For Immediate Release: Keith Appell (703) 683-5004 - Thursday, October 21, 1999
Vol. 3, No. 39
RNC Discovers Gore Arms Control Flip-Flop, But Media's "Ad Watch" Hounds Remain Silent
No Exposure for Gore's Dueling Poseurs
News outlets
declared that Al Gore's decision to air ads on a nuclear test-ban treaty was brilliant
politics. Newsweek's "Conventional Wisdom Watch" cooed: "Cuts
quick ad blasting GOPs [sic] on nukes. Even manages to look a little
presidential." Time's "Winners and Losers" called Gore a winner:
"Tin man cuts smart nuke ad."
In the ad, Gore declared: "This vote goes against the tide of history...I've
worked on this for 20 years because, unless we get this one right, nothing else
matters." But wouldn't that leave the impression that Gore has had the same opinion
for 20 years?
The Republican National Committee has noted that Gore's statements in a 1987
presidential debate sound a lot like Senate Republicans on the floor a few days ago. He
asked, "Can we firmly verify whether or not the Soviet Union is exploding low-yield
tests on its territory?... Secondly, do we need continued tests in order to assure the
reliability of our own nuclear devices?" Gore placed himself to the right of most
Democrats.
In a Clintonesque fashion, Gore then denounced as unrealistic a proposal by the group
sponsoring the debate to ban all flight testing of ballistic missiles: "This is a
really bad idea....if both sides begin to lose all confidence to make their weapons work,
then they'll lose any confidence in their ability to use them if they have to. Now that
might be fine for a first strike, but we depend on our arsenal for deterrence. And if we
do not have any confidence in the reliability of our deterrent weapons, then we have
thrown away deterrence without having anything to substitute for it. Simply good will,
good faith, or are we going to take a realistic approach to this?" [For more, see
box.]
In the October 24, 1987 Los Angeles Times,
reporter James Risen quoted Gore
sounding like George W. Bush: "'I have aimed my campaign message at Democrats who
believe themselves to be realists, and who look at issues one by one without applying
ideological tests,' Gore said. 'The receptivity to that message is greater this year than
ever before, both in the South and across the country, simply because there is such an
intense desire among Democrats to win.'"
Risen wrote that Gore's stands weren't so far from other Democrats, but that it was his
"strident tone in recent debates more than anything else -- most notably his repeated
charge that the party's other candidates support defense policies that would foster
'retreat, complacency and doubt' -- that has won over Southern Democrats."
Where are the media on this story? Where are the fact-checking "ad watch"
patrols to compare Gore's commercial with the public record? Fox News Channel reporter
Carl Cameron is the only national journalist to go beyond cheering Gore's ad or playing
pundit on whether it will sell. -- 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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