False Choices from Network
Pollsters
"According to a new NBC News/Wall Street
Journal poll a majority would rather see a budget that forgoes tax cuts so we
can eliminate the deficit. Less than a third said they would rather keep the
deficit in order to have a tax cut."
-- Tom Brokaw, May 2 NBC Nightly News.
Cutting Our Way Up to a $2
Trillion Annual Budget
"Good evening. President Clinton and
Republican congressional leaders reached a landmark deal today -- agreement on
a five year plan which is designed to actually balance the federal budget.
This plan features both tax breaks and cuts in spending."
-- Dan Rather,
May 2 CBS Evening News.
"The budget deal includes $135 billion in
tax cuts, $350 billion in spending cuts. The largest spending cuts will come
from restraining the growth of Medicare, the second largest savings is in
defense spending."
-- Peter Jennings on ABC's World News Tonight, May 2.
"In addition to $85 billion in tax cuts,
the plan calls for $115 billion savings in Medicare. It's the biggest
reduction in a social program ever endorsed by a President. Even President
Reagan, painted by critics as the destroyer of the social safety net, didn't
rein in Medicare spending. It grew from $45 billion to $90 billion during his
two terms."
-- ABC News reporter Karla Davis on World News Tonight/Saturday, May 3.
Reality Check:
"[The deal]
endorses discretionary spending levels from 1998 - 2002 at $70 billion above a
freeze. This is well above inflation. In fact, the deal is to the left of the
Clinton White House circa 1996: It envisions spending some $80 billion more
over the next five years on domestic agencies than Bill Clinton agreed to in
his own budget last year."
-- Cato Institute budget analyst Stephen Moore
in the May 12 Weekly Standard.
Tax Cuts "Explode,"
Spending Hikes Don't Count
"This balanced budget deal was on again,
off again over the last 48 hours, but today when Republican leaders in
Congress agreed that the tax cuts in the plan would not explode over the next
five to ten years, well the deal got done."
-- NBC White House reporter
David Bloom, May 2 Nightly News.
"Even as budget negotiators slapped one
another on the back for finally closing a deal, fiscal experts cautioned that
yesterday's agreement would do little to hold the budget in balance beyond
2002 when retiring baby boomers stop paying taxes and begin to claim Medicare,
Social Security and other costly federal benefits. And many experts warned
that the tax cuts outlined in yesterday's agreement -- a package estimated to
lower federal revenue by $250 billion over the next ten years -- could make
the long-term deficit outlook considerably worse."
-- "News
analysis" by Clay Chandler, May 3 Washington Post.
Reality Check:
"Taxpayers will
receive just 67 cents in tax cuts for every dollar of new spending earmarked
for White House and congressional priorities."
-- Scott Hodge in a May 12
Heritage Foundation Backgrounder.
No Rush to Thought
"Mr. Wiesel's conversation with Mr.
Goldhagen about his thesis that hundreds of thousands of Germans were
implicated in the Holocaust is better grounded. The men's reflections on such
tangled issues as guilt and responsibility may even get one thinking. When was
the last time Rush Limbaugh did that?"
-- New York Times TV critic Walter
Goodman in review of specials on talk radio and The World of Elie Wiesel, May
7.
When a Cut is Not a Cut
"Weld governed as a foil to his
Democratic predecessor, the workaholic Democrat Michael S. Dukakis, who raised
taxes and cut spending as the recession devastated this state and deficits
ballooned in the late 1980s. Weld, narrowly elected in 1990, spurned tax
increases and took a machete to spending and human services, drawing almost
daily attacks as 'Governor Weld To Do' from the poor, the elderly and state
employees. His 1992 budget was the first in a decade to cut spending from the
previous year."
-- Washington Post reporter Dale Russakoff's profile of
Gov. Bill Weld (R-Mass.), May 3.
Forget Whitewater, Let's Talk
Bananas
"That answer, which the President has
given before, will no doubt be scrutinized back in Washington but it has not
ruined this Mexico trip. Mexicans could care less about Whitewater. They are
joining the administration in calling this summit a success."
-- ABC's
John Donvan referring to Bill Clinton's insistence that "I know of no
factual discrepancy, period" in Hillary's statements. May 6 World News
Tonight.
"When the President fended off a
Whitewater question by saying, 'Look, I'm just down here doing my job,' the
Caribbean journalists burst into applause, in part because they had heard
enough about Whitewater and wanted to talk more about bananas."
-- Donvan
from Barbados, May 10 World News Tonight/Saturday.
Don't Offend Communist
Oppressors
Chris Matthews: "I will now take a
shot at Janet Reno. She calls the White House to say the Chinese government,
the Chinese government, the communist Reds are trying to infiltrate and
interrupt and exploit our campaigns to their advantage. She makes one call to
Tony Lake, the President's advisor, and doesn't get through to him and she
just drops it!"
Newsweek's Eleanor Clift: "What is this, the Chinese Reds? What
decade are you in, Chris?...That's not the issue anymore. It's outdated
language. It's Cold War language..."
Steve Roberts, New York Daily News: "This whole business of the
Chinese Reds. Eleanor is absolutely right, Chris. You are wallowing in it. You
need the Reds to be an enemy. And you know you don't have the Russians to kick
around anymore. The fact is they are more capitalist than we are in many
ways."
-- Exchange from CNBC's Hardball, April 30.
Let's All Raise Taxes and Take
More Time Off
"Well, for centuries, I mean, Scandinavia
has really been known, all these countries, for their innovative and their
progressive social systems. But when it comes to protecting women's rights and
children's rights, Norway could really teach most other countries a thing or
two. They are the top priorities here. Largely responsible for this, former
Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, and she is the first woman to hold that
post...
"She's been very instrumental in
pioneering some of these sweeping changes that have really greatly improved
the quality of life for women and for children in Norway. Nice to have you
here. I think most women, when they hear that, they just want to pack up and
come right over here. But these have been sweeping changes that really have
improved life here for women and children. Why do you think it happened in
such a short time?....And they also have the lowest crime rate in the world.
This is a very, very interesting country that we could learn a little bit
from. Hopefully, we can get some of those programs instituted in America.
Thank you for having us here."
-- Good Morning America co-host Joan
Lunden interviewing former Labour Party Prime Minister Brundtland during May
13 show from Norway.
CNN's Moral Authority: A
Drug-Besotted Girlfriend-Beating Crook
Reporter Anne McDermott: "King thinks the
police are improving...But what about the rest of us? Us blacks and whites and
browns and yellows? Are we improving?"
Rodney King: "As far as
individuals, we have a lot of work to do. A lot."
-- CNN's The World
Today on the fifth anniversary of the Los Angeles riots, April 28.
L. Brent Bozell, Publisher
Brent Baker, Tim Graham; Editors
Geoffrey Dickens, Gene Eliasen, Jim Forbes, Steve Kaminski, Clay Waters; Media
Analysts
Kristina Sewell, Research Associate
Carey Evans, Circulation Director
Jessica Anderson, Intern
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