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1. On 20/20, Gibson Aggressive w/ Palin on Taxes, Abortion and Guns In portions of Charles Gibson's third interview with Sarah Palin aired on Friday's 20/20 and Nightline, but not earlier on World News, Gibson demanded to know why she and John McCain "keep saying" Barack Obama will raise taxes when he says he won't, followed up her wish that Roe v Wade be overturned by -- in a question left out of the ABCNews.com transcript -- contending "it's a critical issue for so many women. You believe women should not have that choice?" and after Palin expressed support for gun rights, he asserted "we spend billions of dollars a year every year treating people who are victims of gun violence" and pleaded, as if more gun control is the only solution: "Nothing we can do about that?" 2. Gibson: Economy 'Sick,' Makes Palin Affirm Conservative Views In Charles Gibson's third interview session with Sarah Palin, conducted at her home in Wasilla and featured on Friday's World News, Gibson asserted "we've got a very sick economy," pressed her to list how she'd change Bush economic policy, insisted she concede "it's now pretty clearly documented you supported that bridge before you opposed it" (and to defend Alaska's continued earmark requests), all before he ran through several social issues -- from abortion to guns -- forcing her to state positions Gibson certainly realized would cement her to ideologically conservative positions seen as extreme by many of his viewers. "Roe v. Wade, do you think it should be reversed?...John McCain would allow abortion in cases of rape and incest. Do you believe in it only in the case where the life of the mother is in danger?...Would you change and accept it in rape and incest?"; "Embryonic stem cell research, John McCain has been supportive of it"; "Homosexuality, genetic or learned?"; and "Guns: 70 percent of this country supports a ban on semiautomatic assault weapons. Do you?" 3. Gibson Advanced to Palin What Hume Calls an Obama 'Dishonesty' Speaking of "dishonesty" in McCain's TV ads, on Fox News Sunday Brit Hume pointed out Barack "Obama goes around claiming he's going to cut the taxes of 95 percent of the public, which is literally impossible" since "40 percent of American taxpayers don't pay any income tax," but that hasn't stopped ABC (directly) and CBS (implicitly) in recent days from advancing that Obama claim as fact. Charles Gibson, in his third interview session with Sarah Palin excerpted on Friday's 20/20 and Nightline (see earlier NB item), stated that Obama will extend the "Bush tax cuts on everything but people who own or earn more than $250,000 a year -- cuts taxes on over 91 percent of the country." On Tuesday's CBS Evening News, Anthony Mason looked at how the Obama and McCain tax plans would impact three Ohio families, including Charles and Joi Beacham who earn $32,000. Mason asked them: "In terms of taxes, what do you want from the next President?" Joi, a school teacher with an astounding level of chutzpah, replied: "Relief." Chutzpah because the Beachams paid no taxes in 2007. 4. In 2007 Interview, ABC's Gibson Greeted Obama With Softballs Nearly a year ago, when the inexperienced presidential candidate Barack Obama sat for his first interview with Charles Gibson, the ABC anchor did not try and expose any gaps in Obama's foreign policy knowledge or press him about his readiness for the job he was seeking. Instead Gibson emphasized Obama's personal story, about how his parents met, how Obama met his wife, etc. But just as he did with his Thursday night interview with GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, Gibson did ask Obama about the "hubris" he displayed in seeking the presidency. Here's the exchange from the November 1, 2007 World News interview, which Gibson started off by pointing out how Obama began thinking about himself as President while attending Harvard Law school. 5. Gibson Didn't Pound Edwards in '04; Asked If Attacks Made Him Mad As Charles Gibson interviewed young vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin, some might wonder: did Gibson (then a co-host of Good Morning America) throw tough foreign-policy questions at John Edwards in 2004, since he had only four and a half years experience in public office? No. Gibson's first John Edwards interview after he was nominated for Vice President came on the September 2, 2004 Good Morning America, on the Thursday morning of the Republican convention in New York. Gibson didn't ask any quiz questions about his readiness or about foreign policy. Instead, he asked six questions about how the Democrats would respond to the GOP going after the Democrats "hammer and tong last night." Gibson merely asked Edwards how he felt about it, and then demanded to know: "You speak with such equanimity this morning. Didn't they make you mad last night?" Edwards replied in part: "Oh, I thought they were over the top, completely over the top." Gibson repeated: " Did you get mad, though?" 6. Most of Washington Post's Biden Tax Story Devoted to Palin Democratic VP nominee Joe Biden's Friday release of his tax returns embarrassingly revealed, according to a Bloomberg item in Saturday's Boston Globe, that Biden and his wife have, over the past ten years, donated a piddling "two-tenths of 1 percent" of their income to charities, but Saturday's Washington Post article didn't mention that and instead allocated six of ten paragraphs to how "progressive groups...want to determine whether [Sarah] Palin skirted tax obligations." (In the middle of a paragraph deep into its story, Saturday's New York Times reported the mere "$995 in gifts to charities" by the Bidens in 2007, but made no further note of it.) 7. CBS Channels Liberal Fretting Over Obama: 'Where's the Fight?' With "Where's the Fight?" on screen under video of a man in New Hampshire who pushed Barack Obama ("When and how are you going to start fighting back?"), Katie Couric teased Friday's CBS Evening News: "Supporters of Barack Obama are frustrated and letting him know it." Couric set up the story by highlighting how "an Obama campaign official sent out a memo saying 'today is the first day of the rest of the campaign,' and vowing to take the fight to John McCain. But Dean Reynolds reports the new edge Obama tried out today wasn't sharp enough for some of his supporters." Indeed, Reynolds, who soon asserted that "many think" McCain's ads are "lies," began his piece by showcasing the one questioner: "At a stop in New Hampshire today, Glenn Grasso of Dover asked Barack Obama a question on the minds of many Democrats." Grasso pleaded: "When and how are you going to start fighting back against attack ads and the smear campaigns?" After a clip of Obama insisting "our ads have been pretty tough," Reynolds focused on how "the audience here was clearly expecting more" and "what bothers many Democrats is what happened next. The audience literally coaxing a word from him that baldly describes what many think of the McCain camp's tactics." Viewers then heard a man in the audience yell "lies!" before Obama endorsed his word. 8. Newsweek on MSNBC: McCain 'Down & Dirty' So Obama Must Fight Back Newsweek reporter Suzanne Smalley declared on MSNBC shortly before 1 PM EDT Friday afternoon that "over the past few weeks, the McCain campaign has really gotten down and dirty. A lot of their ads have been flat-out lies." So, she pleaded: "Obama needs to really take the steering wheel back. Many Democrats in Washington are worried." 9. CBS's Smith Adamantly Denies Giuliani's Charge of Pro-Obama Bias On Friday's CBS Early Show, co-host Harry Smith talked to Rudy Giuliani about Sarah Palin's performance in an interview with ABC's Charlie Gibson on Thursday's World News and Giuliani observed: "The whole issue of whether she knows world affairs or not, these are questions that were never asked of Barack Obama, never asked of him to this day." A visibly upset Smith vigorously denied such a bias: "That's not true. That's not true." Giuliani continued: "To this day he hasn't been asked these questions, about travel-" Smith kept up his defense: "That's not true. That is absolutely not true...That is absolutely not true. Those -- all those questions have been asked over the last 19 months." Giuliani got in the last word: "I don't know where." Despite Smith's assertions that Obama has been pressed on his foreign policy credentials, since October of 2007, Smith has interviewed Obama eight times and asked the less than one-term Senator a total of two foreign policy questions. 10. Washington Post Slaps Palin's Wasilla for Typical Suburban Sprawl In a Sunday Washington Post hit piece on Sarah Palin, "As Mayor of Wasilla, Palin Cut Own Duties, Left Trail of Bad Blood," reporter Alec MacGillis took this inadvertently humorous shot at the growth of Wasilla during her years as Mayor, an observation that could be made just as well about many booming suburban and ex-urban areas of the lower 48: "The light hand of government is evident in the town's commercial core, essentially a haphazard succession of big-box stores, fast-food restaurants and shopping plazas." Sounds like most of Northern Virginia outside of Washington, DC, or many other areas of the country, most with a pretty heavy hand of government-ruled zoning. On 20/20, Gibson Aggressive w/ Palin on Taxes, Abortion and Guns In portions of Charles Gibson's third interview with Sarah Palin aired on Friday's 20/20 and Nightline, but not earlier on World News, Gibson demanded to know why she and John McCain "keep saying" Barack Obama will raise taxes when he says he won't, followed up her wish that Roe v Wade be overturned by -- in a question left out of the ABCNews.com transcript -- contending "it's a critical issue for so many women. You believe women should not have that choice?" and after Palin expressed support for gun rights, he asserted "we spend billions of dollars a year every year treating people who are victims of gun violence" and pleaded, as if more gun control is the only solution: "Nothing we can do about that?" As the two sat in Palin's Wasilla home, Gibson scolded her and McCain: "Why do you both keep saying that Obama is going to raise people's taxes? It's been pretty clear what he intends. He's talked about middle-class tax cuts, extending Bush tax cuts on everything but people who own or earn more than $250,000 a year -- cuts taxes on over 91 percent of the country. Why do you keep saying he's going to raise people's taxes?" (See #3 below for how Gibson conveyed an impossible Obama claim.) Palin retorted: "Well, I would argue with the whole premise of that, that his mission is to not increase taxes. He's had 94 opportunities to either vote for a tax cut or not support tax increases. And 94 times, he's been on the other side of what I believe the majority of Americans want." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted late Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] As excerpted on Friday's World News (see CyberAlert item #2 below), Gibson asked: "Roe v. Wade, do you think it should be reversed?" Palin affirmed: "I think it should and I think that states should be able to decide that issue." But in a follow up question carried on 20/20 and Nightline, Gibson portrayed Palin as anti-women: "It's a critical issue for so many women. You believe women should not have that choice?" At another point in the interview as shown on World News, Gibson made the dubious claim that "70 percent of this country supports a ban on semiautomatic assault weapons. Do you?" Palin replied: "I do not..." 20/20, however, then played Gibson's thesis: "Isn't gun violence in America a health issue? We spend billions of dollars a year every year treating people who are victims of gun violence. Nothing we can do about that?" Palin delivered a perfect conservative response: "Do I think that all of that gun violence, though, is caused by people pulling a trigger who would have followed any law anyway? No. You start banning guns and you start taking away guns from people who will use them responsibly and use them ethically. You put more and more laws on guns and you start taking away a Second Amendment right, it's going to be, Charlie, the bad guys who have the guns, not those who are law-abiding citizens." For the ABCNews.com posted transcript of Gibson's third session with Palin: abcnews.go.com For the previous rundowns of all three Gibson sit-downs with Palin (part 1 on Thursday's World News, part 2 on Thursday's Nightline, with some of portions 1 and 2 on Friday's Good Morning America), and part 3 as aired on Friday's World News, check: For part 1: "Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War,'" check the September 12 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org For part 2: "Gibson Pushes Palin to Concede Global Warming 'Man-Made,'" see another September 12 CyberAlert article: www.mrc.org For part 3: "Gibson: Economy 'Sick,' Makes Palin Affirm Conservative Social Views," scroll down to #2 below in this CyberAlert.
Gibson: Economy 'Sick,' Makes Palin Affirm Conservative Views In Charles Gibson's third interview session with Sarah Palin, conducted at her home in Wasilla and featured on Friday's World News, Gibson asserted "we've got a very sick economy," pressed her to list how she'd change Bush economic policy, insisted she concede "it's now pretty clearly documented you supported that bridge before you opposed it" (and to defend Alaska's continued earmark requests), all before he ran through several social issues -- from abortion to guns -- forcing her to state positions Gibson certainly realized would cement her to ideologically conservative positions seen as extreme by many of his viewers. On the economy, with the Palin's airplane visible lakeside in the background, Gibson proposed: "John McCain and you are now talking about the GOP as a party of change. We've got a very sick economy. Tell me the three principal things you would do to change the Bush economic policies." Amongst his follow-ups: "Summarize the three things that you'd change in the Bush economic plans." Gibson soon ran through a list of social issue topics: # "Roe v. Wade, do you think it should be reversed?...John McCain would allow abortion in cases of rape and incest. Do you believe in it only in the case where the life of the mother is in danger?...Would you change and accept it in rape and incest?" # "Embryonic stem cell research, John McCain has been supportive of it." # "Homosexuality, genetic or learned?" # "Guns: 70 percent of this country supports a ban on semiautomatic assault weapons. Do you?" [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] For my rundowns of the first and second Gibson sit-downs with Palin, which aired on Thursday's World News and Nightline (with some of both on Friday's Good Morning America), check: For part 1: "Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War,'" check the September 12 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org For part 2: "Gibson Pushes Palin to Concede Global Warming 'Man-Made,'" see another September 12 CyberAlert article: www.mrc.org For more of part 3, as aired later on 20/20, scroll up to #1 above in this CyberAlert. Part 1: "Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War'" Gibson promised tonight's (Friday's) 20/20 would include his questions about "Trooper-gate" and whether she banned books. In a clip at the very end of World News plugging more on 20/20, Palin dismissed the book-banning as an "old wives tale." Below is the full corrected transcript, for the record, of what aired on the Friday, September 12 World News (9 minute and 3 minute segments) -- with the exception that the show also ran a bite of Palin, as she and Gibson stood by her seaplane, telling Gibson that Barack Obama now probably "regrets" not picking Hillary Clinton. (The ABCNews.com posted interview transcript of Gibson's third session with Palin is in a different topic sequence and includes portions not aired on Friday's World News, but ran on 20/20: abcnews.go.com )
CHARLES GIBSON: Governor, John McCain and you are now talking about the GOP as a party of change. We've got a very sick economy. Tell me the three principal things you would do to change the Bush economic policies. Segment at end of the newscast:
GIBSON: Is it sexist for people to ask how can somebody manage a family of seven and the vice presidency? Is that a sexist question to ask?
Gibson Advanced to Palin What Hume Calls an Obama 'Dishonesty' Speaking of "dishonesty" in McCain's TV ads, on Fox News Sunday Brit Hume pointed out Barack "Obama goes around claiming he's going to cut the taxes of 95 percent of the public, which is literally impossible" since "40 percent of American taxpayers don't pay any income tax," but that hasn't stopped ABC (directly) and CBS (implicitly) in recent days from advancing that Obama claim as fact. Charles Gibson, in his third interview session with Sarah Palin excerpted on Friday's 20/20 and Nightline (see CyberAlert #1 above), stated that Obama will extend the "Bush tax cuts on everything but people who own or earn more than $250,000 a year -- cuts taxes on over 91 percent of the country." On Tuesday's CBS Evening News, Anthony Mason looked at how the Obama and McCain tax plans would impact three Ohio families, including Charles and Joi Beacham who earn $32,000. Mason asked them: "In terms of taxes, what do you want from the next President?" Joi, a school teacher with an astounding level of chutzpah, replied: "Relief." Chutzpah because, as Mason only noted later (and deserves credit for doing so unlike many of his colleagues over the years), the Beachams "paid no taxes in 2007." Nonetheless, Mason proceeded to report how the Beachams would benefit more from Obama than McCain since they "would see no change in their taxes under McCain, but the Obama plan would help them" because they would get refundable credits and thus "receive a check from the government for more than $2,200." As Hume explained, those who don't pay any income tax will get from Obama's plan "a subsidy. It's hardly a tax cut, it's in fact spending." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Sunday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Hume was a little off in his 40 percent ratio for "taxpayers" who escape having to pay any income tax, though if you add in those who don't file and/or don't earn enough to require filing with the IRS, you probably get to 40 percent or beyond. A June report from the Tax Foundation listed 32.58 percent of IRS income tax returns for 2005 as "non-paying." See: www.taxfoundation.org Hume during the roundtable segment of the September 14 Fox News Sunday: "If we're going to get into this question of dishonesty, I mean, Obama goes around claiming he's going to cut the taxes of 95 percent of the public, which is literally impossible. The reason it's impossible is that 40 percent of American taxpayers don't pay any income tax and therefore can't get a tax cut. What they're going to get is a subsidy. It's hardly a tax cut, it's in fact spending." Hume added, however, "that in the realm of normal exaggeration and hyperbole" of campaigns, "I don't think any of this stuff" -- from McCain and Obama -- "has been too far out of bounds so far." In the September 9 "Where They Stand" report, CBS's Anthony Mason highlighted three Ohio families earning $32,000, $64,000 and $213,000. Charles and Joi Beacham from Pataskala, Ohio with three kids, was the $32,000 family. He runs office supply business, she's a teacher. From the story as it aired):
MASON: In terms of taxes, what do you want from the next President? Online version of the story: www.cbsnews.com
In 2007 Interview, ABC's Gibson Greeted Obama With Softballs Nearly a year ago, when the inexperienced presidential candidate Barack Obama sat for his first interview with Charles Gibson, the ABC anchor did not try and expose any gaps in Obama's foreign policy knowledge or press him about his readiness for the job he was seeking. Instead Gibson emphasized Obama's personal story, about how his parents met, how Obama met his wife, etc. But just as he did with his Thursday night interview with GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, Gibson did ask Obama about the "hubris" he displayed in seeking the presidency. Here's the exchange from the November 1, 2007 World News interview, which Gibson started off by pointing out how Obama began thinking about himself as President while attending Harvard Law school:
CHARLES GIBSON: So did you think to yourself, 'Barack, what kind of hubris is this that I am thinking about being President?" [This item, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, was posted Friday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] That's the only similarity to Gibson's approach to Palin. Gibson sat down with Obama only two months before the Iowa caucuses, when the Illinois Senator was running a strong second to Hillary Clinton in national polls. Yet the questions posed by Gibson at that time struck to the same positive biographical elements that greeted Obama when he first emerged on the national stage in 2004. (For Gibson's approach to Palin, see #1 and #2 above as well as the September 12 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org ) Gibson could have been tougher with Obama, who had already inspired ridicule of his foreign policy acumen by suggesting he would meet hostile heads of state without preconditions. For details on how the big three broadcast networks showered Obama with good press during the run-up to the Democratic primaries, see the MRC's Special Report: "Obama's Margin of Victory: The Media," at: www.mrc.org Here's the full transcript of the November 1, 2007 segment on ABC's World News, part of a series of profiles of the leading presidential candidates:
CHARLES GIBSON: Next, the presidential race and our attempt to explore the private side of the candidates, to learn about the events and the influences that have shaped them and brought them to this point in their political careers. So today in our "Who Is?" series, a Democrat relatively new to national politics, Senator Barack Obama.
Gibson Didn't Pound Edwards in '04; Asked If Attacks Made Him Mad As Charles Gibson interviewed young vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, some might wonder: did Gibson (then a co-host of Good Morning America) throw tough foreign-policy questions at John Edwards in 2004, since he had only four and a half years experience in public office? No. Gibson's first John Edwards interview after he was nominated for Vice President came on the September 2, 2004 Good Morning America, on the Thursday morning of the Republican convention in New York. Gibson didn't ask any quiz questions about his readiness or about foreign policy. Instead, he asked six questions about how the Democrats would respond to the GOP going after the Democrats "hammer and tong last night." Gibson merely asked Edwards how he felt about it, and then demanded to know: "You speak with such equanimity this morning. Didn't they make you mad last night?" Edwards replied in part: "Oh, I thought they were over the top, completely over the top." Gibson repeated: " Did you get mad, though?" [This item, by the MRC's Tim Graham, was posted Friday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Edwards appeared that morning on ABC, CBS, CNN, and NBC. At the time, CyberAlert reported: "After being the most critical of last night's Republican speeches...ABC's Charles Gibson was the gentlest with Edwards, sticking largely to questions about the candidate's feelings. He asked if the Democrats went too easy 'not to engage as directly' in Boston....On CBS, Edwards stammered as Hannah Storm demonstrated a surprisingly hard-news approach, asking for Kerry-Edwards specifics" on counter-terrorism policy. For the September 2 CyberAlert PM edition: www.mrc.org The Gibson interview -- or lecture about how the Democrats failed to whip Republicans hard enough -- began with this introduction: CHARLES GIBSON: In the first half-hour, we talked about how direct were the attacks from the Republicans on the podium last night, directed at the Democratic ticket of John Kerry and John Edwards. A response this morning from John Edwards, the vice-presidential nominee of the Democratic Party. I talked with him a few moments ago.
GIBSON: Senator Edwards, they went at you hammer and tong last night from the podium here at this Republican Convention, saying the fundamental security of this country was at stake in this election, questioning John Kerry's ability to be commander in chief. I wonder how you felt as you listened.
Most of Washington Post's Biden Tax Story Devoted to Palin Democratic VP nominee Joe Biden's Friday release of his tax returns embarrassingly revealed, according to a Bloomberg item in Saturday's Boston Globe, that Biden and his wife have, over the past ten years, donated a piddling "two-tenths of 1 percent" of their income to charities, but Saturday's Washington Post article didn't mention that and instead allocated six of ten paragraphs to how "progressive groups...want to determine whether [Sarah] Palin skirted tax obligations." (In the middle of a paragraph deep into its story, Saturday's New York Times reported the mere "$995 in gifts to charities" by the Bidens in 2007, but made no further note of it.) In the Post article, "Biden Releases His Tax Returns," reporters Lyndsey Layton and Matthew Mosk pointed out how Biden is the "poorest" U.S. Senator, and then pivoted to Palin: "The disclosure came as Democrats tried to put increasing pressure on the Republican vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, to release her returns. Progressive groups said they want to determine whether Palin skirted tax obligations on about $17,000 in per diem payments she received as part of an arrangement that paid her extra for the nights she stayed in her home in Wasilla instead of the governor's mansion in Juneau, 600 miles away...." The tenth and last paragraph of the Post story, one I counted as one of the four of the ten about Biden, related Biden back to Palin: "Biden also prefers to sleep in his own bed at night. When the Senate is in session, Biden famously commutes by train between Washington and Delaware. But members of Congress do not receive a per diem." For the September 13 Post article on page A-3: www.washingtonpost.com [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted early Sunday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The Post gave those "progressive groups" their hook with a very overplayed Tuesday, September 9 front page article, "Palin Billed State for Nights Spent at Home: Taxpayers Also Funded Family's Travel." See: www.washingtonpost.com In a Saturday Post "Free for All" section letter (not online), Matthew Raehl of Manassas, Virginia properly mocked the story: I'd like to propose some alternatives to your sensationalistic headline, "Palin Billed State for Nights Spent at Home": "Palin Saves Alaska Tens of Thousands" "Palin Flies Coach" "Palin Claimed Less Per Diem than Allowed" The September 13 Globe story, "Bidens report giving fraction of income to charity," reported: Senator Joe Biden of Delaware, the Democratic nominee for Vice President, and his wife reported giving a fraction of 1 percent of their income to charity during the past decade, below the national average, tax records show.... Biden and his wife, Jill, earned $319,853 in adjusted gross income and paid $72,787 in federal taxes last year, including $2,721 in alternative minimum taxes. They claimed $995 in deductions for charitable giving, about triple what they deducted in any of the nine previous years. Over the past decade they reported giving an average of $369 to charity.... The Bidens' giving represents a smaller portion of their income than the $353 then-Vice President Al Gore was criticized for donating on an income of $197,729 in 1997. For The Globe story: www.boston.com In the Saturday New York Times story, "Biden Releases Tax Returns, in Part to Pressure Rivals," John Broder buried the skimpy charitable donation figure, and cited just one year: ....Mr. Biden's tax returns show why he consistently ranks as one of the least wealthy members of the Senate. He has virtually no outside or investment income and pays a substantial amount in interest on his home mortgage. For 2007, Mr. Biden and his wife, Jill, paid taxes of $66,273 on an adjusted gross income of $319,853, which included $71,000 in royalties from his book. The couple, who file jointly, claimed $62,954 in deductions, including $995 in gifts to charities and $38,712 in interest payments. They earned $99 in interest on savings accounts and nothing in dividends.... See: www.nytimes.com
CBS Channels Liberal Fretting Over Obama: 'Where's the Fight?' With "Where's the Fight?" on screen under video of a man in New Hampshire who pushed Barack Obama ("When and how are you going to start fighting back?"), Katie Couric teased Friday's CBS Evening News: "Supporters of Barack Obama are frustrated and letting him know it." Couric set up the story by highlighting how "an Obama campaign official sent out a memo saying 'today is the first day of the rest of the campaign,' and vowing to take the fight to John McCain. But Dean Reynolds reports the new edge Obama tried out today wasn't sharp enough for some of his supporters." Indeed, Reynolds, who soon asserted that "many think" McCain's ads are "lies," began his piece by showcasing the one questioner: "At a stop in New Hampshire today, Glenn Grasso of Dover asked Barack Obama a question on the minds of many Democrats." Grasso pleaded: "When and how are you going to start fighting back against attack ads and the smear campaigns?" After a clip of Obama insisting "our ads have been pretty tough," Reynolds focused on how "the audience here was clearly expecting more" and "what bothers many Democrats is what happened next. The audience literally coaxing a word from him that baldly describes what many think of the McCain camp's tactics." Viewers then heard a man in the audience yell "lies!" before Obama endorsed his word: "Lies, that's the word I was looking for." In the next story, a "Reality Check" on inaccuracies in campaign ads, mostly McCain's, reporter Wyatt Andrews concluded by painting Obama as the victim being forced to respond in kind: "McCain has been the aggressor in this slide to negativity, and that is putting pressure on Obama to respond. Either way, this is not the elevated discussion both candidates promised to deliver." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Saturday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Interestingly, while CBS News (and the Washington Post) found Grasso's question newsworthy -- maybe because it matched the concern of more than a few journalists -- neither of two articles on Saturday in the local Dover, New Hampshire newspaper, Foster's Daily Democrat, mentioned the question: For "Obama goes after McCain on taxes, economic policy," see: www.fosters.com For "Obama woos undecided, but some voters still uncertain after visit," see: www.fosters.com In a Saturday Washington Post story, "Obama Campaign Begins Counterattack," reporter Jonathan Weisman recounted: Even after being prodded by the audience in Dover, Obama appeared reluctant to get too aggressive. Glenn Grasso, 39, a doctoral student, pleaded: "When and how are you going to start fighting back?" Obama responded by calling McCain's ads "just fabricated" and "just made up," an answer that spurred some to shout out: "Lies." "Lies, that's the word," Obama said. For the September 13 Post story in full: www.washingtonpost.com The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video to provide this transcript of the Reynolds story on the Friday, September 12 CBS Evening News: KATIE COURIC: Turning to the presidential race, Barack Obama is looking to get his campaign back on track and stop his opponent's momentum. An Obama campaign official sent out a memo saying "today is the first day of the rest of the campaign," and vowing to take the fight to John McCain. But Dean Reynolds reports the new edge Obama tried out today wasn't sharp enough for some of his supporters.
DEAN REYNOLDS: At a stop in New Hampshire today, Glenn Grasso of Dover asked Barack Obama a question on the minds of many Democrats.
Newsweek on MSNBC: McCain 'Down & Dirty' So Obama Must Fight Back Newsweek reporter Suzanne Smalley declared on MSNBC shortly before 1 PM EDT Friday afternoon that "over the past few weeks, the McCain campaign has really gotten down and dirty. A lot of their ads have been flat-out lies." So, she pleaded: "Obama needs to really take the steering wheel back. Many Democrats in Washington are worried." Smalley was encouraged, however, by how at Thursday night's National Service Forum "McCain gave Obama a present on a silver platter by talking about the fact that he's divorced from the every day challenges that people in America face. So I think Obama is going to be using that in the coming days." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Friday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The September 12 exchange with MSNBC host Contessa Brewer's leading question and Smalley's only comment during the short 12:55 PM EDT segment:
CONTESSA BREWER: We saw at the National Service Forum at Columbia University last night Barack Obama and John McCain taking to the stage. Obama shows up having a national service plan, McCain doesn't have a national service plan. Suzanne, that's a big issue, so why not make a campaign ad about that?
CBS's Smith Adamantly Denies Giuliani's Charge of Pro-Obama Bias On Friday's CBS Early Show, co-host Harry Smith talked to Rudy Giuliani about Sarah Palin's performance in an interview with ABC's Charlie Gibson on Thursday's World News and Giuliani observed: "The whole issue of whether she knows world affairs or not, these are questions that were never asked of Barack Obama, never asked of him to this day." A visibly upset Smith vigorously denied such a bias: "That's not true. That's not true." Giuliani continued: "To this day he hasn't been asked these questions, about travel-" Smith kept up his defense: "That's not true. That is absolutely not true...That is absolutely not true. Those -- all those questions have been asked over the last 19 months." Giuliani got in the last word: "I don't know where." Despite Smith's assertions that Obama has been pressed on his foreign policy credentials, since October of 2007, Smith has interviewed Obama eight times and asked the less than one-term Senator a total of two foreign policy questions. The first question came in a December 18, 2007 interview in which Smith asked: "Obama is positioning himself as a candidate for change, particularly on the war. Were you a fan of the surge?" The second question occurred on April 2, 2008: "And there is concern about China's violations of human rights. Should we be a full participant in the Olympic games?" On July 9, co-host Russ Mitchell hit Obama from the left on the troop surge: "What do you say to those folks out there who are saying 'I voted for this guy because he told me he was going to bring the troops home in 16 months now he says he wants to refine his position.'" None of those questions challenged Obama's qualifications to be President of the United States. [This item, by the MRC's Kyle Drennen, was posted Friday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] During the Friday segment, Smith went on to ask Giuliani: "Let me ask you this. Do you have every confidence that she's ready to be president in case she needs to be?" However, on February 29, 2008 Smith interviewed Time magazine editor Richard Stengel, on a story in that publication about whether experience really matters in the presidency: "The question of experience dominating the Democratic campaign, does it really matter?...Time Magazine has two articles on the subject, on the issue that hits news stands today. 'Does Experience Matter in a President' and 'The Science of Experience.'" Stengel explained: "...character trumps experience...It's really the way you are as a person. Your temperament, your intelligence, all of those things make up for what you may lack in experience." For how Smith wasn't sure that experience mattered for a President: newsbusters.org Just prior to Smith's interview with Giuliani, co-host Maggie Rodriguez got reaction to Palin's interview from New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, who argued: "I think in that interview she failed the national security threshold test." Smith then quoted Richardson in his first question to Giuliani: " First thing Bill Richardson said was that Sarah Palin failed the national security threshold test." Giuliani chuckled at the Democratic talking point and Smith admonished him: "Don't laugh for a second, just -- I need -- I want to have a serious conversation with you." Here is the full transcript of the Friday, September 12 segment:
7:00AM TEASER:
7:01AM TEASER:
7:05AM SEGMENT:
RODRIGUEZ: That was Nancy Cordes reporting. We're joined now by New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. He is here to talk to us about what the Democrats thought about the interview. Governor Richardson, good morning.
RICHARDSON: Well, the point is that what you want is a vice president who's going to carry out your views. Yeah, you can challenge him internally, but you can't publicly disagree. And I also disagree with Governor Palin's view that because she has some experience on energy independence, that those are automatic national security credentials. Yes, becoming energy independent has become a national security issue, but the main issues affecting this country are nuclear proliferation, fighting terrorists and I know Governor Giuliani's been very, very strong on that issue. Global warming. Now she seems to be changing her position on global warming. So, look. I think these are factual substantive concerns that I have on the national security front which every vice president should have. They're, you know, a heartbeat away from the White House. And it's important that our national security credentials for that job be part of the qualifications and I saw Governor Palin-
RODRIGUEZ: Now let's go over to Harry with Rudy Giuliani.
Washington Post Slaps Palin's Wasilla for Typical Suburban Sprawl 10) In a Sunday Washington Post hit piece on Sarah Palin, "As Mayor of Wasilla, Palin Cut Own Duties, Left Trail of Bad Blood," reporter Alec MacGillis took this inadvertently humorous shot at the growth of Wasilla during her years as Mayor, an observation that could be made just as well about many booming suburban and ex-urban areas of the lower 48: "The light hand of government is evident in the town's commercial core, essentially a haphazard succession of big-box stores, fast-food restaurants and shopping plazas." Sounds like most of Northern Virginia outside of Washington, DC, or many other areas of the country, most with a pretty heavy hand of government-ruled zoning. MacGillis, in the September 14 front page article, saw too little government ("the frontier philosophy") as causing Wasilla to be uglier -- with buildings made of "corrugated metal," hardly unusual anywhere in Alaska -- than the surrounding natural beauty: Further constraining City Hall's role is the frontier philosophy that has prevailed in Wasilla, a town that was founded in 1917 as a stop along the new railroad from Anchorage to the gold mines further north. The light hand of government is evident in the town's commercial core, essentially a haphazard succession of big-box stores, fast-food restaurants and shopping plazas. The only semblance of an original downtown is a small collection of historic cabins that have been gathered for display in a grassy area beside a shopping center. Most residents live in ranch houses scattered through the woods. Churches, offices, stores and most other buildings are made of corrugated metal or composite materials. Standing in contrast to the utilitarian architecture are the lakes and majestic peaks. END of Excerpt For the article in full from the September 14 Washington Post: www.washingtonpost.com
-- Brent Baker
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