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1. Olbermann and Dean Suggest Impeaching Bush Cabinet Members On Wednesday's Countdown, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann and frequent guest John Dean discussed the possibility of a Democratic Congress moving to impeach members of President Bush's Cabinet as an alternative to actually impeaching the President or Vice President. After Dean contended that Democrats would need to "find their spine and go toe to toe" with the administration because Republicans "play hardball in a much tougher and more ruthless manner than Democrats," Olbermann brought up Dean's idea of impeaching Bush administration members: "The far end of what you suggest, obviously, would be impeachment, but the merits of that are at best arguable. I think we can probably both recall an occasion in which impeachment actually bolstered a President's popularity. But you wrote recently about impeaching not a President or a Vice President, but members of the Cabinet. How would that work? And is it a practical thing?" 2. CNN's Pelosi Puff Piece: She 'Places a Premium on Family Values' Wednesday's American Morning on CNN featured a virtual DNC press release on incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her childhood city of Baltimore. Reporter Andrea Koppel noted that the Congresswoman comes from a neighborhood "full of proud American-Italian Catholics" and that Pelosi hopes voters will recognize the fact that she "places a premium on family values." The piece featured no criticism of the soon-to-be Speaker, only praise for her "historic moment." 3. CNN Hails Harry 'Pinky' Reid: Enjoys 'People' Mag, Loves His iPod An hour after Wednesday's American Morning delivered a puff profile of incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, CNN reporter Dana Bash profiled incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and revealed some "startling" details: The Nevada Democrat's childhood nickname was "Pinky." Additionally, Reid enjoys listening to his iPod and reading "People" magazine. Unsurprisingly, Bash didn't find time to mention the various scandals swirling around Reid. (Judicial Watch recently named him the tenth most corrupt politician of 2006.) The CNN correspondent, who traveled to Reid's home of Searchlight, Nevada, began her piece by promising surprising revelations about his musical tastes (Cowboy Junkies). 4. Same Poll: 'Americans Optimistic' vs 'Americans See Doom, Gloom' Two AP headlines on Yahoo. On December 30, "AP Poll: Americans Optimistic for 2007." On December 31, "Poll: Americans See Doom, Gloom in 2007." As James Taranto pointed out Tuesday on his "Best of the Web" compilation for OpinionJournal.com: "Guess what, folks? It's the same poll! Half of Americans polled think the glass is half-empty, while half think it's half-full. Or something like that." Olbermann and Dean Suggest Impeaching Bush Cabinet Members On Wednesday's Countdown, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann and frequent guest John Dean discussed the possibility of a Democratic Congress moving to impeach members of President Bush's Cabinet as an alternative to actually impeaching the President or Vice President. After Dean contended that Democrats would need to "find their spine and go toe to toe" with the administration because Republicans "play hardball in a much tougher and more ruthless manner than Democrats," Olbermann brought up Dean's idea of impeaching Bush administration members: "The far end of what you suggest, obviously, would be impeachment, but the merits of that are at best arguable. I think we can probably both recall an occasion in which impeachment actually bolstered a President's popularity. But you wrote recently about impeaching not a President or a Vice President, but members of the Cabinet. How would that work? And is it a practical thing?" [This item, by Brad Wilmouth, was posted Wednesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] After Dean argued that such an impeachment could be used to hold hearings on the President's and Vice President's possible "high crimes and misdemeanors" and "send a message across the bow" of the administration, the two then fretted that the administration might be successful at "stonewalling" an investigation, with Dean suggesting such stonewalling might compare to the Great Wall of China. Below is a transcript of relevant portions of the January 3 Countdown show on MSNBC:
Keith Olbermann: "You have written on this subject. Is it going to be difficult for the Democrats to fight fire with fire, the parties, it would seem, having radically different ideas about what constitutes fair play in politics, don't the Democrats go into something of a disadvantage if they get into a street brawl with the Republicans on all this?"
CNN's Pelosi Puff Piece: She 'Places a Premium on Family Values' Wednesday's American Morning on CNN featured a virtual DNC press release on incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her childhood city of Baltimore. Reporter Andrea Koppel noted that the Congresswoman comes from a neighborhood "full of proud American-Italian Catholics" and that Pelosi hopes voters will recognize the fact that she "places a premium on family values." The piece featured no criticism of the soon-to-be Speaker, only praise for her "historic moment." [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] A sample:
Andrea Koppel: "Now, as Congresswoman Pelosi walks into the history books, becoming the first female Speaker of the House, she plans to pay tribute to her Baltimore roots. Professor Matthew Crensen says the visit could help her refashion her image." Earlier in the January 3 segment, Koppel noted how Pelosi has been "labeled" a liberal by Republicans. Labeled? According to the American Conservative Union, the San Francicso Democrat has a lifetime score of three: www.acuratings.org
John Roberts set up the story: "Well, incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says that she's going to waste no time in pursuing her legislative priorities. CNN's Andrea Koppel is live on Capitol Hill with more on the first woman to ascend to the post. She's promising a 100 hours of action right out of the blocks here, isn't she?"
CNN Hails Harry 'Pinky' Reid: Enjoys 'People' Mag, Loves His iPod An hour after Wednesday's American Morning delivered a puff profile of incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, CNN reporter Dana Bash profiled incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and revealed some "startling" details: The Nevada Democrat's childhood nickname was "Pinky." Additionally, Reid enjoys listening to his iPod and reading "People" magazine. Unsurprisingly, Bash didn't find time to mention the various scandals swirling around Reid. (Judicial Watch recently named him the tenth most corrupt politician of 2006.) The CNN correspondent, who traveled to Reid's home of Searchlight, Nevada, began her piece by promising surprising revelations about his musical tastes (Cowboy Junkies). [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
Dana Bash marveled: "The Senator from Nevada fights for Sin City but doesn't gamble or drink. A square-looking guy who listens to hip songs on his iPod."
After being introduced by American Morning co-host John Roberts, Bash offered a number of humanizing details about Reid, including the "Pinky" revelation: The segment continued with several personal, often painful, stories from Reid's childhood. (His father committed suicide.) These details may be informative and compelling, but doesn't it seem odd to completely leave out any mention of Reid's controversies? Bash closed the piece with some extended biographical information and co-host Roberts again brought up the Nevada Senator's fondness for People magazine:
Bash: "Harry Reid sums himself up this way-" One has to ask, would a Republican's fondness for celebrity gossip magazines be enough to engender such favorable coverage?
Same Poll: 'Americans Optimistic' vs 'Americans See Doom, Gloom' Two AP headlines on Yahoo. On December 30, "AP Poll: Americans Optimistic for 2007." On December 31, "Poll: Americans See Doom, Gloom in 2007." As James Taranto pointed out Tuesday on his "Best of the Web" compilation for OpinionJournal.com: "Guess what, folks? It's the same poll! Half of Americans polled think the glass is half-empty, while half think it's half-full. Or something like that." Taranto provided excerpts from the leads of the two articles. From the optimistic version: Seventy-two percent of Americans feel good about what 2007 will bring for the country, and an even larger 89 percent are optimistic about the new year for themselves and their families, according to the poll. That fits with a long-term trend suggesting that Americans are generally an optimistic lot. Polling over recent decades is replete with optimism, and with a tendency for people to feel more positively about their own situations than that of the country overall.... And from the "doom, gloom" version: Six in 10 people think the U.S. will be the victim of another terrorist attack next year, more than five years after the Sept. 11 assault on New York and Washington. An identical percentage think it is likely that bad guys will unleash a biological or nuclear weapon elsewhere in the world. There is plenty of gloom to accompany all of that doom. Seventy percent of Americans predict another major natural disaster within the United States and an equal percentage expect worsening global warming. Fewer than one-third of people, or 29 percent, think it is likely that the U.S. will withdraw its troops from Iraq.... END of Excerpts Taranto observed: "The pessimistic version also notes that 'one in four, 25 percent, anticipates the second coming of Jesus Christ.' But if they're Christians, wouldn't that make them optimists?"
For the story headlined, "AP poll: Americans optimistic for 2007," go to: news.yahoo.com
-- Brent Baker
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