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1. CBS & ABC Stories Blame Conservatives for Mistreatment of Miers From Dallas, Harriet Miers' hometown, Lee Cowan relayed on Thursday's CBS Evening News that "at a Dallas diner this morning, her withdrawal served up a lot of disappointment" where patrons were upset "that conservatives, even here in her home state, weren't willing to give her a chance." Cowan went outside and leaned into a taxi to ask the driver: "What happened?" The cabbie replied: "I think the far right, they had been itching for a big battle for years." ABC's World News Tonight also framed a report around blaming conservatives for the supposed mistreatment of Miers, as Linda Douglass opened a piece: "Democrats were quick to blame Miers' collapse on conservative activists, who demanded loudly that the President dump her." After a clip of Senator Harry Reid scolding the "the radical right wing of the Republican Party," Douglass relayed pro and con soundbites before she concluded with how "Senator [Lindsey] Graham is urging the President to appoint someone who, in his words, 'won't blow this place up'" -- meaning a non-conservative. George Stephanopoulos listed some potential nominees before warning: "Both Priscilla Owen and Michael Luttig fall into that category that Lindsey Graham talked about. They would blow the place up." 2. Gibson Baffled Why Conservatives Upset by Miers' Abortion Formula On ABC's Good Morning America on Thursday, co-host Charles Gibson seemed mystified why a pro-life group would be disturbed by Harriet Miers' formulation that the abortion debate is between those who would "criminalize abortions" verus "guarantee the freedom of the individual woman's right to choose." Gibson thought that such liberal language was perfectly neutral: "That sounds to me, when I read it, as if she's setting out alternatives and not taking a stand." 3. CNN's Toobin Tags Potential Nominees as "Very Conservative" Less than an hour after the announcement Thursday morning that Harriet Miers had withdrawn her nomination for the Supreme Court, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin was on the air attaching enhanced ideological labels on three potential new nominees while touting one conservatives don't like. By phone at 9:55am, Toobin labeled Priscilla Owen, Janice Rogers Brown and Michael Luttig as "very conservative" before trumpeting how Alberto Gonzales has "some moderation in his history" and is "a lot more politically appealing candidate." On Owen, he described her, with an emphasis on the word "very," as "very conservative, frequently dissenting, because a conservative court was not conservative enough for her" and he derided Brown as "even more conservative than Priscilla Owen." 4. Woodward Points Out Wilson Found Evidence of Iraq-Niger Deal Much to Senator Chris Dodd's consternation on Thursday's Larry King Live on CNN, Washington Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob Woodward, of Watergate fame, pointed out a fact rarely mentioned by the mainstream media -- that "most of the analysts at the CIA said that [Joseph] Wilson's findings, when he went to Niger, supported the conclusion that there was some deal with Iraq" for uranium. When Dodd started to counter Woodward, Woodward asserted that "Democrats and the Republicans all signed that report. That is a fact." Woodward revealed that he had the report "in his pocket"and when King asked why, Woodward answered: "Yes I do because I knew I might be challenged." When King went to an ad break two minutes later, the camera pulled back to show everyone at the table. Woodward then slid forward across the table to Dodd what looked like a few 8-and-half-by-11 sheets of paper with a post-it on top. Dodd ignored it. 5. Coulter Hits Lauer on Respect for Fitzgerald vs Impugning Starr Conservative author and columnist Ann Coulter, on Thursday's Today, nailed Matt Lauer on the media's double-standard in respectful treatment of special prosecutor Peter Fitzgerald compared to Ken Starr, whom the media regularly impugned. When Lauer gave Fitzgerald the leeway Starr never received, contending "it's hard to attack this prosecutor at this particular moment wouldn't you agree?", Coulter fired back: "It was hard to attack Ken Starr! He was a boy scout!" In a blog entry, the MRC's Geoffrey Dickens also pointed out Today's graphic bias. During the Coulter segment, Today ran this doubly-damning headline: "Leak Investigation: Dirty Politics or Broken Laws?" CBS & ABC Stories Blame Conservatives for Mistreatment of Miers People who know Harriet Miers in Dallas, Lee Cowan reported on Thursday's CBS Evening News, think she "deserved better than this" and he quickly moved to highlight those mad at conservatives, or as one cab driver charged, the "far right." Cowan relayed that "at a Dallas diner this morning, her withdrawal served up a lot of disappointment" where patrons were upset "that conservatives, even here in her home state, weren't willing to give her a chance." Cowan went outside and leaned into a taxi to ask the driver: "What happened?" The cabbie replied: "I think the far right, they had been itching for a big battle for years." Cowan did pass along a defense of conservatives: "Dallas talk show host Mark Davis though says local conservatives are actually just trying to watch out for the President's legacy." Over on ABC's World News Tonight, following a lead story from Terry Moran, Linda Douglass opened a piece: "Democrats were quick to blame Miers' collapse on conservative activists, who demanded loudly that the President dump her." After a clip of Senator Harry Reid scolding the "the radical right wing of the Republican Party," Douglass picked up on how Senator Arlen Specter "said the groups drowned her and the President out." Following bites from Senator Sam Brownback and Rush Limbaugh, she returned to the anti-conservative prism from which she began, setting up a slam from Senator Ted Kennedy by relating how Democrats say "if he chooses an ideological conservative, he will appear to be the tool of outside groups," and she concluded with how "Senator [Lindsey] Graham is urging the President to appoint someone who, in his words, 'won't blow this place up'" -- meaning a non-conservative. Pivoting from Douglass, anchor Bob Woodruff turned to George Stephanopoulos and inquired: "Does he [Bush] have to nominate a conservative to satisfy the base of his party or a moderate who would be acceptable enough to Democrats to avoid a long and prolonged fight?" Stephanopoulos listed some potential nominees before warning: "Both Priscilla Owen and Michael Luttig fall into that category that Lindsey Graham talked about. They would blow the place up." [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] The October 27 CBS Evening News led with a story from John Roberts on the Miers withdrawal, followed by Lee Cowan from Dallas with reaction from those in her home town. Picking up after an opening soundbite from a disappointed high school friend:
Lee Cowan: "Loyalty in the Lone Star state runs pretty deep. At a Dallas diner this morning, her withdrawal served up a lot of disappointment. It's not just that Miers didn't get to become only the second Texan to sit on the high court, it's that conservatives, even here in her home state, weren't willing to give her a chance."
Bob Woodruff: "This is a significant defeat for a President who faces a number of challenges at the moment. It has been nearly 40 years since a Supreme Court nominee has withdrawn their name from consideration by the Senate. ABC's Linda Douglass has been following this fight from Capitol Hill."
Woodruff: "Which raises the, Linda Douglass, on Capitol Hill, thank you. Which raises the question: What does the President do next? Does he have to nominate a conservative to satisfy the base of his party or a moderate who would be acceptable enough to Democrats to avoid a long and prolonged fight. ABC's George Stephanopoulos joins us now to talk about this political calculus. Now, the President miscalculated the first time around. Does he change his strategy completely now?"
Gibson Baffled Why Conservatives Upset by Miers' Abortion Formula On ABC's Good Morning America on Thursday, co-host Charles Gibson seemed mystified why a pro-life group would be disturbed by Harriet Miers' formulation that the abortion debate is between those who would "criminalize abortions" verus "guarantee the freedom of the individual woman's right to choose." Gibson thought that such liberal language was perfectly neutral: "That sounds to me, when I read it, as if she's setting out alternatives and not taking a stand." His guest, Concerned Women for America's Wendy Wright, told Gibson that someone who was genuinely pro-life would have framed the debate very differently: "Those who believe in the sanctity of human life speak in terms like that, respect for unborn children, respect for life. And so by her phrasing of criminalizing abortion as contrasted to freedom, that does speak to a philosophy that's a bit troubling." ABC was hosting the conservative Wright because on Wednesday the CWA had called for Harriet Miers to withdraw as a nominee for the Supreme Court, something Miers did a little later on Thursday morning. But Gibson's questions showed him to be flummoxed by a conservative approach to both the Court and the issue of abortion. [This item, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, was posted late Thursday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ]
Gibson began the 7:07am EDT interview, as transcribed by the MRC's Brian Boyd, by focusing on "new troubles for President Bush's Supreme Court nominee, Harriet Miers. The group Concerned Women for America, one of the nation's largest organizations of conservative women, is now urging the President to withdraw Miers' nomination. So the question is, will other influential Christian conservative groups join the fight against her? Wendy Wright is Executive Vice President of Concerned Women for America and joins us this morning from Washington. The issue with abortion, of course, is that the Court has made it impossible for the people, acting through their elected representatives, to regulate abortion. And the Court decision that elevated abortion to a constitutional right, Roe v. Wade, is regarded by many conservatives as one of the most outrageous examples of the courts "legislating from the bench."
Gibson's final question to Wright painted conservatives as ideologically greedy: "You made reference to the fact that four years before that speech she checked the box on a questionnaire saying she did want to support, she did not want, I'm sorry, I'm getting confused, that she wanted to support a ban to abortions. That's not enough for you?" Less than two hours later, Miers withdrew her nomination.
CNN's Toobin Tags Potential Nominees as "Very Conservative" Less than an hour after the announcement Thursday morning that Harriet Miers had withdrawn her nomination for the Supreme Court, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin was on the air attaching enhanced ideological labels on three potential new nominees while touting one conservatives don't like. By phone at 9:55am, Toobin labeled Priscilla Owen, Janice Rogers Brown and Michael Luttig as "very conservative" before trumpeting how Alberto Gonzales has "some moderation in his history" and is "a lot more politically appealing candidate." On Owen, he described her, with an emphasis on the word "very," as "very conservative, frequently dissenting, because a conservative court was not conservative enough for her" and he derided Brown as "even more conservative than Priscilla Owen." The MRC's Megan McCormack late Thursday morning posted, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog, an item about Toobin's labeling. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org
American Morning co-host Miles O'Brien set up Toobin on the October 27 show: "And Jeff, as we've been saying, Harriet Miers' job now is to, to go through the short list and pick her successor as nominee. Let's go through the short list that you have. Of course, we don't know precisely the names that she has in front of her, but it's safe to say the three or so names we have right here are among them. Let's go through it. First of all, Priscilla Owen. Tell me about her."
Woodward Points Out Wilson Found Evidence of Iraq-Niger Deal Much to Senator Chris Dodd's consternation on Thursday's Larry King Live on CNN, Washington Post Assistant Managing Editor Bob Woodward, of Watergate fame, pointed out a fact rarely mentioned by the mainstream media -- that "most of the analysts at the CIA said that [Joseph] Wilson's findings, when he went to Niger, supported the conclusion that there was some deal with Iraq" for uranium. When Dodd started to counter Woodward, Woodward asserted that "Democrats and the Republicans all signed that report. That is a fact." Woodward revealed that he had the report "in his pocket"and when King asked why, Woodward answered: "Yes I do because I knew I might be challenged." When King went to an ad break two minutes later, the camera pulled back to show everyone at the table. Woodward then slid forward across the table to Dodd what looked like a few 8-and-half-by-11 sheets of paper with a post-it on top. Dodd ignored it, but in the second before CNN went to black, Senator Lindsey Graham, sitting beside Dodd, picked them up. [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org where it is accompanied by a still shot from a fraction of a second after the papers are released from Woodward's hand along with a video excerpt of the handoff, in both RealPlayer and Windows Media formats. To post a comment, see the picture or watch the video, go to: newsbusters.org ] From CNN's October 27 Larry King Live, picking up after Dodd compared Joe Wilson with the security guard who discovered the Watergate burglary:
Woodward: "There's some factual problems here. When Wilson went to Niger before all this blew up, in fact, before there was a war, he came back and reported, and Michael [Isikoff] and others who've read the Senate Intelligence Committee on this, know his report was very ambiguous. In fact, most of the analysts at the CIA said that Wilson's findings, when he went to Niger, supported the conclusion that there was some deal with Iraq. Now, no, that's [reacting to agitation across table from Senator Chris Dodd] -- I mean, the Democrats, the Democrats and the Republicans all signed that report. That is a fact. And you know, there are other facts and there's speculation." Isikoff went on to agree with Dodd as he maintained that the evidence shows "they really were out to get Wilson." After Isikoff finished his answer, viewers saw the events described above in which Woodward slid the papers over to Dodd, who ignored them.
Coulter Hits Lauer on Respect for Fitzgerald vs Impugning Starr Conservative author and columnist Ann Coulter, on Thursday's Today, nailed Matt Lauer on the media's double-standard in respectful treatment of special prosecutor Peter Fitzgerald compared to Ken Starr, whom the media regularly impugned. When Lauer gave Fitzgerald the leeway Starr never received, contending "it's hard to attack this prosecutor at this particular moment wouldn't you agree?", Coulter fired back: "It was hard to attack Ken Starr! He was a boy scout!" In a blog entry, the MRC's Geoffrey Dickens also pointed out Today's graphic bias. During the Coulter segment, Today ran this doubly-damning headline: "Leak Investigation: Dirty Politics or Broken Laws?" For the NewsBusters.org posting on this exchange between Coulter and Lauer, with a still shot showing the text NBC put at the bottom of the screen: newsbusters.org Geoffrey provided this rundown from the 7am half hour of the October 27 Today: Lauer: "We know the President has gone on the record. He said to me that he thinks the special prosecutor in this case is handling the investigation in an extremely dignified manner. So if indictments do come down how do Republicans react? Can some of them say this was all a sham?"
After catching up on a few points to Lauer's previous questions Coulter answered Lauer's Fitzgerald query:
Lauer gave Fitzgerald the leeway Starr never received: "It's hard to attack this prosecutor at this particular moment wouldn't you agree?"
-- Brent Baker
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