Bush's specific
plan, quickly downplayed the relevance: "That's significantly fewer
than say the same about Social Security [on screen graphic showed 83%] or
education [89%]."
It also turns out that support for a bigger
tax cut than offered by Bush is even greater than I reported in the March
28 CyberAlert as twice as many who said the Bush tax cut plan was
"about right" in size "prefer" it be bigger as
"prefer" that it be smaller.
The March 28 CyberAlert reported: "An ABC
News/Washington Post poll discovered 58 percent think Bush's tax cut
plan is 'about right' or 'too small' while just 36 percent
consider it 'too big,' but instead of reporting that, on Monday night
ABC's Terry Moran stressed how the public is 'becoming a little
skeptical about some aspects of his leadership' as he has 'an anemic
rating' for handling the economy and 'by a margin of two to one, 61 to
31 percent, Americans polled in our polls say that the President favors
large business corporations over the interests of ordinary working
people.'" For more details, go to:
http://archive.mrc.org/news/cyberalert/2001/cyb20010328.asp#3
The poll asked: "As you may know, Bush
has proposed cutting taxes by one-point-six trillion dollars over 10
years. Do you think this tax cut is too big, too small or about
right?" In reviewing the survey results as listed on the Washington
Post Web site I noticed a follow-up inquiry to the 48 percent who had
answered "about right." The ABC News/Washington Post poll takers
then asked them: "Would you prefer it to be bigger, smaller, or
what?" While 54 percent stuck with their "about right"
response, 29 percent preferred that it be "bigger" compared to
half as many, 15 percent, who wanted it to be "smaller."
For the Post's complete rundown of the
survey results, go to:
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/polls/vault/stories/data032701.htm
Tuesday morning, March 27, MRC analyst Jessica
Anderson noticed that GMA, like World News Tonight the night before,
skipped how ABC's poll discovered majority support for a tax cut the
size of Bush's or larger. News reader Antonio Mora did pick up on
another finding, but quickly dismissed it:
"A day after he said the economy is
sputtering, President Bush is delivering a speech the White House bills as
a major economic policy address. Mr. Bush will deliver the speech in
Kalamazoo, Michigan, at the end of a three-state swing to push his tax cut
plan. Despite talking about the economy's current weakness, the President
also said it is fundamentally strong. Meanwhile, a new ABC News/Washington
Post poll finds 63 percent of those surveyed give high priority to a tax
cut, but that's significantly fewer than say the same about Social
Security [on screen: 83%] or education [89%]."
5
Last
Saturday night C-SPAN showed CNN founder Ted Turner's address to a forum
at the Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachusetts which took place, I
believe, on March 13. During his rambling hour, the Vice Chairman of AOL
Time Warner repeated many of his usual liberal pronouncements, but in
reviewing the tape MRC analyst Jessica Anderson took down some opinions
you may not have heard before.
Turner dismissed any menace from North Korea,
claiming "they pose about as much threat to us as an ant does to an
elephant. I mean, anybody that's worried about North Korea is really,
really sick"; made fun of Ronald Reagan as the "conqueror of
Grenada"; and denigrated missile defense as "the dumbest thing I
ever heard of and it doesn't work either." He went on to denounce
President Bush's defense policies: "We have an administration
that's committed to spending more money on defense and they have to have
ideas on how to do it. The military industrial complex backed this
administration to the hilt and they're getting paid back with big
contracts."
Turner's quotes in full:
-- On North Korea on Reagan invading Grenada:
"Now, let me tell you something about the armed forces and how safe
things are, okay? Yesterday, we dropped a bomb on our own troops over in
Iraq, okay? Remember that? And just a couple of weeks ago, the submarine
came up and sank the Japanese -- we're doing, our military is causing
more damage to ourselves and to our allies than it is to -- and besides,
who are our enemies? North Korea? They have an economy that's smaller
than the city of Detroit. I mean, they pose about as much threat to us as
an ant does to an elephant. I mean, anybody that's worried about North
Korea is really, really sick. I mean, I'm not even worried about Iraq,
to tell you the truth. We could blow 'em away anytime we want to, you
know? And that goes for any other country in the developing world, you
know.
"I mean, I remember I was in California
hiking in the woods one day and I came upon a small cabin that was
uninhabited, and I walked inside just to see what was in there, and they
had a picture of Ronald Reagan when he was young....And he was in a World
War I outfit, you know, like -- he looked like Smokey the Bear, you know,
with his little World War I army sergeant hat on with his hands on his
hips. You all don't remember this, but the caption on the bottom of the
photograph was, 'The Conqueror of Grenada.' You know, we invaded
Grenada about 20 years ago when Reagan was President. I don't know why.
They thought some students were dangerous because they had a Marxist
government in Grenada, you know, I don't know, population of about 200
people or so."
-- Missile defense: "We could spend the
whole hour, or even more, on missile defense. First of all, if you want to
be safe from nuclear weapons, the best way to do it is very simple,
let's just get rid of 'em. Let's get a treaty together and let's
have the nuclear powers or all the countries have a debate at the United
Nations and vote to get rid of 'em and then let's get rid of 'em.
That's how to be safe from nuclear weapons, not building this nuclear
missile defense. I mean, first of all, I mean, if a rogue state or a
terrorist is going to bomb the United States with their one nuclear
weapon, they're going to bring it in in a van through Canada; they're
going to, you know, and like Timothy McVeigh did with Oklahoma City did.
You know, you can put a bomb in a truck or you can put it in a little boat
and bring it into New York Harbor or into Boston Harbor and blow Boston
and New York up, because a missile, a ballistic missile, the only
countries that have those are the most sophisticated countries. You can
tell exactly where they're coming from, so, you know, it's the dumbest
thing I ever heard of and it doesn't work either, that's the other
thing.=
"It's just, you know, we have an
administration that's committed to spending more money on defense and
they have to have ideas on how to do it. The military industrial complex
backed this administration to the hilt and they're getting paid back
with big contracts, our money which is being wasted in that particular
area, in my opinion."
It's been a busy foot in mouth month for
Turner. Some earlier CyberAlert items on his latest outbursts:
-- Ted Turner to attendees at Bernard Shaw's
retirement party on Ash Wednesday who had smudges on their foreheads, as
reported by FNC's Brit Hume: "What are you, a bunch of Jesus
freaks? You ought to be working for Fox." Go to: http://archive.mrc.org/news/cyberalert/2001/cyb20010307.asp#3
-- Upset by Ted Turner's "Jesus
freaks" remark, CNN Moneyline co-anchor Stuart Varney left CNN. The
New York Post added: "Insiders say Varney believes the cable network
has strayed from its middle-of-the road political coverage -- and has
slanted heavily towards Democratic party positions." Go to: http://archive.mrc.org/news/cyberalert/2001/cyb20010315.asp#5
-- Ted Turner declared the West "did not
win the Cold War," claimed that "without the U.N. we wouldn't
have made it through the Cold War" and argued that "the wrong
man is President." But CNN's new chief insisted that FNC is
"fairly extreme" while CNN is "right down the middle."
Go to: http://archive.mrc.org/news/cyberalert/2001/cyb20010319.asp#4
That last one includes a RealPlayer video clip
of Turner claiming "the wrong man is President" as shown by FNC. --Brent Baker
>>>
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