"No Way to Bankroll Big Tax Cuts"; "Staunch Conservative" Nominees; Drugs from the Left; "Democrats" Vs. "Conservatives"
1) Dan Rather opened the CBS Evening News by conveying
only how "critics say" Bush's budget "doesn't add
up" because "there's no way to bankroll big tax cuts while at
the same time saving Social Security, providing prescription drug coverage
for seniors, and spending more on education, defense and other
programs."
2) Despite the inclusion of two Clinton judges,
Wednesday's morning shows insisted all eleven of Bush's judicial picks
were "conservative." CBS's Julie Chen identified them as
"all staunch conservatives." Dan Rather put the best face on
liberal opponents: "Senate Democrats say they'll oppose confirming
anyone selected primarily for ideology instead of qualifications."
3) CBS took on Bush's drug policy from the left. Dan
Rather rued how Bush had selected "two tough-minded conservatives to
command the long-running war on drugs," a choice "some suspect
that will mean less help for Americans, mostly young ones, trying to kick
addiction." John Roberts focused on "new concerns among the
treatment community."
4)Looking at a possible deal on the tax cut ABC's Linda
Douglass saw no liberal players, just "Democrats" offering
compromise and "conservatives" who are "unhappy" about
a smaller cut in the top rate and "don't like" the idea of a
new ten percent rate.
5) An unusual view aired by CBS. Cynthia Bowers noted how
"some" believe higher gas prices are "mostly the result of
regulation run amok. This country now runs on more than forty blends of
fuel. The energy industry says the fix would be to simplify the rules and
let every car burn essentially the same unleaded."
6) FNC's Brit Hume highlighted the MRC's study which
found that in 51 global warming stories "only seven made any
reference to global warming skeptics and six of those references were here
on the Fox News Channel" while "ABC, CBS and NBC completely
excluded the views of skeptics of global warming theories."
7) Interviewing Florida Governor Jeb Bush, CBS's Jane
Clayson wouldn't let go of the idea that Al Gore really won the state
and NBC's Katie Couric took another shot at Katherine Harris: "Many
people questioned her objectivity last November."
8) Letterman's "Top Ten Things Never Before Said By
a United States Senator."
9) Job openings at the MRC for a News Analyst and a
Writer/Researcher.
1
Not even
a pretense of balance from Dan Rather as he opened Wednesday's CBS
Evening News by leading only with how "critics say" Bush's
budget which passed in the House "doesn't add up" because
"there's no way to bankroll big tax cuts while at the same time
saving Social Security, providing prescription drug coverage for seniors,
and spending more on education, defense and other programs." Rather
referred to it as "a blueprint that leaves out the fine print."
In full, here's how Rather began the May 9
CBS Evening News, as transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
"Good evening. Congress is pushing toward
final passage of a slightly modified version of President Bush's budget
and tax cut plan. Now comes the hard part -- actually putting the tax cuts
into effect while making the numbers add up and holding down spending.
Many critics say this plan doesn't add up, that there's no way to
bankroll big tax cuts while at the same time saving Social Security,
providing prescription drug coverage for seniors, and spending more on
education, defense and other programs. CBS's Bob Schieffer on Capitol
Hill has more tonight about a blueprint that leaves out the fine
print."
Not surprisingly, Schieffer's story was no
more balanced.
2
Despite
the fact that President Bush on Wednesday, as expected, nominated for
judgeships two blacks who were previously nominated by President Clinton,
Wednesday's morning shows insisted all eleven to be named were
"conservative." CBS's Julie Chen identified them as "all
staunch conservatives" while NBC's Ann Curry referred to
"eleven conservative judges."
Wednesday evening, on the broadcast networks, only
the NBC Nightly News outlined how while the group is "mostly
conservative," it includes two Clinton nominees and is also diverse
by racial, ethnic and gender standards. Instead, while Dan Rather avoided
the conservative label, he put the best face on liberal opposition:
"Senate Democrats say they'll oppose confirming anyone selected
primarily for ideology instead of qualifications."
-- On the May 9 Good Morning America, ABC news
reader Antonio Mora maintained Bush's list "is dominated by
conservatives," but he conceded it also includes "two judges
first nominated by President Clinton."
-- Julie Chen on CBS's The Early Show:
"President Bush makes his first federal judicial appointments today,
11 judges in all. All staunch conservatives. Senate Democrats are
threatening to block some of the nominees."
-- Ann Curry on NBC's Today: "President
Bush sends his first judicial nominations to Congress today and he is
expected to name 11 conservative judges to federal appeals court
posts."
-- ABC's World News Tonight, which ran a
full story the night before (see the May 9 CyberAlert), held itself on May
9 to this short item read by Peter Jennings: "At the White House
today President Bush nominated eleven men and women to become federal
judges. It is a mostly conservative group of lawyers and judges who must
all be approved by the Senate. Democrats are expected to oppose some of
the nominees."
-- Dan Rather on the CBS Evening News:
"President Bush today named his first eleven choices to be federal
appeals court judges. Most of the nominees are little known outside
judicial circles. Senate Democrats say they'll oppose confirming anyone
selected primarily for ideology instead of qualifications. They already
object to Terrence Boyle, a former aide to Republican Senator Jesse Helms
of North Carolina."
-- Only the NBC Nightly News aired a full
report on Wednesday night. David Gregory pointed out how Bush had held out
an "olive branch" to Democrats by choosing two Clinton names. He
described the group: "The eleven make up a mostly conservative but
diverse, and experts say, highly qualified group. Three women, one
Hispanic and two African-Americans."
3
Dan
Rather bemoaned how President Bush selected "two tough-minded
conservatives to command the long-running war on drugs," a choice
"some suspect that will mean less help for Americans, mostly young
ones, trying to kick addiction."
Immediately after his short item on Bush's
judicial nominations, Rather intoned on the May 9 CBS Evening News:
"Also today, the White House said the President has chosen what he
considers to be two tough-minded conservatives to command the long-running
war on drugs. As CBS News White House correspondent John Roberts reports,
some suspect that will mean less help for Americans, mostly young ones,
trying to kick addiction."
Roberts took on the issue from the liberal
point view, worrying: "On this day, there are new concerns among the
treatment community that the President's pick of Congressman Asa
Hutchinson, a central figure in the Clinton impeachment trial, to head the
DEA, and conservative John Walters as Drug Czar, indicate a hard-line drug
policy where rehabilitation will clearly take a back seat to
enforcement."
Ethan Nadelmann, Drug Policy Foundation Director:
"The two of them firmly represent the belief that drug policy should
have nothing to do with science or public health. It's all about
punishing people for their sins."
Roberts: "The White House today declared
that the President is committed to fighting the war on drugs. Officials
point out he has proposed to increase by almost $200 million next year,
funding for treatment and education. But Mr. Bush would spend five times
that for new counter-narcotics operations to target supply."
Roberts did go on to give a soundbite to
Hutchinson, but that did not balance the overall one-sidedness of his
piece.
4
On
Capitol Hill, as seen through the prism of ABC News reporter Linda
Douglass, there are only "Democrats" and
"conservatives." In a Wednesday night look at a possible
compromise on the tax cut she saw no liberal players, just
"Democrats" offering compromise and "conservatives"
who are "unhappy" about a smaller reduction in the top rate and
"don't like" the idea of creating a new ten percent rate.
From Capitol Hill on the May 9 World News
Tonight, Douglass told anchor Peter Jennings:
"Sources from both parties are telling us
that President Bush will not get what he wants when it comes to cutting
the top income tax rate. Now he wants to cut that top rate from 39.6
percent down to 33 percent. Democrats have been saying that gives too much
money to the rich and a compromise is emerging that would bring it down to
about 36 percent. Conservatives are very unhappy about that. There also
appears Peter to be agreement on expanding the amount, increasing the
amount of income covered by the 15 percent tax bracket, that's the
lowest tax bracket right now. But Democrats are also pushing to add a new
lower bracket, ten percent. Some Republicans are supporting that.
Conservatives don't like that either. They are saying in the House and
the Senate they don't want a tax cut that's tilted toward the low
income scale. They want the people who pay the most to get the biggest tax
cut."
(ABC should get some credit for leading
Wednesday night with an issue that's under the radar: How President
Bush, to the anger of normal allies in the property rights movement, plans
to push a policy to allow the federal government to expropriate private
land through eminent domain to allow for the construction of new
inter-state power lines.)
5
Surprise
of the night: CBS gave air time to the view that all the environmental
rules requiring special gasoline formulas for different regions are what
is fueling higher pump prices.
After offering anecdotal evidence about higher
gas pump prices and how a refinery fire in Philadelphia spiked the
wholesale price, on Wednesday's CBS Evening News reporter Cynthia Bowers
observed, as transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Some groups,
including the oil industry, believe the problem is mostly the result of
regulation run amok. This country now runs on more than forty blends of
fuel. The energy industry says the fix would be to simplify the rules and
let every car burn essentially the same unleaded."
Ed Murphy, American Petroleum Institute:
"The answer to the boutique fuel problem is to eliminate oxygenate
mandate in the law."
Bowers elaborated: "Government rules mandate
that in big cities with big air pollution problems the gasoline must
contain an additive, or oxygenate, to keep the air cleaner. Most of the
country chose the chemical MTBE, but the corn belt uses ethanol. Still
other cities like Atlanta use different mixtures, all of which isolates
certain regions to certain refineries and means a problem like the one in
Philadelphia or the recent fire in California can cause immediate price
hikes."
6
Liberal
uniformity on the environment is much more common than CBS's unusual
take detailed in item #5 above, a recent MRC study found. Wednesday night
on FNC Brit Hume relayed the key findings of the MRC's study.
During the "Grapevine" segment on
the May 9 Special Report with Brit Hume he informed FNC viewers: "The
Media Research Center looked at the coverage of global warming from
Inauguration Day to Earth Day, April 22nd, and found of the 51 stories
only seven made any reference to global warming skeptics and six of those
references were here on the Fox News Channel, one on CNN. The Center said
ABC, CBS and NBC completely excluded the views of skeptics of global
warming theories advanced by environmentalists."
Hume was citing the Special Report released
earlier this week by the MRC's Free Market Project, titled,
"Clamoring for Kyoto: The Networks' One-Sided Coverage of Global
Warming."
To read the executive summary of the report
written by Rich Noyes, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/specialreports/fmp/2001/globalwarmingexec.html
To read the complete report online with graphs
and illustrative RealPlayer video clips, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/specialreports/fmp/2001/globalwarming.html
7
The
networks won't let go of the idea that Al Gore really won in Florida and
that Katherine Harris's integrity is suspect.
Interviewing Florida Governor Jeb Bush on
Wednesday morning about his state's new law to reform the voting system
and eliminate punch card machines, CBS's Jane Clayson wanted to know if
the reforms had been in effect last year "do you think that Al Gore
would be President today?" NBC's Katie Couric noted how Harris is
will drafting new rules and then asserted: "Many people questioned
her objectivity last November."
-- Jane Clayson to Bush on the Early Show, as
noted by MRC analyst Brian Boyd: "Taken as a whole a lot of these
reforms are ones that Democrats wanted during the recount process. I know
it's a touchy question, but had these, if these reforms had been in
effect do you think that Al Gore would be President today?"
When Bush pointed out how media recounts this
year disprove that, Clayson countered: "Well, he came out ahead in
the under-votes and there's still the over-votes to be counted which will
be done."
-- Katie Couric to Bush on Today, as caught by
MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens: "The bill also requires a machine
recount if the margin of victory is half of one percent or less and a
manual recount if it's a fourth of a percent or less. Now the person who
will be drafting the rules for those hand counts is Florida Secretary of
State Katherine Harris. Many people questioned her objectivity last
November. Why do you think she's the right person to do this?"
8
From the
May 9 Late Show with David Letterman, as read on tape in a Senate office
by actual Senators, the "Top Ten Things Never Before Said By a United
States Senator." Copyright 2001 by Worldwide Pants. Inc.
10. "Wake me when Senator Windbag is finished"
(From Connecticut, Senator Christopher Dodd)
9. "Last night Strom Thurmond and I got absolutely wrecked at the
Eminem concert"
(From Indiana, Senator Evan Bayh)
8. "All press inquiries should go to my pet chimpanzee,
Ricky"
(From Pennsylvania, Senator Arlen Specter)
7. "I promise to be the best senator I can be for the next 6
years...or 4 years...or however many years a Senator serves"
(From Maine, Senator Olympia Snowe)
6. "Mr. President -- I yield the floor to the honorable Senator
Sock"
(From New York, Senator Charles Schumer)
5. "President Bush is always using a lot of big words that I just
don't understand"
(From Delaware, Senator Joseph Biden)
4. "I'm honest, bright, a hard worker, and I served my country
honorably in the military -- guess I'm never going to be President"
(From Indiana, Senator Richard Lugar)
3. "I'm going to raise your taxes so I can buy myself a sweet
Camaro"
(From Connecticut, Senator Joseph Lieberman)
2. "My day breaks up like this: 10 minutes doing Senator stuff, 9
hours Sony Playstation"
(From New York, Senator Hillary Clinton)
1. "The House of Representatives is a bunch of dorks"
(From Iowa, Senator Tom Harkin)
Other than Harkin, what happened to all the Senators from West of Terre
Haute?
9
Help
write CyberAlerts. Join the MRC news analysis team. Two job openings at
the Media Research Center in Alexandria, Virginia:
-- News Analyst. The Media Research
Center (MRC), a non-profit foundation in Old Town, Alexandria, Virginia
which is the leading conservative group documenting liberal media bias,
has an opening for a News Analyst in its News Division. News analysts
review magazines and newspapers for biased stories and monitor television
network news, entering summaries of news stories into a computerized
database. News analysts also perform research tasks and contribute writing
to the MRC's publications, including a weekly fax report and daily
e-mail dispatch.
Candidates must have a thorough knowledge of
current events, display a solid understanding of conservative reasoning on
political issues, have an interest in the news media and demonstrate an
ability to write clearly and concisely. A current events and news media
personality identification quiz will be given to candidates at the time of
an interview.
Candidates must work at the MRC's
Alexandria, Virginia offices which are eight blocks from the King Street
Metro stop on the Yellow and Blue lines. This is an entry-level position.
Salary: Low $20s.
To apply, fax resume to the attention of Brent
Baker, the MRC's Vice President: (703) 683-9736. Or, e-mail your resume
to: bbaker@mediaresearch.org
- Writer/Researcher. The Media Research
Center (MRC), a non-profit foundation in Old Town, Alexandria, Virginia
which is the leading conservative group documenting liberal media bias,
has an opening for a Writer/Researcher in its News Division.
This position entails researching and writing
columns and op-ed pieces for senior level staff, contributing to a daily
e-mail report, writing a monthly membership newsletter, researching and
writing reports documenting media bias as well as writing and editing
major reports and books. Depending on ability, may also serve as a MRC
spokesman in radio and TV interviews.
Candidates must closely follow current events,
display a solid knowledge of conservative reasoning on political issues,
have a thorough understanding of liberal media bias and an ability to
recognize it. In addition, candidates must be self-starters who are able
to develop topic ideas own their own. Candidate should have several years
of experience in a position which required daily or near-daily writing and
should be able to produce quality pieces which need little editing. A
current events and news media personality identification quiz will be
given to candidates at the time of an interview.
Candidates must work at the MRC's
Alexandria, Virginia offices which are eight blocks from the King Street
Metro stop on the Yellow and Blue lines. This is a mid-level position with
a salary starting in the low to mid- $30s, but a higher salary will be
considered for candidates with additional experience and a demonstrated
ability to excel in the position.
To apply, fax resume to the attention of Brent
Baker, the MRC's Vice President: (703) 683-9736. Or, e-mail your resume
to: bbaker@mediaresearch.org.
-- Brent Baker
>>>
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