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1. Schieffer Touts Misleading Poll on Most Favoring 60 Vote Standard Another day, another distorted media poll on blocking filibusters for judicial nominees. Barely an hour before a dozen Senate Democrats and Republicans announced a deal to avoid the "nuclear/constitutional option," CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer noted how a CBS News poll found that a piddling ten percent were following the issue "very closely" but, nonetheless, he touted how "people we surveyed still favored needing 60 votes to confirm court nominees." The question, which presumed naivete ("As you may know, there are 100 Senators"), simply asked: "How many Senators' votes should it take to move ahead to confirm a federal judicial nominee? Should a majority of 51 votes be required, or is this something that should require a larger majority of 60 votes?" So, all that question elicited is that most people think it would be nice have a big majority, not any opinion on whether it's good to have anyone short of 60 votes, but still with a majority, blocked from ever getting a vote. 2. Couric and Gibson Blame America, First Lady Counters Their Claims First Lady Laura Bush appeared from Egypt on all three broadcast network morning shows on Monday, and ABC and NBC demanded that Mrs. Bush address why the Middle East hates America. When Mrs. Bush suggested abuses like Abu Ghraib were an exception, not a rule, among the troops, NBC's Katie Couric countered: "In your view is the administration holding the people who are doing these things, and perhaps they are in the minority as you say, but do you think they're being held sufficiently accountable?" Mrs. Bush took exception to Katie's P-word: "It's not 'perhaps in the minority'...the sad news is that the coverage is so extreme of a handful of really, really bad cases." On ABC, Charles Gibson quibbled with what Mrs. Bush wrote at a Holocaust memorial: "You wrote in the visitors book, 'We commit ourselves to teach tolerance and to live in peace,' and yet there are Muslims who feel, given what's happened with Muslim detainees, that we are not tolerant and that given what's happened in Iraq, we are not bringing peace." In the show's second hour, ABC reported Mrs. Bush said to ABC that the protesters who encountered her in Israel didn't represent the people as a whole, but the soundbite they used was really of her commenting on the small number of abusive American troops. 3. Meacham Touts Newsweek's Truth-Telling, Forgets Spiking Lewinsky On Monday's Imus in the Morning on MSNBC, Newsweek Managing Editor Jon Meacham dismissed the perception of "a liberal media" as something that "comes out of really the Nixon years" and, he stressed, "a whole lot of liberals...think we're in the pocket of the right wing." Meacham insisted that at Newsweek "all we're trying to do is find out the facts and tell the truth as best we can see it." As for "people who are whacking Michael Isikoff around on the right, who say he's a liberal journalist who's trying to make America look bad, seem to have forgotten that this is the guy who basically impeached Bill Clinton seven years ago." Indeed, but Meacham overlooked a huge difference in how Newsweek treated Isikoff's two stories: The magazine immediately ran his one-source hit on the U.S. military for supposedly flushing a Koran down a toilet, but had spiked his better-sourced January of 1998 Monica Lewinsky piece, leaving it to Matt Drudge to reveal his scoop about the President's sexual relationship with an intern. 4. Jennings Visits ABC, World News Tonight Focuses on Prisoner Abuse ABC's Charles Gibson concluded Monday's World News Tonight with a note about Peter Jennings, who has been off the air since early April as he battles lung cancer. Gibson relayed how Jennings "was in the office this afternoon helping us put together tonight's broadcast" and that "we had a great time, a lot of laughter, and he was keeping us on our toes, as usual." Might Jennings' presence explain World News Tonight's focus Monday on "disturbing, though hard to verify" allegations of prisoner abuse in Afghanistan? 5. You Read it Here First: FNC Picks Up on Rather's Praise of Mapes You read it here first. In his "Grapevine" segment on Monday night, FNC's Brit Hume picked up on comments from Dan Rather in a CNBC interview aired Sunday night, which were uniquely quoted in Monday's CyberAlert. Hume recited Rather's praise for Mary Mapes, the since-fired producer of the 60 Minutes story which employed forged memos, as a "a very good pro" and "the kind of professional that the audience should want in television." Schieffer Touts Misleading Poll on Most Favoring 60 Vote Standard Another day, another distorted media poll on blocking filibusters for judicial nominees. Barely an hour before a dozen Senate Democrats and Republicans announced a deal to avoid the "nuclear/constitutional option," CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer noted how a CBS News poll found that a piddling ten percent were following the issue "very closely" but, nonetheless, he touted how "people we surveyed still favored needing 60 votes to confirm court nominees." The question, which presumed naivete ("As you may know, there are 100 Senators"), simply asked: "How many Senators' votes should it take to move ahead to confirm a federal judicial nominee? Should a majority of 51 votes be required, or is this something that should require a larger majority of 60 votes?" So, all that question elicited is that most people think it would be nice have a big majority, not any opinion on whether it's good to have anyone short of 60, but still with a majority, blocked from ever getting a vote. Schieffer announced on the May 23 CBS Evening News: "Also in Washington, barring a last-minute compromise, the Senate appears to be heading for a vote that could change the rules tomorrow to eliminate the filibuster on judicial nominees. In practical terms, that means the President's nominees to the federal bench, including the Supreme Court, could soon be confirmed by a simple majority in the Senate rather than the 60 votes that are required with a filibuster in place. But despite the high political stakes, a new CBS poll out tonight finds only 10 percent of the public is paying very close attention to the debate. Even so, most people we surveyed still favored needing 60 votes to confirm court nominees." On screen, a graphic was titled "Require 60 vote majority to move ahead with confirming..." and below that the "yes" percents for "Federal Judges," at 63%, and for "Supreme Court Judges," at 64%. For a different part of the sample CBS had substituted "Supreme Court nominee" for "federal judicial nominee" in the question quoted above. Another silly question in the poll, but one not cited by Schieffer, pretended majority rule is an alien concept: "In order for someone to be confirmed as a federal judge, what do you think should happen first: 1) Republicans and Democrats in the Senate should both have to agree that a person should be a judge, even if that takes a long time, or 2) Because Republicans have the most Senators, Republicans should get to decide whether a person should be a judge, even if Democrats disagree?"
"Must agree: 79%
For the CBSNews.com rundown of the poll: www.cbsnews.com Previous CyberAlert items on media hype for distorted polls regarding the blocking of Democratic filibusters:
# April 26 CyberAlert: ABC and the Washington Post touted how a new poll found two-thirds opposed to a rul change to end Democratic filibusters of judicial nominees, but the language of the question led to the media's desired answer. "An ABC News poll has found little support for changing the Senate's rules to help the President's judicial nominees win confirmation," World News Tonight anchor Charles Gibson trumpeted Monday night. The Washington Post's lead front page headline, over a Tuesday story on the poll, declared: "Filibuster Rule Change Opposed." But the questions in the poll failed to point out the unprecedented use of a filibuster to block nominees who have majority support while they forwarded the Democratic talking point that "the Senate has confirmed 35 federal appeals court judges nominated by Bush" and painted rules changes as an effort "to make it easier for the Republicans to confirm Bush's judicial nominees," not as a way to overcome Democratic obstructionism. See: www.mediaresearch.org
Couric and Gibson Blame America, First Lady Counters Their Claims First Lady Laura Bush appeared from Egypt on all three broadcast network morning shows on Monday, and ABC and NBC demanded that Mrs. Bush address why the Middle East hates America. When Mrs. Bush suggested abuses like Abu Ghraib were an exception, not a rule, among the troops, NBC's Katie Couric countered: "In your view is the administration holding the people who are doing these things, and perhaps they are in the minority as you say, but do you think they're being held sufficiently accountable?" Mrs. Bush took exception to Katie's P-word: "It's not 'perhaps in the minority'...the sad news is that the coverage is so extreme of a handful of really, really bad cases." On ABC, Charles Gibson quibbled with what Mrs. Bush wrote at a Holocaust memorial: "You wrote in the visitors book, 'We commit ourselves to teach tolerance and to live in peace,' and yet there are Muslims who feel, given what's happened with Muslim detainees, that we are not tolerant and that given what's happened in Iraq, we are not bringing peace." In the show's second hour, ABC reported Mrs. Bush said to ABC that the protesters who encountered her in Israel didn't represent the people as a whole, but the soundbite they used was really of her commenting on the small number of abusive American troops. [The MRC's Tim Graham submitted this item to CyberAlert, based on the transcriptions completed by Jessica Barnes and Geoff Dickens.] On CBS's Early Show, Harry Smith asked two questions about the protests, but did not insist that America had a big repair job to do. He also asked uniquely about how Mrs. Bush responded to the news that the grenade found in a square in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi had the potential to explode.
All three interviews were conducted with Bush in Giza, Egypt with a pyramid in the background.
On ABC's Good Morning America, as the screen read "Rough Reception" throughout the interview, Charles Gibson began his First Lady interview with the issue of Muslim hostility: "Mrs. Bush, it's nice to see you. First Ladies are used to being treated with some deference, and yet yesterday you got a real taste of some Muslim hostility, and I wondered what that moment was like as you heard their personal anger."
In the newscast beginning the second hour at 8am, anchor Ron Claiborne began: "First Lady Laura Bush meets with the wife of the Egyptian Prime Minister this morning during her five-day tour of the Middle East. Mrs. Bush said she was not surprised to be met with protesters during her tour of holy sites in Israel. She told us this morning that the demonstrators don't represent people as a whole." Mrs. Bush did suggest to Katie Couric that the protesters were not numerous, but did not say that in the snippet ABC recycled.
Meacham Touts Newsweek's Truth-Telling, Forgets Spiking Lewinsky On Monday's Imus in the Morning on MSNBC, Newsweek Managing Editor Jon Meacham dismissed the perception of "a liberal media" as something that "comes out of really the Nixon years" and, he stressed, "a whole lot of liberals...think we're in the pocket of the right wing." Meacham insisted that at Newsweek "all we're trying to do is find out the facts and tell the truth as best we can see it." As for "people who are whacking Michael Isikoff around on the right, who say he's a liberal journalist who's trying to make America look bad, seem to have forgotten that this is the guy who basically impeached Bill Clinton seven years ago." Indeed, but Meacham overlooked a huge difference in how Newsweek treated Isikoff's two stories: The magazine immediately ran his one-source hit on the U.S. military for supposedly flushing a Koran down a toilet, but had spiked his better-sourced January of 1998 Monica Lewinsky piece, leaving it to Matt Drudge to reveal his scoop about the President's sexual relationship with an intern.
The MRC's Jessica Barnes caught this from Meacham, who appeared by phone, at about 6:50am EDT on May 23:
Jennings Visits ABC, World News Tonight Focuses on Prisoner Abuse ABC's Charles Gibson concluded Monday's World News Tonight with a note about Peter Jennings, who has been off the air since early April as he battles lung cancer. Gibson relayed how Jennings "was in the office this afternoon helping us put together tonight's broadcast" and that "we had a great time, a lot of laughter, and he was keeping us on our toes, as usual." Might Jennings' presence explain World News Tonight's focus Monday on "disturbing, though hard to verify" allegations of prisoner abuse in Afghanistan? At the very end of the May 23 World News Tonight, Gibson conveyed: "I should mention that Peter Jennings was in the office this afternoon helping us put together tonight's broadcast. We had a great time, a lot of laughter, and he was keeping us on our toes, as usual. So, for Peter Jennings, and for all of us at ABC News, I'm Charles Gibson. Good night." Earlier, he had set up a story: "A few Afghan prisoners have been released and are talking about their time in captivity. Those stories are disturbing, though hard to verify. ABC News has had a chance to speak with one former detainee, who is now in Britain, and whose accusations of prisoner mistreatment are being taken very seriously by the Pentagon. Here's ABC's national security correspondent, Martha Raddatz."
Raddatz began, as corrected against the closed-captioning by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: "British-born Moazzam Begg was held for three years on suspicions he was a terrorist. Begg had made several trips to training camps in Afghanistan, and moved there with his wife and children just three months before 9/11. Three months later, he was taken to a U.S. military detention center." So Guantanamo isn't so bad afterall?
You Read it Here First: FNC Picks Up on Rather's Praise of Mapes You read it here first. In his "Grapevine" segment on Monday night, FNC's Brit Hume picked up on comments from Dan Rather in a CNBC interview aired Sunday night, which were uniquely quoted in Monday's CyberAlert. Hume recited Rather's praise for Mary Mapes, the since-fired producer of the 60 Minutes story which employed forged memos, as a "a very good pro" and "the kind of professional that the audience should want in television." Hume's last Grapevine item, on the May 23 Special Report with Brit Hume: "Former CBS News producer Mary Mapes may have been heavily responsible for the Bush National Guard story that brought Dan Rather to grief -- and led to her firing -- but that hasn't changed Rather's opinion of her, or what he thinks the public's opinion of her ought to be. Mapes, you may recall, was the producer of the story involving the discredited documents purporting to show that President Bush got favored treatment, and skirted his duties in the National Guard. But, in an interview over the weekend on CNBC, Rather called Mapes quote, 'a very good pro,' adding quote, 'She's the kind of professional that the audience should want in television.'" Monday's Grapevine is posted at: www.foxnews.com The May 23 CyberAlert recounted: Interviewed by Tina Brown in a session aired Sunday night on CNBC, Dan Rather praised Mary Mapes, the producer of the 60 Minutes story based on forged memos, as "a very good pro," and insisted that "she's the kind of professional that the audience should want in television." Asked by Brown if "after the flap over the National Guard story, do you feel inhibited?", Rather contended he's never "inhibited when it comes to news and trying to do fair-minded, accurate reporting on important stories." Then Brown wanted to know: "What are the realistic chances that you're going to be able to do a story that really shakes and rattles the Bush administration?" Rather maintained they are "excellent" since "CBS News has a culture, has a history that those of us who work here, it's very real -- that we see it as a sort of magical mystical kingdom of journalistic knights."
For more, go to: www.mediaresearch.org
-- Brent Baker
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