Upset by Thanks to Congress & Bush; Ferraro a "Hero to Millions"; Anti-Soft Money Ban Ruling Skipped; Couric Dated Clinton Spinner
1) A letter from the IRS informing taxpayers that thanks
to Congress and the President they will be getting a tax cut disturbed
CBS. "Democrats who didn't vote for the tax bill pointed out that
the mailing will cost over $20 million and called the letter shamelessly
political," Bill Plante intoned.
2) "Australia has now joined the U.S. in rejecting
the Kyoto global warming treaty and for similar reasons," FNC Brit
Hume uniquely reported Tuesday night.
3) Geraldine Ferraro's 1984 popularity exaggerated.
"It seems it was just a few years ago when Geraldine Ferraro became a
hero to millions of Americans," gushed NBC's Ann Curry. CNN's
Bill Schneider insisted that "people were genuinely excited" by
her candidacy in 1984 as "women found themselves caught up in the
thrill of it all."
4) An enthusiastic review from Geraldo Rivera for Alan
Dershowitz's new book, Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked
Election 2000. Rivera boasted it "makes a point that I firmly
believe" and he called it Dershowitz's "best" book.
5) When a federal district judge issued a ruling which
advanced a liberal cause, forcing an employer to cover prescription
contraceptives for females, ABC, CBS and NBC all ran full stories even
though the decision impacted only one employer. But when another federal
judge ruled unconstitutional Alaska's ban on soft money, thus
potentially undermining the media's cherished McCain-Feingold bill, the
networks ignored it.
6) "Gene Sperling and Katie Couric's top-secret
dating adventures." Last year Couric dated Clinton's economic
adviser, Tuesday's Washington Post revealed.
1
The
latest scandal given credence by the CBS Evening News: Letters from the
IRS to taxpayers which inform recipients that they will be getting a tax
cut thanks Congress and President Bush. Bill Plante highlighted how
"Democrats who didn't vote for the tax bill pointed out that the
mailing will cost over $20 million and called the letter shamelessly
political, suggesting it sounded more like a sweepstakes promotion."
Anchor John Roberts introduced the June 19
story, as transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
"You've got mail or soon will have from
the IRS. But don't worry, it tells you about your coming tax rebate
check and who deserves your thanks. So who approved the message in this
mass-mailing at taxpayer expense? Bill Plante has the bottom line for
you."
Plante began: "Even before the check is
in the mail, the Internal Revenue Service will be sending out a letter
designed to make certain taxpayers know who should get the credit. 'We
are pleased to inform you,' says the mailing, 'that the United States
Congress passed and President George W. Bush signed the law which provides
immediate tax relief in 2001 and long-term tax relief for the years to
come.' The letter then tells each recipient how much money to expect and
reminds them that this is 'just the first installment.' Democrats who
didn't vote for the tax bill pointed out that the mailing will cost over
$20 million and called the letter shamelessly political, suggesting it
sounded more like a sweepstakes promotion."
Senator Charles Schumer: "Quote, 'You need
to take now additional steps. Your check will be mailed to you.' Thanks,
Mr. President."
Plante: "The President's spokesman
acknowledged the White House had signed off on the wording of the letter
but said it would alert people to an unexpected windfall."
Ari Fleischer: "In the IRS's judgement,
it's going to cut down the number of surprise phone calls they get from
taxpayers who say, 'Why all of a sudden do I receive a check?'"
Plante: "The IRS says Congress told them to
send the notification letter, but it didn't tell them what to say. The
IRS worked that out with the White House. And just to make sure you
don't miss the point, there'll be a short message about tax relief
right on the check itself."
Maybe there wouldn't be any need for a
letter if CBS News and the other networks had been less
politically-motivated in their coverage. Imagine all those who will be
surprised to learn they are getting a tax cut after hearing for months
about how the cut is skewed to the wealthy.
2
President
Bush now has company in rejecting the Kyoto treaty. Unlike the Europeans
who just complain about the lack of U.S. effort to ratify the global
warming treaty while they ignore it, Australia's Prime Minister has
rejected the treaty, FNC's Brit Hume disclosed.
On Monday's Special Report with Brit Hume,
during the "Grapevine" segment, Hume relayed:
"Australia has now joined the U.S. in
rejecting the Kyoto global warming treaty and for similar reasons. Prime
Minister John Howard said that because the treaty exempts poorer
countries, such as China or India, quote 'if you've got a dirty
industry which is not allowed in a country like Australia but is allowed
in another country, it will shift to the other country and there will be
no net reduction in greenhouse gasses,' end quote. Australia, though
small, is the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gasses per
capita."
3
The sad
news that 1984 Democratic vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro is
battling a terminal form of cancer, first revealed Tuesday in an interview
on NBC's Today with Jamie Gangel, led another NBC reporter to fondly
recall how Ferraro "became a hero to millions of Americans" and
to some re-writing of history by CNN's Bill Schneider who exaggerated
her popularity.
At the top of Tuesday's Today, fill-in
co-host Ann Curry betrayed her approval of the pick of the liberal
Democratic Congresswoman by Walter Mondale, as she gushed: "Good
morning everybody. It seems it was just a few years ago when Geraldine
Ferraro became a hero to millions of Americans, particularly American
women."
On Tuesday's Inside Politics CNN political
analyst Bill Schneider insisted that in 1984 "people were genuinely
excited" by her candidacy as "women found themselves caught up
in the thrill of it all."
More like journalists were "caught up in
the thrill of it all" -- and seem to be again.
Schneider began his June 19 piece:
"Before the 1984 Democratic convention,
Walter Mondale was under a lot of pressure from women's rights activists
to put a woman on the ticket. If he does that, cynics said, Mondale will
look like he's caving in to another special interest. He did name a
woman, Geraldine Ferraro, Democratic Congresswoman from Queens, New York.
But the reaction was not what the cynics expected. People were genuinely
excited....Women found themselves caught up in the thrill of it all,
Democrats were over the Moon."
Later, Schneider asserted: "At one point
in the vice presidential debate that year, her opponent stepped over the
line."
Vice President George H.W. Bush: "But let me
help you with the difference, Miss Ferraro, between Iran and the embassy
in Lebanon."
Schneider: "Ferraro called him on it."
Ferraro: "Let me just say first of all that
I almost resent, Vice President Bush, your patronizing attitude, that you
have to teach me about foreign policy."
If that's a patronizing attitude then many
reporters are currently displaying it toward President Bush on the same
topic.
4
To no
one's surprise, Geraldo Rivera announced Monday night that Alan
Dershowitz's new book, Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked
Election 2000, "makes a point that I firmly believe." Rivera
called it the Harvard professor's "best" non-fiction book as
he approvingly read aloud several excerpts about the "history-making
heist."
MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens took down some
highlights from the June 18 Rivera Live on CNBC:
-- "Across the nation in New York City,
Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz, the prolific author whose latest
blockbuster is called Supreme Injustice. I, I think it's a great book.
I'm sure that it will raise the hackles of most Republicans but it makes
a point that I firmly believe and backs it up with, well, you'll
see."
-- "Did the Supreme Court of the United
States rob the American people of their duly elected President? I was
there when they argued. Yes, says Alan Dershowitz. That history-making
heist is exactly what happened when the justices issued their highly
controversial Bush vs. Gore ruling last December. The 5-4 decision stopped
the Florida ballot recount as you recall, put George W. Bush in the White
House. And according to Professor Dershowitz forever tarnished the exalted
reputation of this nation's highest court. Now the professor backs up
his charges in this hard-hitting and maybe his best, certainly in the
non-fiction area, Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked Election
2000."
-- "Before we go much further, here's
what I think from a lawyer's point of view. The book's most important
sentence or sentences. Now after noting that the Court said that its
decision was quote, 'limited to present circumstances only,' Professor
Dershowitz writes: 'The purpose of the remarkable cautionary line, which
is virtually an admission that this decision does not fit into a
continuing,' uh, 'line of continuing precedence was to cobble together
a majority for Bush consisting of justices who almost never find equal
protection violations, except perhaps when white people are discriminated
against by affirmative action, and who do not want a broad
equal-protection decision waiting out there to be used as a precedent in
other cases in which the result would be inconsistent with the political
or ideological results they generally prefer.'"
-- "To me that's interesting but not
nearly as interesting as the more provocative point, I believe, Professor
Dershowitz you allege and this is what we'll discuss after the break,
that it was based on personal and professional conflicts of interest, this
decision. This decision was based on what these people had to gain by
making Bush the President of the United States or in some other personal
way be satisfied or self-aggrandized."
-- To his other guest, Dan Lungren, the former
Attorney General of California, Rivera demanded: "Didn't this
decision mark a high point as Professor Dershowitz writes in conservative
judicial activism? Here they did, they granted the stay of the, of the
counting. 'Rendered the decision permanently stopping the counting. They
ended the election that had been widely perceived as so inconsistent with
the alleged conservative approach to judging that it signals a new
conservative boldness, which is unlikely to me.'"
Even if everything Dershowitz charges were
true, a decision from the U.S. Supreme Court to allow the Florida Supreme
Court-ordered recount to proceed wouldn't have changed the outcome, two
recent media recounts have determined.
5
Last
week when a federal district judge issued a ruling which advanced a
liberal cause, forcing an employer to cover prescription contraceptives
for female employees, ABC, CBS and NBC all ran full stories even though
the decision impacted only one employer in Washington State. But a week
later, when the Washington Times reported how a federal judge ruled
unconstitutional Alaska's ban on donations from labor unions and
business to political parties (soft money), thus potentially undermining
the media's cherished McCain-Feingold campaign speech regulatory scheme,
the networks ignored it.
MRC analyst Ken Shepherd alerted me to the
contrast he predicted would occur after he read a front page story in the
June 19 Washington Times.
Back on June 12, World News Tonight anchor
Charles Gibson opened the ABC show by celebrating the particular court
ruling: "We start tonight with a court decision that could be a great
advance in women's rights." Dan Rather set up the CBS story:
"Many women may soon have to pay less out of their own pockets for
birth control prescriptions. As CBS's Sandra Hughes reports, it's a
federal first: A court ruling today about health insurance coverage for
female contraception." NBC anchor Tom Brokaw proclaimed: "A
federal court ruling that could mean big savings for women in the
workplace. A drug company was ordered to include the cost of birth control
for women in health care benefits."
For more on coverage that night, check the
June 13 CyberAlert: http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2001/cyb20010613.asp#2
MSNBC's The News with Brian Williams also
aired a story followed by an interview with a lawyer for the plaintiff and
the next day the morning shows dedicated segments to the decision. (I did
not see Tuesday night's News with Brian Williams, but I doubt it picked
up on the campaign finance ruling after NBC Nightly News skipped it as did
all three morning shows on June 19.)
The networks have displayed no interest in the
soft money ruling which actually came down last week. An excerpt from the
June 19 Washington Times story by Ralph Z. Hallow:
A federal judge's ruling that "soft money" contributions to
political parties are a constitutional right demolished the underpinnings
of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill, key Republicans said
yesterday. They called the decision a "harbinger" of what the
Supreme Court would do if the McCain bill became law.
"This is a tremendous victory for our democracy," Sen. Mitch
McConnell, Kentucky Republican, told The Washington Times. "McCain-Feingold
is a ticking constitutional time bomb. If enacted, it would blow up the
minute it landed in court."
Mr. McConnell repeated his pledge to "be the lead plaintiff
lighting the fuse."...
When asked for comment by The Washington Times yesterday, backers of a
regulation bill sponsored by Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican, and
Sen. Russell D. Feingold, Wisconsin Democrat, seemed unaware of Friday's
ruling in an Alaska case.
In that decision -- which went largely unreported in the press outside
Alaska -- U.S. District Judge James Singleton struck down a part of the
state's 1997 campaign contributions law that blocked businesses and
labor unions from donating money to political parties.
The judge let stand the state law's ban on business and union
contributions to individual candidates.
Some regulation proponents were cautious in assessing the significance
of the Alaska decision on the sweeping new federal prohibitions sought by
Mr. McCain and others....
Regulation opponents, by contrast, were more confident about the
decision's impact.
"This decision reaffirms that the campaign finance regulators'
legislation has a terrible track record with the federal judiciary,"
Michael Toner, the Republican National Committee's chief legal counsel,
told The Washington Times. The Supreme Court ruled in 1996 that federal
limits on political parties' expenditures made to help individual
federal candidates violate the First Amendment when that spending is not
coordinated with a candidate's campaign.
Mr. Toner said Friday´s ruling "could be a real harbinger of how
the Supreme Court would view McCain-Feingold if it ever became law."
In his ruling, Judge Singleton said that restricting "donations to
political parties for purposes unrelated to nominating or electing
candidates [including] issue advocacy and voter
registration...significantly interferes with the protected rights of
speech and association."...
END Excerpt
To read the entire story, go to: http://www.washtimes.com/national/20010619-16869257.htm
6
Last
year Today co-host Katie Couric dated a top Clinton administration
official, Tuesday's Washington Post revealed. In his "The Reliable
Source" column Lloyd Grove unveiled the short-lived secret
relationship in March 2000 between Couric and Gene Sperling, at the time
the Chairman of the National Economic Council, a job which then entailed
bashing the Bush tax cut proposal.
Grove's June 19 item:
Now it can be told: Gene Sperling and Katie Couric's top-secret dating
adventures. Okay, so it happened more than a year ago, before Couric
started her serious romance with television sitcom impresario Tom Werner,
but hey, we just heard about it.
Apparently, the 42-year-old former Clinton White House economic czar,
once named "Washington's Most Eligible Bachelor" by W magazine,
and the 44-year-old "Today" show star, a widowed mother of two,
shared a couple of Manhattan dinners back in March 2000, when Couric was
stepping gingerly into the singles scene after the January 1998 colon
cancer death of her husband, Washington lawyer Jay Monahan. On their
second date, Sperling was using crutches because of a tennis injury. Katie
apparently liked Gene, telling friends that he was "smart." We
hear that there was supposed to have been a third date, but after an
ineffectual game of phone tag, Sperling began reading in the gossip
columns about Couric and Werner.
When we called Sperling yesterday for details, he sheepishly told us:
"We're just friends, and that's a standard denial denial. But it was
nice to be out with someone shorter than me." Couric didn't return
our call yesterday. We hear that she was vacationing in Europe -- with
Werner, natch.
END Excerpt
To remind yourself of who Sperling is, go to
the online version of this story and scroll down a bit to see a photo of
him: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16450-2001Jun19.html
I checked the MRC News Tracking System
database and learned that though soundbites from Sperling ran in news
stories on Today, he did not appear at the time on Today as a guest
interviewee, nor in the months before or after his dinner dates with
Couric. -- Brent Baker
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