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1. ABC: McCain 'Nasty & Bitter'; CBS: He's Trying to Depress Turnout ABC on Monday night focused its ire at John McCain, for making the campaign "increasingly nasty and bitter" by unleashing a "blistering barrage on Obama," while CBS's Jeff Greenfield suggested McCain "may" have decided to "campaign ugly" because "negative campaigns tend to depress turnout" and thus hurt Barack Obama since he's attracting the new voters. Gibson's loaded set-up: "We turn to presidential politics and what is becoming an increasingly nasty and bitter contest. On the eve of the second presidential debate, the McCain campaign has unleashed a blistering barrage on Obama, attacking him not only for what he says, but for who he is and who he knows." Reporter Ron Claiborne proceeded to describe a McCain speech as "by far McCain's fiercest, most sustained, harshest attack on Barack Obama of the entire campaign" which included "even questioning Obama's honesty." After noting the "new offensive includes running mate Sarah Palin accusing Obama of associating with Bill Ayers," Claiborne was less condemnatory of Obama, describing "a slick 13-minute Web video about the Keating Five banking scandal." 2. MSNBC's Hardball Dismisses Ayers as 'Politics of Distraction' In a segment headlined "The Politics of Distraction," Chris Matthews, on Monday night's Hardball, dismissed the McCain/Palin campaign's linking of Bill Ayers to Barack Obama. Matthews conjured a scenario where the GOP was trying to use Obama's tie to Ayers, his middle name of "Hussein," and his donor list to turn Obama into "a man of dangerous mystery." In the first segment of the show, Matthews invited on the Wall Street Journal's Peggy Noonan and the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson to discuss the McCain campaign allegedly distracting voters with Ayers, and for his part, Robinson issued this rallying cry to his colleagues in the press: "We shouldn't, we shouldn't let them do that, though. We in the media shouldn't let them do that." 3. CBS's Early Show: McCain-Palin Making Campaign 'Ugly' At the top of Monday's CBS Early Show, co-host Harry Smith described how the McCain campaign was criticizing Barack Obama for his connection to domestic terrorist Bill Ayers, but avoided any such label: "...dredging up of a character that Barack Obama knows from Chicago named Bill Ayers, who was one of the founders of the Weather Underground. So it's really getting crazy..." Smith offered no explanation of the terrorist activity launched by Weather Underground. Chip Reid also avoided the terrorist label, but did describe the activity of the organization: "William Ayers, a former radical who participated in a domestic bombing campaign during the Vietnam War." Smith and Reid also bashed the McCain campaign for daring to even mention such a connection. Smith began the show by declaring: "It's getting ugly. Less than a month to go and the campaigns are turning negative in the race for the White House...Desperate measures or smart strategy?...And the campaign is getting nasty to say the least." In his report, Reid blamed the ugliness and nastiness on the McCain campaign: "But with a flurry of new negative ads and attacks, it's clear the gloves are now completely off. John McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, is leading the charge...With the campaign's new bare knuckle strategy, attacking Barack Obama's character..." 4. GMA Deplores Palin's 'Guilt by Association' Attack on Obama ABC reporter David Wright continued his sympathetic spinning for Senator Barack Obama on Monday's Good Morning America and assailed Governor Sarah Palin: "Last night in Omaha, Sarah Palin not only questioned Obama's patriotism...she accused him of consorting with terrorists." And while Wright explained briefly Palin's observation that Obama has been associated with William Ayers, a former member of the violent Weather Underground, he downplayed the connection. After describing Palin's comment as accusing Obama of "consorting with terrorists," Wright later described the remarks as "guilt by association." The journalist then quoted a McCain representative, "...They say, Barack Obama has been fundamentally dishonest about his work with an unrepentant terrorist. That's the quote from the McCain campaign." However, it's Wright who was being misleading in treating the McCain/Palin statements as an accusation. He closed the first piece by solemnly intoning: "The mud is really starting to fly here and whoever can make the mud stick, well, that person may be the winner a month from now." 5. CNN's 'Truth Squad' Obfuscates Obama Link to Terrorist Ayers CNN's so-called Truth Squad, in two reports on Sunday and Monday by two different correspondents, labeled Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin "false" for stating that Barack Obama "sees America as imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own country." The Squad, in their "fact-checking" of the Alaska Governor, who was making a reference to left-wing terrorist William Ayers, obfuscated Obama's past connections to the former leader of the Weather Underground. The Squad's reports, which aired on CNN's Sunday Morning program and on Monday's American Morning, also left out key details about the Democratic presidential candidate's past with Ayers. 6. Whoopi Goldberg on The View: McCain 'Pulling Out Garbage' With the McCain campaign's new offensive on Barack Obama and his ties with William Ayers, View co-host Whoopi Goldberg on Monday suggested McCain is playing this card out of desperation and using the same failed tactics of Hillary Clinton: "The man is losing. The man is losing and he's pulling out garbage that didn't work for Clinton. It's not going to work for him." Discussing Ayers, Goldberg "assume[d] that he rehabilitated himself." When Elisabeth Hasselbeck, outnumbered three to one, reminded the panel that Ayers expressed regret in 2001 that he had not done more, Sherri Shepherd wagged her finger in Elisabeth's face, lecturing: "No you don't Elisabeth." Shepherd retorted that Ayers' remarks were not about September 11, something already known. Barbara Walters called such campaign tactics "smears" even as Elisabeth asserted that they are not smears, but true. ABC: McCain 'Nasty & Bitter'; CBS: He's Trying to Depress Turnout ABC on Monday night focused its ire at John McCain, for making the campaign "increasingly nasty and bitter" by unleashing a "blistering barrage on Obama," while CBS's Jeff Greenfield suggested McCain "may" have decided to "campaign ugly" because "negative campaigns tend to depress turnout" and thus hurt Barack Obama since he's attracting the new voters. Gibson's loaded set-up: "We turn to presidential politics and what is becoming an increasingly nasty and bitter contest. On the eve of the second presidential debate, the McCain campaign has unleashed a blistering barrage on Obama, attacking him not only for what he says, but for who he is and who he knows." Reporter Ron Claiborne proceeded to describe a McCain speech as "by far McCain's fiercest, most sustained, harshest attack on Barack Obama of the entire campaign" which included "even questioning Obama's honesty." After noting the "new offensive includes running mate Sarah Palin accusing Obama of associating with Bill Ayers," Claiborne was less condemnatory of Obama, describing "a slick 13-minute Web video about the Keating Five banking scandal." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Monday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]
On the CBS Evening News, Katie Couric asked: "So, do you think it's going to turn a lot of voters from both camps off and they're not going to show up on election day?" Greenfield allowed: When Couric wondered "might this motivate voters?", Greenfield reiterated his original theory: "I just know there's a theory that says 'make the campaign ugly and people won't turn out to vote.'" The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video to provide this transcript of the story on the Monday, October 6 World News on ABC anchored from Dayton, Ohio: CHARLES GIBSON: Next we turn to presidential politics and what is becoming an increasingly nasty and bitter contest. On the eve of the second presidential debate, the McCain campaign has unleashed a blistering barrage on Obama, attacking him not only for what he says, but for who he is and who he knows. Ron Claiborne is with McCain in Albuquerque.
RON CLAIBORNE: It was by far McCain's fiercest, most sustained, harshest attack on Barack Obama of the entire campaign. The Couric-Greenfield discussion following a story on how the campaign is growing "nastier," with McCain and Plain attacking and now a retort from Obama:
COURIC: Jeff, very simply, why are they doing this?
MSNBC's Hardball Dismisses Ayers as 'Politics of Distraction' In a segment headlined "The Politics of Distraction," Chris Matthews, on Monday night's Hardball, dismissed the McCain/Palin campaign's linking of Bill Ayers to Barack Obama. Matthews conjured a scenario where the GOP was trying to use Obama's tie to Ayers, his middle name of "Hussein," and his donor list to turn Obama into "a man of dangerous mystery." Matthews: "I see an attempt, over the last seven days, to tie three points together in the thinking of older voters, especially, so that they can have a mystery about Barack Obama they hadn't had last week. One, this question of Bill Ayers, the Weathermen, back 10 years or so in Chicago politics or Chicago organizing politics. Two, his middle name Hussein. And three, the question of who his donor list includes? I think they're putting this together by demanding that donor list. They're trying to build the case that he's a man of mystery. That, not that he's a street corner guy from the ghetto but that he's somehow maybe connected to terrorism because of this past association with a terrorist. With his middle name being Hussein, which I predicted last week, everybody it's, everybody I talked to, it was coming out. And third this donor list game. They are trying to make him a man of dangerous mystery because they can't beat him on the standard issues of this election." [This item, by the MRC's Geoffrey Dickens, was posted Monday evening on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] In the first segment of the show, Matthews invited on the Wall Street Journal's Peggy Noonan and the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson to discuss the McCain campaign allegedly distracting voters with Ayers, and for his part, Robinson issued this rallying cry to his colleagues in the press: "We shouldn't, we shouldn't let them do that, though. We in the media shouldn't let them do that." The following conversations occurred on the October 6 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: One thing I noticed about Obama and it sometimes drive me crazy, Peggy [Noonan], is that he seems very calm. And I keep wanting, wanting him to be more like me or more like [Jim] Cramer, which is, we're very much alike. And yet that almost Zen calmness of him, in our era, Perry Como calmness of his seems to be helping him, compared to the erratic seeming McCain. Is that tenor important? Or is it, at some point do you have to show some passion? ...
MATTHEWS: Okay I am a student of politics, since I was 13-years-old and I see a pattern, alright? This has nothing to do with my views about these candidates. I see an attempt, over the last seven days, to tie three points together in the thinking of older voters, especially, so that they can have a mystery about Barack Obama they hadn't had last week. One, this question of Bill Ayers, the Weathermen, back 10 years or so in Chicago politics or Chicago organizing politics. Two, his middle name Hussein. And three, the question of who his donor list includes? I think they're putting this together by demanding that donor list. They're trying to build the case that he's a man of mystery. That, not that he's a street corner guy from the ghetto but that he's somehow maybe connected to terrorism because of this past association with a terrorist. With his middle name being Hussein, which I predicted last week, everybody it's, everybody I talked to, it was coming out. And third this donor list game. They are trying to make him a man of dangerous mystery because they can't beat him on the standard issues of this election. Is that what they're doing? ...
MATTHEWS: Imagine writing a history book, the election turned on who the guy hung around with, 20 some years ago. I tell ya, I always try to look forward, then look backwards. What were the causes of the war? What turned the election? What were the big issues that turned the election, and then look back and say, that's a basis for judging. A big historic reason. You only get one vote. ...
MATTHEWS: I've been watching and studying politics, I said, for a long time. What we're seeing here is a campaign that knows it's on a losing course. That knows it needs, desperately, to change the subject. I'm talking about the McCain campaign. The subject right now is the economy. And it's killing the incumbent party. If you ask someone if they like the direction this country is heading in, only a fraction, a slice of voters say, "Yeah, keep it up!" So what are the wiseguys around John McCain tell him? They tell him, that either he goes at his rival personally, or he loses. He needs to change the subject from, "What do you think of the way things are headed in this country?" to, "Who is this guy Barack Obama?" Mystery. That's what they want to shroud Obama with, mystery.
CBS's Early Show: McCain-Palin Making Campaign 'Ugly' At the top of Monday's CBS Early Show, co-host Harry Smith described how the McCain campaign was criticizing Barack Obama for his connection to domestic terrorist Bill Ayers, but avoided any such label: "...dredging up of a character that Barack Obama knows from Chicago named Bill Ayers, who was one of the founders of the Weather Underground. So it's really getting crazy..." Smith offered no explanation of the terrorist activity launched by Weather Underground. In a later segment, correspondent Chip Reid also avoided the terrorist label, but did describe the activity of the organization: "William Ayers, a former radical who participated in a domestic bombing campaign during the Vietnam War." At the same time that Smith and Reid worked to downplay Ayers's terrorist activity and connection to Obama, they also bashed the McCain campaign for daring to even mention such a connection. Smith began the show by declaring: "It's getting ugly. Less than a month to go and the campaigns are turning negative in the race for the White House...Desperate measures or smart strategy?...And the campaign is getting nasty to say the least." In his report, Reid blamed the ugliness and nastiness on the McCain campaign: "But with a flurry of new negative ads and attacks, it's clear the gloves are now completely off. John McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, is leading the charge...With the campaign's new bare knuckle strategy, attacking Barack Obama's character..." [This item, by the MRC's Kyle Drennen, was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Reid followed by repeating the Obama campaigns talking points on the issue: "The Obama campaign says Obama and Ayers are only casual friends, whose children go to the same schools...Campaigning in North Carolina, Obama accused McCain of launching a smear campaign to distract attention from McCain's record on the economy." Reid went to described Obama's lead in the polls and an Obama rally in Ohio featuring Bruce Springsteen. Reid concluded his report by describing how the Obama campaign is: "...expecting John McCain to come out swinging as he struggles to find someway to try to turn this thing around." The only suggestion that Obama was also engaging in negative campaigning was a few brief mentions of Obama ads attacking John McCain for his role in the Keating Five scandal. Smith began the show by explaining: "A couple of ads coming out now, one from the Obama side dredging up the memories of the Keating Five, the savings and loan scandal that cost hundreds of millions of dollars to several -- about 10,000 -- 20,000 stockholders, that implicated Senator John McCain." Later, Reid mentioned: "Later today they plan to release a so-called 'documentary' on it's campaign website detailing McCain's relationship with Charles Keating. The man at the center of the savings and loan scandal in the late 1980s." At no point during the segment was it explained that McCain was exonerated of any wrongdoing in the corruption scandal. Following Reid's report, Smith interviewed McCain advisor Nancy Pfotenhauer and Obama communications director Robert Gibbs about the campaign attacks. When Pfotenhauer quoted a recent New York Times article that outlined Obama's connection to Ayers, Smith became visibly upset and angrily interrupted: "And what was the conclusion? Excuse me. And what was...Excuse me. What was the conclusion? What was the conclusion? What was the conclusion of that article?" [See video of Smith scolding Pfotenhauer here: newsbusters.org Here is the full transcript of the segment: 7:00AM TEASER:
HARRY SMITH: It's getting ugly. Less than a month to go and the campaigns are turning negative in the race for the White House.
7:01AM TEASER:
7:02AM SEGMENT:
CHIP REID: Well, good morning, Maggie. You know, it wasn't long ago when Barack Obama and John McCain were both promising a positive, high-minded campaign. But with a flurry of new negative ads and attacks, it's clear the gloves are now completely off. John McCain's running mate, Sarah Palin, is leading the charge.
HARRY SMITH: Joining us now from Arlington, Virginia is Nancy Pfotenhauer, a McCain campaign advisor, and from Asheville, North Carolina, Robert Gibbs, an adviser for the Obama campaign. Good morning to you both.
GMA Deplores Palin's 'Guilt by Association' Attack on Obama ABC reporter David Wright continued his sympathetic spinning for Senator Barack Obama on Monday's Good Morning America and assailed Governor Sarah Palin. He complained: "Last night in Omaha, Sarah Palin not only questioned Obama's patriotism...she accused him of consorting with terrorists." And while Wright explained briefly Palin's observation that Obama has been associated with William Ayers, a former member of the violent Weather Underground, he downplayed the connection. After describing Palin's comment as accusing Obama of "consorting with terrorists," Wright later described the remarks as "guilt by association." The journalist then quoted a McCain representative, "...They say, Barack Obama has been fundamentally dishonest about his work with an unrepentant terrorist. That's the quote from the McCain campaign." However, it's Wright who was being misleading in treating the McCain/Palin statements as an accusation. It's a simple fact: William Ayers is an unrepentant terrorist. In 2001, speaking of his 30 bombings, including attacks on the Pentagon, he said: "I feel we didn't do enough." And yet, in a follow-up segment, Wright described Palin's speech as "sticking in the knife" He closed the first piece by solemnly intoning: "The mud is really starting to fly here and whoever can make the mud stick, well, that person may be the winner a month from now." [This item, by the MRC's Scott Whitlock, was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] And although Wright seemed shocked that Palin "questioned Obama's patriotism," which would have to be inferred from her statement, the same morning show ignored House Speaker Nancy Pelosi when she directly attacked the "unpatriotic" Republican members of the House. This occurred on September 27 during the wrangling over the bailout bill. During campaign 2008, David Wright has developed quite a reputation for gushing over Obama and defending him against charges. On April 17, 2008, he labeled terrorist bomber Ayers simply as a "neighbor" of the now-Democratic presidential nominee. (This is despite the fact that an organizing meeting for Obama's state senate campaign was held at Ayers' house and the former Weather Underground member donated $200 to the Democrat in 2001.) See an April 18, 2008 CyberAlert posting for more: www.mrc.org On February 19, 2008, he rhapsodized that Obama rallies are like "Springsteen concerts, but the tickets are free." See a February 21, 2008 CyberAlert posting for more: www.mrc.org A transcript of the October 6 segment, which aired at 7:02am, follows: DIANE SAWYER: [ABC graphic: Race Gets Nasty]: This morning, Sarah Palin leads the negative attacks for John McCain as the Obama forces prepare to fight back. Is this what America wants 29 days before the election? We weigh in with both sides.
7:01am
7:02am
7:13
CNN's 'Truth Squad' Obfuscates Obama Link to Terrorist Ayers CNN's so-called Truth Squad, in two reports on Sunday and Monday by two different correspondents, labeled Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin "false" for stating that Barack Obama "sees America as imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own country." The Squad, in their "fact-checking" of the Alaska governor, who was making a reference to left-wing terrorist William Ayers, obfuscated Obama's past connections to the former leader of the Weather Underground. The Squad's reports, which aired on CNN's Sunday Morning program and on Monday's American Morning, also left out key details about the Democratic presidential candidate's past with Ayers. The network first made an attempt at "fact-checking" Palin's statement, which she made at a campaign rally in Carson, California, near the beginning of the 7 am hour of their Sunday Morning program. Anchor T.J. Holmes, after a report by Don Lemon on the Alaska governor's claim, gave a brief look at the Obama/Ayers connection. "Well, nobody's exactly sure how well Bill Ayers and Barack Obama know each other. The New York Times, CNN, other news organizations have looked into this, found that they apparently did not have a very close relationship, it appears." Well, that's about as clear as Mississippi River mud, and one might guess that Holmes was asking his audience to take the word of two liberal media outlets. [This item, by the MRC's Matthew Balan, was posted Monday evening on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Holmes then gave a short bio of Ayers: "So, exactly who is Bill Ayers? Today, he is a professor of education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Back in the '60s, however, Ayers was a radical activist and a founding member of the group the Weather Underground. That group was behind several bombings in Washington, including at the Capitol and the Pentagon. Riot and conspiracy charges against Ayers were dropped in 1974." After this, he returned to discussing the Obama/Ayers connection: "Ayers and Obama were, in fact, acquaintances. They live in the same Chicago neighborhood, and in 1995, Obama attended a political meeting at Ayers' home. Obama and Ayers also served together on a Chicago charity from 1995 to 1999." Actually, Obama and Ayers served together on the board of the Woods Fund, a Chicago-based organization, from 1999 to 2002. The Fund, which is a $72 million foundation, has given large grants to several liberal organizations (David Freddoso gave a thorough description of these grants in his book, The Case Against Barack Obama). Among these organizations is ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, which over the past several years has been connected to incidents of voter registration fraud. More importantly, CNN did not go into detail about the 1995 "political meeting at Ayers' home," where he lives with his wife Bernadine Dohrn (who was an active member of the Weather Underground herself, and is known for her praise of the Charles Manson murders: "Dig it! Manson killed those pigs, then they ate dinner in the same room with them, then they shoved a fork into a victim's stomach"). A February, 22, 2008 story by Ben Smith of the Politico described how "[Illinois] State Senator Alice Palmer introduced her chosen successor, Barack Obama, to a few of the district's influential liberals at the home of two well known figures on the local left: William Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn." In other words, Obama's political career more or less began in the home of two left-wing terrorists. Smith later recounted in his story that the New York Times quoted Ayers (in their September 11, 2001 edition no less, according to Freddoso; in the same article, the Dohrn quote about Manson appeared) as saying, "I don't regret setting bombs; I feel we didn't do enough." The detail that this political meeting with Ayers took place at his house would be left out by CNN in the subsequent "Truth Squad" reports. For Ben Smith's February, 22, 2008 article on the Obama/Ayers connection, which included Ayers' quote, "I don't regret setting bombs; I feel we didn't do enough," see "Obama once visited '60s radicals" at: www.politico.com The first "Truth Squad" report aired about an hour and 15 minutes after Holmes gave his first brief "fact-check." Correspondent Josh Levs detailed the "radical" background of Ayers, and then gave the following outline: "...[W]e have a graphic for you here laying out a few facts about Ayers and Obama.... They live in the same neighborhood. Both worked with a nonprofit -- Annenberg Challenge, on a local school improvement project, and both were board members for the same charity. Ayers hosted a campaign event for Obama when Obama was running for state Senate. But Obama's campaign says they had no contact by phone or email since 2005." The correspondent then parsed one of Palin's words, just as CNN.com had done in their "fact-check:" "Now, we contacted the McCain campaign because we wanted to understand why Palin used the plural word, 'terrorists,' and we did not hear back from the McCain campaign." Levs failed to mention Bernadine Dohrn's marriage to Ayers, so the lack of understanding of Palin's use of the plural could be understandable. For more on how CNN.com parsed Palin's use of the plural word "terrorists," see Terry Trippany's October 5 NewsBusters.org item, "CNN Ignores Bernardine Dohrn's Terrorist Past While Defending Obama" at: newsbusters.org At the end of the report, Levs delivered CNN's "verdict:"
LEVS: Let's go to the verdict now, which I have for you from the CNN 'Truth Squad.' Our verdict here is false. There's no indication that Ayers and Obama are palling around, or that they have had an ongoing relationship in the past three years. And also, there's nothing to suggest that Ayers is now involved in terrorist activities other than -- or that any other Obama associates are. So, there you go. We kind of jumped on that one yesterday. As soon as we heard it on the campaign trail, obviously, it was a key one for the 'Truth Squad' to tackle. So, we got it for you. On Monday's American Morning, correspondent Jason Carroll gave his own version of the "Truth Squad" "fact-check" during a report 19 minutes into the 7 am Eastern hour of the CNN program. After co-host John Roberts introduced the report, Carroll began with an apparent Freudian slip: "She's definitely getting ugly out there. It was a harshly worded political weekend -- Sarah Palin twice linking Barack Obama to terrorists." After playing the "money quote" from Palin, he then gave the following analysis:
CARROLL: A dramatic charge, but is it right? We know that Palin was referring to at least, in part, to the man that you see there on the left here -- '60s radical William Ayers. Ayers and his wife were members of the Weather Underground, a group that protested the Vietnam War by bombing government buildings, including the Pentagon and the Capitol. The FBI labeled it a domestic terrorist group, and Ayers and his wife spent 10 years on the run. Charges were eventually dropped, but only after it was ruled that the FBI crossed the line in obtaining evidence. Ayers went on to become a professor at the University of Illinois, and settled down in Obama's Chicago neighborhood. The two met in 1995 and served on two boards together. In 1995, they worked on a school improvement program. That same year, Ayers hosted a campaign event for Obama, as Obama began to bid for the U.S. Senate. And from 1999 to 2001, both were board members for a charity foundation known at the Woods Fund. But Obama's campaign says they have not spoken on the phone or e-mailed since 2005, when Obama became a U.S. senator, and we found no evidence they were social outside of the work they did together. So Carroll basically rehashed what his fellow correspondent Josh Levs outlined the morning before, all the while omitting where this "campaign event" took place and continuing to parse over the plural word "terrorists." Roberts actually had to correct Carroll, as he said that the meeting at Ayers took place as he "began to bid for the U.S. Senate," instead of at the beginning of his campaign for the Illinois State Senate. Also, according to an AP report on April 17, 2008, Obama left the Woods Fund board in December 2002, not in 2001. When that report was filed, Ayers was actually still on the Fund's board. For the AP report on Obama's tenure on the Woods Funds's board with Ayers, see "Fact Check: Obama's Relationship with William Ayers" at: elections.foxnews.com
Whoopi Goldberg on The View: McCain 'Pulling Out Garbage' With the McCain campaign's new offensive on Barack Obama and his ties with William Ayers, View co-host Whoopi Goldberg on Monday suggested McCain is playing this card out of desperation and using the same failed tactics of Hillary Clinton: "The man is losing. The man is losing and he's pulling out garbage that didn't work for Clinton. It's not going to work for him." Discussing Ayers, Goldberg "assume[d] that he rehabilitated himself." When Elisabeth Hasselbeck, outnumbered three to one, reminded the panel that Ayers expressed regret in 2001 that he had not done more, Sherri Shepherd wagged her finger in Elisabeth's face, lecturing: "No you don't Elisabeth." Shepherd retorted that Ayers' remarks were not about September 11, something already known. [This item, by the MRC's Justin McCarthy, was posted Monday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Barbara Walters, for her part, called such campaign tactics "smears" even as Elisabeth asserted that they are not smears, but true. Walters, also added that attacks on McCain's involvement in the Keating Five scandal was a smear as well and such attacks distract us for the many challenges the United States faces. From the October 6 show:
GOLDBERG: Both campaigns have gone on the attack now. Palin has been accusing Obama of paling around with terrorists. And Obama's accusing McCain of being involved with the Keating Five Savings and Loan scandal. Any thoughts?
-- Brent Baker
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