UPDATED: On May 19, 2011, Katie Couric stepped down as the anchor of the
CBS Evening News. Couric’s tenure was marked by low ratings — aside from an initial publicity-driven bounce when she took over in September 2006, the
Evening News consistently lagged ABC’s
World News and the
NBC Nightly News — and a showcasing of the liberal mindset Couric previously displayed as the longtime co-host of NBC’s
Today (for many examples, see our earlier reports
here and
here).
From cheering on Barack Obama’s campaign and his liberal presidential agenda, to denigrating the Tea Party and conservative policy positions, Couric perpetuated the bias problem that eroded CBS's credibility under
Dan Rather. Below are more than 40 examples of the liberal slant that typified her reign as the Queen of the
CBS Evening News:
Tea Party = “Moderate Republicans” an “Endangered Species”
“The party crashers. Big primary victories by fringe candidates open a rift in the GOP....After big victories this week by candidates of the Tea Party, the Grand Old Party is in turmoil....Does this mean moderate Republicans are becoming an endangered species?”
— Katie Couric on the September 16, 2010 CBS Evening News.“Tonight, 26 days til the elections, a CBS News poll finds support for Republicans growing, but most Americans don’t believe the Tea Party represents them.”
— Couric on the CBS Evening News, October 7, 2010.“We went to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and talked with independent voters who helped President Obama win that battleground state two years ago....There was unanimous agreement in this group, the Tea Party isn’t their cup of tea.”
— Couric on the October 14, 2010 CBS Evening News.Katie Couric: “And how serious, Bob Schieffer, do you see this chasm developing? I mean, how big a problem will this pose for the GOP?”
Bob Schieffer: “It is a problem.”
— Discussing the supposed divide between the Tea Party and the Republican Party during CBS State of the Union coverage, January 25, 2011.Smaller Government = “Fighting Words”
“Boehner said his goal is a, quote, ‘smaller, less costly and more accountable government.’ Chip, both the President and John Boehner say they hope to find common ground, but those words from John Boehner, they sound like fighting words to me.”
— Couric opening a CBS News special report on President Obama’s post-election press conference, November 3, 2010.Fearing Cuts that Are “Too Deep”
“Republicans say high on their priority list is deficit reduction, starting with major cuts in domestic spending this year. Fiscally conservative freshmen say everything’s fair game. But is there danger in your view, Congressman [Allen] West, that the ax will be too sharp, that the cuts will be too deep?”
— Couric during panel discussion with freshmen members of Congress, CBS Evening News, January 5, 2011.We Need “Muslim Version of The Cosby Show”
“Maybe we need a Muslim version of The Cosby Show. I know that sounds crazy, I know that sounds crazy. But The Cosby Show did so much to change attitudes about African-Americans in this country, and I think sometimes people are afraid of what they don’t understand – like you, Mo.”
— Couric talking to comedian Mo Rocca on her @katiecouric web show, December 22, 2010.Ground Zero Mosque = American Values
"There is a debate to be had about the sensitivity of building this center so close to Ground Zero. But we can not let fear and rage tear down the towers of our core American values."
— Couric on Ground Zero mosque for "Katie Couric's Notebook" on Couric & Co. blog, August 23, 2010.
Katie Shakes Her Pom-Poms for Obama
"Good evening, everyone. Barack Obama, the presumptive Democratic nominee for President, is about to begin a major overseas tour designed to bolster his foreign policy and national security resume, and help him be seen as a credible Commander-in-Chief and potential leader of the free world."
— Katie Couric kicking off the July 18, 2008 CBS Evening News.
"It has been an Obamathon ever since the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee touched down in Afghanistan. At today's press conference in Amman, a throng of reporters recorded his every move. In total, 200 journalists requested seats on 'Air Obama' — 40 of them were accepted. The bill for the trip? About $20,000 each."
— Couric wrapping up the July 22, 2008 Evening News from Amman, Jordan, as part of her network's coverage of Obama’s trip."You campaigned to change the culture in Washington, to change the politics-as-usual culture here. Are you frustrated? Do you think it is much, much harder to do that than you ever anticipated?"
— Couric to Obama in an interview shown on the February 3, 2009 Evening News.
"You're so confident, Mr. President, and so focused. Is your confidence ever shaken? Do you ever wake up and say, 'Damn, this is hard. Damn, I'm not going to get the things done I want to get done, and it's just too politicized to really get accomplished the big things I want to accomplish'?"
— Couric in an exchange with Obama shown on CBS's The Early Show, July 22, 2009. [Video/audio (0:22): WMV | Mp3]Couric: "Mr. Obama, by the way, has continued a presidential tradition, what Thomas Jefferson called 'neology,' making up a new word or giving new meaning to an old one....Talking about the fuss over health care reform, President Obama has introduced us to 'wee wee'd up.'"
President Obama: "There's something about August going into September where everybody in Washington gets all wee wee'd up."
— Evening News, August 24, 2009.
"The 'Dream Team' pushing Chicago's bid for the 2016 Olympic summer games is nearly complete. First Lady Michelle Obama landed today in Denmark where Olympic officials are meeting....The team captain, meanwhile, President Obama, arrives Friday ahead of the final vote."
— Evening News, September 30, 2009. [Video/audio (0:22): WMV | Mp3] Senior political correspondent Jeff Greenfield: "This was very much like he was in the campaign. He went five or ten minutes without a single applause line. He said 'let me tell you how we got into this mess,' he reached out and said to people 'I'm not giving up my idea that we can change the tone of politics.'..."
Couric: "Well, as Tom Friedman said, 'He's better at making us smarter than making us angry.'"
— From CBS's live coverage following the State of the Union, January 27, 2010.
"In a poll conducted a month ago — just a month ago — 71 percent of the Jews in Israel surveyed said they dislike President Obama; 47 percent expressed a strong dislike....To change public opinion in your country, should you be more strongly advocating on his behalf?"
— Couric to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, July 7, 2010 Evening News.
Pressuring Opponents to Join Obama's Revolution
"A recent CBS News poll shows that 53 percent of the American people fully backs the stimulus package, 63 percent of people we polled thought the Republican opposition to the stimulus package was for political reasons. So, are you out of touch with the American people?...Do you think the Republicans are digging themselves in a hole by not being more supportive of the President’s proposals?"
— Couric interviewing Republican House Leader John Boehner on the February 24, 2009 Evening News. Couric: "President Obama made an in-person appeal to House Republicans to vote for his economic stimulus plan, but it didn't work. Not a single Republican joined the majority Democrats tonight as the House passed the more than $800 billion package...."
White House correspondent Chip Reid: "Republicans relentlessly attacked the bill despite the President's extraordinary efforts to get bipartisan support...."
Couric: "Chip, as you mentioned, I mean, the President went up to the Hill to personally appeal to Republicans already, so what more can he do?"
— Evening News, January 28, 2009.
"Do you feel as if you owe President-elect Obama one [an apology]?...You said, on whether Senator Obama is a Marxist, you said, quote, 'It's a good question to ask.' Are you sorry you said that?...What really irritated — even enraged — some Democrats was your speech at the Republican National Convention. Did you understand at the time how nervy that might seem to some Democrats? How inappropriate?"
— Couric to Senator Joe Lieberman, who supported John McCain, November 19, 2008, Evening News.
Arizona's Immigration Law = Cops Gone Wild
"Tonight, Arizona's controversial new immigration law. Police will now be able to make anyone they choose prove they're here illegally. It triggers demonstrations by both sides and a warning from President Obama."
— Couric at the top of the April 23, 2010 Evening News. [Video/audio (0:12): WMV | Mp3]"Hundreds of thousands of them [illegal immigrants] now live in Arizona. But as Kelly Cobiella reports, many no longer feel welcome."
— Evening News, May 3, 2010.
"The uproar continues over Arizona's new immigration law. The commissioner of Major League Baseball today brushed off calls from Latino groups to move next year's All-Star game out of Phoenix. But Bill Whitaker reports, the boycott of Arizona is spreading."
— Evening News, May 13, 2010.
ObamaCare Can't Come Soon Enough
"More than 46 million Americans have no health insurance. So when it comes to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness and good health, all men are not created equal."
— Couric, Evening News, March 12, 2007."The timing could not be worse. Just as he [President Obama] was pushing so hard for health care reform and having some pretty serious setbacks....How do you think the President can, if he can, resuscitate this whole effort?"
— Couric to Bob Schieffer, referring to the flap over Obama's crack that police acted "stupidly" in arresting Henry Gates, July 24, 2009, Evening News.
"Once again, we begin tonight with the battle over health care reform, but this time, we're not starting at a town meeting. Tonight, we're going to show you why many believe reform is desperately needed. These are just some of the tens of thousands of Americans who need health care but have no insurance or not enough of it, and they're lining up at a free makeshift clinic in Los Angeles."
— Couric opening the August 13, 2009 Evening News.
"I feel like right now, in many ways, we're a very angry nation....Maybe I'm naive and idealistic, but you would hope that there could be some conversations taking place where people, you know, really respected one another and talked about the different goals that they had, because I think providing health care for people who can't afford it is something that most people do agree with — that there has to be some kind of alternative other than our national, our nation's emergency rooms for people who need health care. And I read somewhere — I think it was in The New Yorker — that 45,000 people died needlessly because they simply don't have access to health care, and that just seems so unfair and so undemocratic.”
— Couric in a December 22, 2009 Facebook video chat. The statistic Couric cited, which she also touted on the September 17, 2009 Evening News, was generated by the left-wing Physicians for a National Health Program. [Video/audio (0:51): WMV | Mp3]
Fretting Over Too Much Support for Iraq War
Katie Couric: "[Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice] rejects the notion that the U.S. is a bully, imposing its values on the world."
Condoleezza Rice: "What's wrong with assistance so that people can have their full and complete right to the very liberties and freedoms that we enjoy?"
Couric: "To quote my daughter, 'Who made us the boss of them?'"
— 60 Minutes, September 24, 2006. [Video/audio (0:27): WMV | Mp3]
“I think certainly people who covered that [the prelude to the war in Iraq] fell down on the job in terms of getting the right information and kind of rolled over in terms of U.S. policy and really didn’t do their due diligence....I remember at the time of the [troop] buildup, I felt really uncomfortable with the whole atmosphere of the country....You know, the whole culture of wearing flags on your lapel and saying ‘we’ when you were referring to the United States, which, and, and, you know, even the ‘shock and awe’ in the initial stages, it was just too jubilant and just a little uncomfortable....Anyone who questioned the administration was considered unpatriotic....I think everyone in this room would agree that people in this country were misled in terms of the rationale for war. I think that’s clear.”
— Couric talking to former CBS and NBC correspondent Marvin Kalb on the Sept. 25, 2007 Kalb Report shown on C-SPAN2 the next day. [Video/audio (2:03): WMV | Mp3]
Co-host Harry Smith: "[Former White House press secretary Scott McClellan] talks about the failure of mainstream media to hold the Bush administration's feet to the fire in the run-up to the war. Is that an allegation that feels to you like it has merit or not?"...
Couric: "I think it's one of the most embarrassing chapters in American journalism. And I think there was a sense of pressure from corporations who own where we work and from the government itself to really squash any kinds of dissent or any kind of questioning of it. I think it was extremely subtle but very, very effective. And I think Scott McClellan has a really good point."
— The Early Show, May 28, 2008. [Video/audio (0:30): WMV | Mp3] "Do you feel any sense of guilt that the Iraq war, which you helped sell to the American people, has resulted in the loss of life for thousands of American soldiers?"
— Couric to former Bush press secretary Scott McClellan in an Evening News interview, May 29, 2008.
She is Woman, Hear Her Roar
Couric: "More now on the history that was made by the Democrats last night. For the first time, a woman will become Speaker of the House....A lot has been made of the fact that you, if elected, and it appears that you will be, that you will be the first woman Speaker of the House and the highest ranking woman in the United States government. What does that mean to you?"
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: "It's pretty exciting, I have to say. I'm just so excited that a Democrat will be Speaker of the House."
Couric: "So you're a Democrat first, a woman second?"
— Interview with a Pelosi after Democrats won control of Congress in 2006 midterm elections, Evening News, November 8, 2006.
"One of the great lessons of that campaign is the continued and accepted role of sexism in American life, particularly in the media. Many women have made the point that if Senator Obama had to confront the racist equivalent of an 'Iron My Shirt' poster at campaign rallies, or a Hillary nutcracker sold at airports, or mainstream pundits saying they instinctively cross their legs at the mention of her name, the outrage would not be a footnote. It would be front-page news."
— Couric in her "Katie Couric's Notebook" video commentary posted on CBSNews.com, June 10, 2008. [Video/audio (0:32): WMV | Mp3]
Bashing Palin: What Happened to Feminist Solidarity?
"I spoke with your running mate, Sarah Palin, and she told me that if action is not taken, a Great Depression is quote 'the road that America may find itself on.'...Isn't so much of this, Senator McCain, about consumer confidence and using rhetoric like the 'Great Depression' — is that the kind of language Americans need to hear right now?"
— Couric interviewing John McCain about the financial crisis on the September 24, 2008, Evening News. [Audio (0:25): Mp3]"Everyone was waiting to see how the political newcomer would do tonight and perhaps the headline is Governor Sarah Palin did not embarrass herself or her running mate as some Republicans might have feared and some Democrats might have hoped."
— Couric during live coverage following the vice presidential debate on October 2, 2008.
America Needs a Hug From Big Government
"Experts have been warning for years that this country's infrastructure is crumbling. But are taxpayers ready to spend the billions, maybe trillions, it would take to fix all the pipelines, tunnels and bridges?"
— Couric reporting on the Minneapolis bridge collapse, Evening News, August 2, 2007.
"In Britain, a government takeover of a bank last year helped to temporarily calm fears in the financial markets there. Nationalization may have a psychological impact as well, and Uncle Sam wrapping his arms around failing banks in this country might provide a big dose of confidence for the American consumer."
— Couric on the February 19, 2009 Evening News, talking about the Obama administration possibly taking over American banks. [Video/audio (0:29): WMV | Mp3]
Praising the Great 'Goreacle'
“[Gore winning an Oscar] might usher in a backlash against environmentalists....It seems like we’re reaching critical mass when it comes to this issue. And all the experts agree. Well, almost every expert. (There are a handful of scientists — many of them on the payroll of big oil companies — who wonder if global warming is a reality.) But my fervent hope is that Hollywood’s embrace of Al Gore doesn’t give people an excuse to condemn and mock the effort — and oppose taking steps that we as a society need to take to deal with the issue of climate change.”
— Couric writing about the Oscars on her CBSNews.com blog, Couric & Co., February 26, 2007.
"Also in Washington today, a lot of excitement on Capitol Hill. A movie star showed up to testify before Congress – a movie star named Al Gore."
— Evening News, March, 21, 2007. [Video/audio (0:13): WMV | Mp3] "He was once called 'Mr. Stiff.' Now he's known as 'The Goreacle,' the new Al Gore....Sharyn Alfonsi reports on Gore 2.0."
— Evening News, May 25, 2007.
"I'm honored to be joined today by the Godfather of Green, the King of Conservation: Former Vice President Al Gore."
— Couric opening her November 2, 2009 "@KatieCouric" CBSNews.com webcast. [Video/audio (0:24): WMV | Mp3]
The Government Works So Hard...When Democrats Are in Charge
"In January a new Congress swept into Washington promising ethics reform, fiscal responsibility, and a change in direction for the war in Iraq. Now they're on August recess so how did they do? We called Thomas Mann, co-author of a book on Congress called The Broken Branch. The mood he said, continues to be ugly on Capitol Hill but this new crop worked much harder than the last. A big accomplishment was in challenging executive power with oversight hearings on Iraq, Medicare, the Department of Justice, and global warming. Stem cell legislation and immigration reform were stymied, but Congress did raise the minimum wage and pass an ethics and lobbying reform bill....Promises, promises. Sometimes they are kept even in Washington."
— "Katie Couric's Notebook," Couric & Co. blog, August 6, 2007.
Couric: "One of the key players in getting this deal approved is the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. I talked to her this afternoon as Senate negotiators were announcing the agreement and we spoke right after she had been on the phone with the President. [to Pelosi] Are you surprised how intimately involved he is in the whole process?"
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: "Quite frankly, yes. I said, 'Mr. President, neither of us has time for this conversation, especially you,' because we really, we understand each other. We know where we need to go."
Couric, smiling: "Can you tell us anything he said to you, like, 'Get cracking'?"
Pelosi, laughing: "No, never that. We're always cracking."
— Evening News, February 11, 2009. [Video/audio (0:31): WMV | Mp3] "Tonight, the President calls it 'astounding.' The recession has now cost nearly four-and-a-half million Americans their jobs. We'll show you the new jobs his stimulus plan is creating...."
— Couric introducing series of reports on the March 6, 2009 Evening News.
As Voters Move Right, GOP Should Move Left
"As Politico reported, there's growing concern among some GOP leaders that controversial commentators and far-right conservatives have hijacked the message. People like Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin appeal to the base, and you certainly need that base to win elections. But in an age when 42% of Americans call themselves 'independents,' you can't win with just the base, either....[A]s the number of declared Republicans hits a 26-year low, according to a poll in the Washington Post,...Republicans need to get the focus back onto the Big Tent where all are welcome and off the sideshows that are popping up along the party's fringe."
— Couric in her "Katie Couric's Notebook" video posted on CBSNews.com, October 27, 2009.
Christianity is Just Too Divisive
“Do you worry at all that non-believers may feel excluded and diminished at a time when we’re so divided about so much?”
— Couric to The Nativity Story’s Catherine Hardwicke and Mike Rich in a December 4, 2006 Evening News story about Hollywood movies based on Biblical themes. [Video/audio (0:13): WMV | Mp3]"He [Pope Benedict XVI] is very conservative. And I know a recent poll says 62 percent of Catholics believe the church isn't reflective of their views. Does that mean entertaining issues like women as priests or use of birth control will be really off the table as long as he's Pope?"
— Couric to Father Thomas Williams on the April 15, 2008 Evening News.
John Edwards: A Profile in Courage
"Agree with him or not, he [John Edwards] deserves credit for pushing tough issues off the back burner. He encouraged his fellow Democrats to speak out for the disenfranchised and under-served. He was the first to raise issues like poverty, universal health care and climate change, proposing big ideas — sometimes controversial ideas — to meet big challenges. He bucked the conventional wisdom and took political risks, speaking honestly about why he wanted to raise taxes, for example. That took courage."
— Couric in a January 30, 2008 "Katie Couric’s Notebook" video posted to CBSNews.com a few hours after Edwards quit the presidential race.