For Immediate Release: Keith Appell (703) 683-5004 - Wednesday, June 16, 1999
Vol. 3, No. 23
National Media Continue Quadrennial Tradition of Trying to Drive Conservative Influence Out of GOP
George W. Bush's Media Litmus Tests
This week may signal the official media kickoff
of Campaign 2000 and the arrival of Bill Clinton's lame-duck status. But it also marks the
start of the national media's quadrennial attempt to drive conservative influence out of
the GOP. Compelled in part by impressive early poll ratings, reporters have praised George
W. Bush's first outings. But will he pass the media's litmus tests? So far, reporters
suggest Bush's "compassionate conservatism" slogan makes him sound like the
Un-Reagan, but will he go further to repudiate his party's conservative base?
On ABC's Good
Morning America Monday, co-host Charles Gibson asked Michael Duffy of Time
magazine and ABC's Cokie Roberts to assess Bush: "Alright, talk to me a little bit
about where this guy stands on issues, and Michael, let me start with you. He talks about
himself as a compassionate conservative. That sounds a little bit like one from Column A,
one from Column B. I don't know what it means. Does he?"
Duffy answered: "Well, what he says it is, essentially, is he's not taking the
extreme positions that some in his party have taken for the last four or five years. He
said on Saturday, you know, I'm not, I'm conservative, but I'm not uncompassionate. I
believe in education, I believe essentially in the environment, I'm not going to say the
kind of race-baiting things that perhaps my father or others in the party have said."
In Time, Duffy and Nancy Gibbs touted Bush's ties to successful Republican
governors, including Michigan's John Engler, who were by definition centrists: "In
contrast to the sinking Congress, the Governors were emerging as stars, centrist and
practical CEOs who were busy fixing welfare and improving schools and cutting taxes while
Gingrich fiddled." Tax cuts and welfare reform, centrist?
On NBC's Today, Newsweek reporter Howard Fineman marveled at how
unusual it is for a conservative to declare he cares about education and the poor:
"He's giving a general election message now, Katie. He's telling the Republicans at
the grassroots, 'Look, you want to win? Here's how you do it. Yes tax cuts, yes less
government, yes decency back in the Oval Office but also we've got to be concerned about
educating every American child and helping out the poor.' It's an unusual message really
to hear from a Republican rostrum but the people clapped if only because they think this
is how to win."
In the pages of Newsweek, Fineman explained: "For generations, the Bushes
have been troubled by -- and had trouble with -- the GOP right. His grandfather was a
consummate Ike man, flummoxed by McCarthy and the Red-baiters. His father never bonded
with the New Right activists who despised him even after he became leader of the party the
Gipper built. If W can get the right wing to ease off -- or roll them in the primaries --
he can call the party of Ike and Reagan his."
In 1995, hours after Colin Powell announced he would not run for President, Fineman
explained the media mindset on CNBC: "A lot of my colleagues are trying to accept the
fact that the Republican Party has the upper hand, and they want a Republican Party they
can live with, and Powell is a guy they could live with." From elections to
inaugurations to conventions, the media aren't seeking to present just the facts, but to
talk up a pre-Reagan Republican Party they can "live with." If Bush does trounce
Gore, they want to make sure there's no conservative mandate. -- Tim Graham
L. Brent Bozell III, Publisher; Brent Baker, Tim Graham, Editors;
Jessica Anderson, Brian Boyd, Geoffrey
Dickens, Mark Drake, Paul Smith, Brad
Wilmouth, Media Analysts; Kristina Sewell, Research
Associate. For the latest liberal media bias, read the
CyberAlert at
www.mrc.org. |
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