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1. Foley Scandal as Doomsday for GOP: 'Too Late for Damage Control' "It could be too late for damage control," CBS anchor Katie Couric intoned Monday night in painting the worst-possible scenario for continued GOP control of the House in the wake of the Mark Foley scandal. Reporter Gloria Borger declared: "There is no getting around it: The unraveling of the page scandal could be the undoing of some House Republican leaders, if not their hold on Congress." With the words on screen, she highlighted how "one senior House Republican tells CBS News that this scandal 'could be the congressional equivalent of Katrina'" and "'our base is moral conservatives, and we look like a bunch of hypocrites who just didn't want another scandal before the election.'" Over on ABC's World News, George Stephanopoulos unequivocally stated: "This issue became the number one issue in every congressional race in the country. And both Republicans and Democrats say it has the potential to cost Republicans the Congress." Anchor Charles Gibson noted how House Speaker Dennis Hastert "says, 'Well, I was deceived.'" Gibson then suggested Hastert be held accountable: "Harry Truman had a sign on his desk that said: 'The Buck stops here.'" 2. Morning Shows: Big Push on Foley, Potential Loss of GOP Majority In the wake of Rep. Mark Foley's sudden resignation over ABC finding his sexually charged electronic messages to teenage male House pages, Monday's broadcast network morning shows all began with Foley, and the networks presented doom-laden scenarios of a crumbling Republican majority and some demands for Speaker Dennis Hastert and other Republican House leaders to resign. "But this is more than just one man's downfall," insisted Matt Lauer on NBC. "It could be a major blow to the Republican Party, desperately trying to hold on to control of Congress in the coming midterm elections." ABC's Robin Roberts wondered, "this morning, newly revealed e-mails, the denials, dealings of a Congress in chaos. Could the Foley scandal cost the Republicans the House?" CBS's Julie Chen pushed Tony Snow to suggest Hastert and others should resign. ABC's George Stephanopoulos dramatically called the scandal "a Category Three hurricane and it's picking up steam." When CNN's Soledad O'Brien then tried to suggest she was "certainly not rushing for anybody's resignation," Snow protested: "Sure you are." 3. NBC Wins the Prize for Most Enthusiastic Woodward Book-Selling If there was a competition on Monday morning to see who would give Bob Woodward the most free publicity, NBC's Today was the hands-down winner. Between the introductory promos, an Andrea Mitchell report, a Tony Snow interview, and a Bob Woodward interview, NBC gave Woodward's book, State of Denial, 15 minutes of publicity in the first half hour of Monday's show. In those 15 minutes, NBC viewers saw the book's red cover displayed on the screen six times, the title was mentioned at least five times, and the on-screen graphics carried the title for most of those 15 minutes. 4. Matthews: Bush 'Won't Tell Truth,' So 'Solution Is an Election' Appearing on Monday's Tonight Show, MSNBC's Chris Matthews predicted Democrats will win the House since "I don't know how you can lose to this crowd," declared that he's "rooting for" a Democratic Senate candidate because of the candidate's race, went on a rant against Dick Cheney over the false premises behind the Iraq war and argued that since President Bush "won't tell the truth about this war," the "only solution...is an election." Jay Leno began the segment by asking about the Mark Foley scandal, but soon moved to whether Democrats will take over the House. Matthews predicted they will win the House, but not the Senate, adding of a Democrat who is black: "I'm rooting for Harold Ford in Tennessee for a reason. I think we need a little diversity up there on Capitol Hill. That would be nice." Apparently Maryland Republican Senate candidate Michael Steele, who is also black, would not add the proper "diversity." 5. Pre-FNC, Ex-MSNBC Chief Recalls, Few Saw Any Liberal Bias Clueless in Secaucus. "Before Fox," the AP's David Bauder relayed in a weekend article about the tenth anniversary of the Fox News Channel, "many in the media scoffed at the notion of a liberal bias and figured only a handful of people really believed that, said Erik Sorenson, former MSNBC President." Sorenson, the President of the Secaucus, New Jersey-based MSNBC from 1999 through early 2004, where he re-hired Keith Olbermann in 2003 to replace Phil Donahue's show which he had created, told Bauder: "Fox proved it's a much larger group than anybody realized." Many realized it earlier, just not very many inside MSNBC -- or CBS News, where he served as Executive Producer of the CBS Evening News from 1991 to 1995. So he should know how Rush Limbaugh was banned from the newscast back then. Indeed, Bauder related how "the very idea that Rush Limbaugh would appear on a CBS Evening News segment called 'Free Speech,' heavily promoted on Katie Couric's first night as anchor, would have been unfathomable a decade ago, Sorenson said." 6. Read It Here First: Weekly Standard, Novak Pick Up on Cyber Items You read it here first. Highlighting an exchange featured in NewsBusters and CyberAlert, this week's "Scrapbook" in the Weekly Standard magazine mocked Katie Couric's retort to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice: "To quote my daughter, 'Who made us the boss of them?'" And Monday's column by Robert Novak recounted how, on CBS's Early Show, former CIA analyst Michael Scheuer contradicted the claims Bill Clinton made, in his interview with Chris Wallace, about efforts to kill Osama bin Laden. A NewsBusters/CyberAlert item a week earlier had highlighted Scheuer's comments and another item documented how James Carville and Paula Begala rallied behind Clinton on the Today show, a joint appearance Novak also noted. 7. Letterman's "Top Ten Surprises in Bob Woodward's New Book" Letterman's "Top Ten Surprises in Bob Woodward's New Book." Foley Scandal as Doomsday for GOP: 'Too Late for Damage Control' "It could be too late for damage control," CBS anchor Katie Couric intoned Monday night in painting the worst-possible scenario for continued GOP control of the House in the wake of the Mark Foley scandal. Reporter Gloria Borger declared: "There is no getting around it: The unraveling of the page scandal could be the undoing of some House Republican leaders, if not their hold on Congress." With the words on screen, she highlighted how "one senior House Republican tells CBS News that this scandal 'could be the congressional equivalent of Katrina'" and "'our base is moral conservatives, and we look like a bunch of hypocrites who just didn't want another scandal before the election.'" Over on ABC's World News, George Stephanopoulos unequivocally stated: "This issue became the number one issue in every congressional race in the country. And both Republicans and Democrats say it has the potential to cost Republicans the Congress." Anchor Charles Gibson noted how House Speaker Dennis Hastert "says, 'Well, I was deceived.'" Gibson then suggested Hastert be held accountable: "Harry Truman had a sign on his desk that said: 'The Buck stops here.' What is the jeopardy of the House Republican leadership?" Stephanopoulos replied, "The question is: How much more did they know? And why didn't they act on what they knew? That's what Democrats are going to push." And the Washington press corps, too. [This item was posted Monday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
The NBC Nightly News delivered a less-hyperbolic tone, but Tim Russert came aboard to raise the topic of "panic" amongst the GOP: The evening shows matched the tone expressed on Monday's morning shows, as detailed in item #2 below. The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for one story each aired on the October 2 CBS and ABC evening newscasts. Both carried two stories on the subject: # CBS Evening News with Katie Couric: Katie Couric: "House Speaker Dennis Hastert is feeling the heat from the scandal involving ex-Congressman Mark Foley of Florida. Hastert and other top Republicans knew for a year that Foley had sent questionable e-mails to a former congressional page. The Speaker says he only found out last Friday, though, about other sexually explicit messages sent by Foley. But, as national political correspondent Gloria Borger reports, it could be too late for damage control."
Gloria Borger: "There is no getting around it: The unraveling of the page scandal could be the undoing of some House Republican leaders, if not their hold on Congress. Congressman Mark Foley has left the premises to undergo rehab for what he called 'alcoholism and related behavioral problems,' as the FBI and Florida officials began investigating his contacts with a young male page. But on Capitol Hill, one senior House Republican tells CBS News that this scandal [text on screen] 'could be the congressional equivalent of Katrina.' 'Our base is moral conservatives, and we look like a bunch of hypocrites who just didn't want another scandal before the election.' Today Republicans named their new candidate, but winning is a long shot. And increasingly angry Republicans are asking: Did their leaders keep this secret to save a precious House seat? Republican Shelley Capito is demanding an answer."
Charles Gibson: "And next, we're going to turn to the shock waves set off by Congressman Mark Foley three days after the Florida Republican resigned in disgrace over sexually explicit messages sent to teenage congressional pages and former pages. With an FBI investigation under way, Foley has checked into a rehab clinic, saying a lifelong addiction to alcohol drove him to the inappropriate behavior that ended his political career. Our chief investigative correspondent, Brian Ross, who broke this story, here with the latest."
After Ross, Gibson turned to Stephanopoulos:
Morning Shows: Big Push on Foley, Potential Loss of GOP Majority In the wake of Rep. Mark Foley's sudden resignation over ABC finding his sexually charged electronic messages to teenage male House pages, Monday's broadcast network morning shows all began with Foley, and the networks presented doom-laden scenarios of a crumbling Republican majority and some demands for Speaker Dennis Hastert and other Republican House leaders to resign. "But this is more than just one man's downfall," insisted Matt Lauer on NBC. "It could be a major blow to the Republican Party, desperately trying to hold on to control of Congress in the coming midterm elections." ABC's Robin Roberts wondered, "this morning, newly revealed e-mails, the denials, dealings of a Congress in chaos. Could the Foley scandal cost the Republicans the House? " ABC's Chris Cuomo and CBS's Julie Chen each pushed Tony Snow to suggest Hastert and others should resign. Chen also asked if Republican leaders should be questioned "under oath." ABC's George Stephanopoulos dramatically called the scandal "a Category Three hurricane and it's picking up steam." When CNN's Soledad O'Brien then tried to suggest she was "certainly not rushing for anybody's resignation," Snow protested: "Sure you are." None made historical comparisons with Democrats caught in sexual relationships with House pages or other teenagers. [This item, by Tim Graham, was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] It was a four-network portrait of aggression: # ABC's Good Morning America. With Diane Sawyer in Los Angeles to interview actor Robin Williams about his struggles with alcoholism, Chris Cuomo sat in the anchor chair next to Robin Roberts. They began with the Foley hype, with the first nine and a half minutes devoted to the Foley scandal:
Cuomo: "Capitol Hill leaders scrambling all weekend, the story is Congressman Mark Foley. Allegations about e-mails, and now reports that he may be in rehab." ABC's Brian Ross aired a story with the text of some Internet messages from Foley (with the handle "Maf54"), and interviewed former page Matthew Loraditch, who charged they were warning pages about Foley five years ago. Then they turned to ABC Chief Washington Correspondent George Stephanopoulos for gloomy political predictions for the GOP:
Robin Roberts: "Let's get right to the political fallout from all this. Joining us is our chief Washington correspondent George Stephanopoulos, who is also, of course, the host of This Week. And let's get right to it, George. How bad is this for Republicans in Congress?"
In his interview with Tony Snow, Chris Cuomo, son of Mario, carried the Democratic attack with vigor:
Co-host Julie Chen asked Tony Snow about the Bob Woodward book first, and saved the second part for Foley:
From there, the co-hosts previewed again their pressure on the GOP:
Meredith Vieira: "Florida Republican Congressman Mark Foley resigned from Congress on Friday after word surfaced he sent sexually explicit electronic messages to male pages who were in high school." With most of their attention in the first half-hour on Bob Woodward's new book-length attack on Bush -- and Vieira didn't ask Snow any Foley questions -- NBC merely ran a Mike Taibbi story on the self-perpetuating prediction of a growing Foley scandal:
Mike Taibbi: "Mark Foley hasn't been seen publicly since his sudden resignation Friday over his sexually explicit internet contacts with underage male congressional pages and his nameplate removed from his office door. But the fallout from the scandal is gathering steam." Brown, a Democrat, is running against DeWine for the Senate.
Like Attkisson, Taibbi suggested a Republican conspiracy: "At least five Republican House members did know ahead of time, some nearly a year ago, about emails described as over-friendly that Foley sent a 16-year-old male page, though not about any overtly sexual messages. The party's congressional committee chairman, Thomas Reynolds, said the situation was resolved after Foley insisted his emails were innocent and that House Speaker Dennis Hastert was told about it. But a Democratic member of the page board, which runs the page program, said he heard nothing about Foley's emails until the scandal exploded Friday and that any suggestion of an investigation by the board was completely false. Hence the accelerating talk among Democrats about an election year Republican cover-up."
NBC Wins the Prize for Most Enthusiastic Woodward Book-Selling If there was a competition on Monday morning to see who would give Bob Woodward the most free publicity, NBC's Today was the hands-down winner. Between the introductory promos, an Andrea Mitchell report, a Tony Snow interview, and a Bob Woodward interview, NBC gave Woodward's book, State of Denial, 15 minutes of publicity in the first half hour of Monday's show. In those 15 minutes, NBC viewers saw the book's red cover displayed on the screen six times, the title was mentioned at least five times, and the on-screen graphics carried the title for most of those 15 minutes. [This item, by Tim Graham, was posted Monday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] After Matt Lauer promoted the Mark Foley story, he added: "Counterpunch. The Bush administration fights backs, fights back against explosive claims in Bob Woodward's new book that it bungled the war in Iraq." Seconds later, Meredith Vieira added: "And another big story out of Washington, that bombshell book from legendary investigative journalist Bob Woodward paints a scathing picture of the Bush administration's handing of the war in Iraq, that goes as far as to say the White House is deliberately misleading the public." The Andrea Mitchell set-up piece was about two minutes and 40 seconds. The Tony Snow interview was roughly five minutes, the Woodward interview another six. (Introductory promos took up about 38 seconds.) During the Woodward interview, the graphic on screen was "Bombshell Book: Was Bush In a 'State of Denial'?" NBC also instructed viewers to read more at MSNBC.com. Mitchell laid the Woodward line out with gusto: "Once again, a Bob Woodward book is causing a political firestorm." (Who's the firestorm manufacturer here, with 15 minutes of heavy-breathing air time?) "In his latest, State of Denial, he describes a feuding foreign policy team and an administration deliberately misleading the public about the war in Iraq." After publicizing the claims that White House insiders wanted Donald Rumsfeld canned (along with denials), Mitchell added: "State of Denial portrays Rumsfeld as arrogant, running roughshod over his commanders and Condoleezza Rice. And Woodward says Rice, when she was National Security Adviser, ignored a warning from CIA Director George Tenet, two months before 9/11, that he feared a major al-Qaeda attack. Rice has disputed Woodward's description of the briefing and her lack of response." Mitchell wasn't done with the publicizing and underlining: "Perhaps most damaging, Woodward's claims of a coverup about the insurgency in Iraq. Classified documents in the book indicate the Pentagon knew the number of attacks on U.S. troops was going up while claiming the opposite and under-reporting the numbers. Flying overnight to the Middle East, Condoleezza Rice told reporters it is incomprehensible that she would ignore that CIA warning two months before 9/11 but records and participants in that meet show that it did, indeed, take place."
Matthews: Bush 'Won't Tell Truth,' So 'Solution Is an Election' Appearing on Monday's Tonight Show, MSNBC's Chris Matthews predicted Democrats will win the House since "I don't know how you can lose to this crowd," declared that he's "rooting for" a Democratic Senate candidate because of the candidate's race, went on a rant against Dick Cheney over the false premises behind the Iraq war and argued that since President Bush "won't tell the truth about this war," the "only solution...is an election." Jay Leno began the segment by asking about the Mark Foley scandal, but soon moved to whether Democrats will take over the House. Matthews predicted they will win the House, but not the Senate, adding of a Democrat who is black: "I'm rooting for Harold Ford in Tennessee for a reason. I think we need a little diversity up there on Capitol Hill. That would be nice." Apparently Maryland Republican Senate candidate Michael Steele, who is also black, would not add the proper "diversity." Matthews charged that Donald Rumsfeld "wants all the power in the world, but he doesn't want any responsibility." As for Bush, Matthews contended: "The President won't talk to anybody who said he's made a mistake. He won't admit any mistakes, and in the end, he won't tell the truth about this war over there. And that's the problem we got with the President. The only solution to this is an election." Matthews earned applause from the audience in Burbank when he urged both parties to declare "we're getting out of there [Iraq] at the end of this President's term." [This item was posted, with video, late Monday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. The media files will be added to the posted version of this CyberAlert, but in the meantime, to watch the Real or Windows Media video -- or to listen to the MP3 audio -- go to: newsbusters.org ] Matthews also made clear his wish that John McCain not promise to keep troops in Iraq: "Unless somebody stands forth, if McCain does it, I'd hate to see it, but if somebody comes forth and says, 'I want to keep 150,000 troops there after the next election,' we'll vote against that guy, if that's what you think." In the midst of Matthews' rambling comments about the false claims made by Cheney and Rumsfeld, host Jay Leno interjected a question which presumed the news media haven't been aggressive enough toward the administration: "Why has the media dropped the ball? Why don't they, I mean, this seems like, it seems like the reporters now just take what's given to them." The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video for a portion of Matthews' appearance on the October 2 Tonight Show with Jay Leno:
Jay Leno: "Will this effect the elections?"
Pre-FNC, Ex-MSNBC Chief Recalls, Few Saw Any Liberal Bias Clueless in Secaucus. "Before Fox," the AP's David Bauder relayed in a weekend article about the tenth anniversary of the Fox News Channel, "many in the media scoffed at the notion of a liberal bias and figured only a handful of people really believed that, said Erik Sorenson, former MSNBC President." Sorenson, the President of the Secaucus, New Jersey-based MSNBC from 1999 through early 2004, where he re-hired Keith Olbermann in 2003 to replace Phil Donahue's show which he had created, told Bauder: "Fox proved it's a much larger group than anybody realized." Many realized it earlier, just not very many inside MSNBC -- or CBS News, where he served as Executive Producer of the CBS Evening News from 1991 to 1995. So he should know how Rush Limbaugh was banned from the newscast back then. Indeed, Bauder related how "the very idea that Rush Limbaugh would appear on a CBS Evening News segment called 'Free Speech,' heavily promoted on Katie Couric's first night as anchor, would have been unfathomable a decade ago, Sorenson said." [This item was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] An excerpt from Bauder's October 1 dispatch, which on Yahoo carries the headline, "Slumping Fox News celebrating 1st decade": ...."I watched CNN for a week before I went on and I kept trying to wake myself up," [Fox News CEO Roger] Ailes told The Associated Press. "I kept nodding off and I realized they are biased, they are boring, they looked like a network that has never had any competition." Ailes, a former Republican political operative, said simply presenting different points of view made Fox seem like a contrast to left-leaning news coverage elsewhere. Before Fox, many in the media scoffed at the notion of a liberal bias and figured only a handful of people really believed that, said Erik Sorenson, former MSNBC president. "Fox proved it's a much larger group than anybody realized," he said. Their success clearly made others respond. The very idea that Rush Limbaugh would appear on a "CBS Evening News" segment called "Free Speech," heavily promoted on Katie Couric's first night as anchor, would have been unfathomable a decade ago, Sorenson said. "I've had many people say to me we have forced people to think differently in their own newsrooms," Ailes said.... END of Excerpt
For the AP article in full: news.yahoo.com
Read It Here First: Weekly Standard, Novak Pick Up on Cyber Items You read it here first. Highlighting an exchange featured in NewsBusters and CyberAlert, this week's "Scrapbook" in the Weekly Standard magazine mocked Katie Couric's retort to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice: "To quote my daughter, 'Who made us the boss of them?'" And Monday's column by Robert Novak recounted how, on CBS's Early Show, former CIA analyst Michael Scheuer contradicted the claims Bill Clinton made, in his interview with Chris Wallace, about efforts to kill Osama bin Laden. A NewsBusters/CyberAlert item a week earlier had highlighted Scheuer's comments and another item documented how James Carville and Paula Begala rallied behind Clinton on the Today show, a joint appearance Novak also noted. The "Scrapbook" item in the October 9 Weekly Standard: CBS 'News': the Couric Era CBS News anchor Katie Couric interviews Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, September 24, 2006:
COURIC: When she defends her position, this former Stanford professor can at times sound like she's lecturing a class. . . . Is it really priority number one, in terms of philosophically and pragmatically, for the United States to be spreading democracy around the world? Well -- seems to us that when the interviewer at times sounds like she's channeling a 10-year-old, the interviewee can be forgiven for sounding like she's lecturing a class. END of Excerpt
That's online at: www.weeklystandard.com In a profile of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice which led Sunday's 60 Minutes, Katie Couric explained how Rice "rejects the notion that the U.S. is a bully, imposing its values on the world." CBS then ran a soundbite from Rice as she sat a few feet in front of Couric: "What's wrong with assistance so that people can have their full and complete right to the very liberties and freedoms that we enjoy?" To which, Couric retorted by inserting one of her kids into the story: "To quote my daughter, 'Who made us the boss of them?'" (Couric has two daughters, one a teen and the other a tween, I believe.) Couric followed up: "You have said that your goal was, quote, 'To leave the world not just safer but better.' Right now Iraq doesn't seem safer, Iran and North Korea have not fallen into line. Do you honestly believe that the world is safer now?" See: www.mrc.org
In his October 2 column, Bob Novak reported: The September 26 CyberAlert, "CBS Analyst Blames Clinton for Failure to Kill bin Laden," recounted: Despite Bill Clinton's angry protestations, the bulk of the blame for America's failure to catch or kill Osama bin Laden lies squarely on the Clinton administration, at least according to former CIA officer turned CBS News analyst Michael Scheuer. Scheuer's words, delivered on Monday's edition of CBS's Early Show, must have come as a shock for co-host Harry Smith since the liberal media's usual refrain on bin Laden is to blame Bush for the failure to kill him back in the early days of the Afghanistan campaign. That just isn't the case, Scheuer argued, implicitly criticizing the press: "The former President seems to be able to deny facts with impunity. Bin Laden is alive today because Mr. Clinton, Mr. Sandy Berger, and Mr. Richard Clarke refused to kill him," he said. See: www.mrc.org Novak also related: "Republican insiders, meanwhile, saw a Democratic plot, mapped by Clinton's longtime political advisers, James Carville and Paul Begala, to blunt the GOP comeback. On NBC's Today program, they agreed that their chief had just stiffened the backbone of Democrats. 'Good Dr. Clinton gave us a spinal transplant on Sunday,' Begala exulted." A September 27 CyberAlert item, "Today's Idea of Balanced Guests: James Carville and Paul Begala?" See: www.mrc.org
For Novak's column, "Clinton's Flawed Legacy," go to: www.townhall.com
Letterman's "Top Ten Surprises in Bob Woodward's New Book" From the October 2 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Surprises in Bob Woodward's New Book." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. Bush financed the war by selling White House china on e-Bay 9. Instead of pursuing al-Qaeda, CIA agents originally pursued Al Pacino 8. President's military strategy based on re-runs of F-Troop 7. Bush's plan: To fix this mess by the end of his third term 6. Says both Bush and Clinton could have done more to prevent the new Kevin Costner film 5. Frequent use of the word "Brangelina" 4. The nude fold-out of Donald Rumsfeld 3. Iraq insurgency began when local affiliates started broadcasting 'Yes, Dear' 2. Book chronicles Condoleezza's futile attempts to get laid 1. Bush lost focus on Iraq because Congressman Mark Foley wouldn't stop sending him inappropriate e-mails
-- Brent Baker
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