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Media MattersThis link is for use by RSS-enabled software to retrieve the latest items from Media Matters for America. URLhttp://mediamatters.orgLast update17 weeks 3 days agoJanuary 14, 200819:00
On the January 8 edition of National
Public Radio's On the
Media, discussing the media's coverage of the New
Hampshire primary, co-host Brooke Gladstone stated: "[T]here was an interesting
piece of analysis on Campaign Desk, which offers continual coverage of the
coverage on the CJR [Columbia Journalism
Review] website, and it suggests that the vote for [Hillary] Clinton
in New Hampshire was in some way a vote against MSNBC's Chris Matthews, as the
sort of breathing, saliva-spewing symbol of a general media dump on Hillary.
When we talk about groupthink, is he the leader of the pack?" Guest Christopher Hayes,
Washington
editor for The Nation, replied: "I think he's one of
them. I mean, he's certainly the most voluble of the bunch." Hayes later said
of Matthews: "I think
that he's ascended to the level of kind of icon of the frustration that people
have with the media, particularly the media's relationship with the Clintons."
The post on CJR's Campaign Desk to which
Gladstone was apparently referring was authored by CJR writer Liz Cox Barrett
and titled, "The Anti-Chris Matthews Vote: And how it sparked some media soul-searching
(though not from Matthews)." In the post, Barrett documented several quotes from
Matthews and asked: "So was there, in fact, what amounts to an anti-Chris
Matthews vote that emerged in New
Hampshire? And if so, why might Hillary Clinton have
been the beneficiary?" Barrett added, "Here are a couple of thoughts on those
questions," and linked to a Salon.com article by staff writer Rebecca Traister headlined "The
Witch ain't dead and Chris Matthew is a ding-dong" and a blog post by Atlantic associate editor Matthew
Yglesias that discussed Matthews.
Prior to the segment featuring Hayes
and Gladstone, co-host Bob Garfield also discussed the media's coverage of Clinton: "Even the unsinkable
Chris Matthews, MSNBC's towering monument to certainty, seemed a little shaken
up, almost a new man. Here he was on Tuesday." Garfield then aired an audio clip of Matthews'
statement during MSNBC's coverage of the January 8 New Hampshire primary that "I
give her [Hillary Clinton] a lot of personal credit. I will never underestimate
Hillary Clinton again." Garfield then said, "Well, maybe not entirely new man. Here he
was the next day." Garfield then aired
Matthews' statement the following day that
"the reason she's a
U.S. senator, the reason she's a
candidate for president, the reason she may be a front-runner is her husband
messed around."
At the end of Garfield's segment,
which also included audio clips of CNN host Lou Dobbs, CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric, and
NBC Nightly News anchor Brian
Williams discussing the media's coverage of the New Hampshire primary, Garfield
asserted: "And that is a course on how the media screws up. In fact, it's not
just one course; it's a whole meal -- from soup to
nuts."
From the January 11 edition of
National Public Radio's On the
Media:
BOB GARFIELD (co-host): OK, last
week we started the show with politics despite a pretty thin media angle
because, come on, it was the Iowa caucuses. But this week, we're doing it
again; only this time, I swear, with a much, much better media story. And by
"better," I mean a pitiful, pathetic, New Hampshire primary pundit implosion --
a historic, Dewey-defeats-Truman pie in the face, the creamy remnants of which
TV stars including CNN's Lou Dobbs, CBS' Katie Couric, and NBC's Brian Williams
are still scraping off their kissers.
[begin audio clip]
DOBBS: The savants, the pundits, all
of the political experts need to do a little, a little seeking of forgiveness
because everyone was so wrong in this, and breathtakingly so.
COURIC: We'll be hearing more from
those ubiquitous pundits and polls in the weeks ahead. But Iowa and now New
Hampshire should remind us all: In the end, the only
voice that really matters belongs to the voters.
WILLIAMS: Give us a few weeks. We'll
promptly forget the lessons of this debacle in polling predictions and primary
politics. We will all live to screw up another day, though our performance in
New Hampshire
will be hard to beat.
[end audio
clip]
GARFIELD: That was
NBC's Brian Williams stating the painfully obvious: They will live to screw up
another day because campaign journalism, and especially political punditry, is
all about prognostication -- a savory soup of polling data, history, and
supposed expertise, which is all well and good, except that the electorate
doesn't necessarily eat the soup. The experts are still sorting out the polls.
Is the sampling unrepresentative? Did the sample lie? Did the human factor --
actual living, breathing voters deciding on living, breathing candidates --
rudely ignore the inevitability of a Clinton defeat? Even the unsinkable Chris Matthews, MSNBC's towering
monument to certainty, seemed a little shaken up, almost a new man. Here he was
on Tuesday:
MATTHEWS [audio clip]: And I give her a lot of personal credit. I will never
underestimate Hillary Clinton again.
GARFIELD: Well, maybe not entirely new man. Here he was the next
day:
MATTHEWS [audio clip]: And I'll be brutal -- the reason she's a U.S.
senator, the reason she's a candidate for president, the reason she may be a
front-runner is her husband messed around. ... That's how she got to be senator from
New York. We
keep forgetting it. She didn't win there on her merit. She won because
everybody felt, "My God, this woman stood up under humiliation."
GARFIELD: And that is a course on how the media screws up. In
fact, it's not just one course; it's a whole meal -- from soup to
nuts.
GLADSTONE:
Christopher Hayes, Washington editor for The Nation, is fresh off the campaign trail. He joins
us now, sleep deprived and we hope with his guard down. Chris, welcome back to
the show.
HAYES: Thanks for having me back,
Brooke.
GLADSTONE: So there was an interesting piece of analysis on
Campaign Desk, which offers continual coverage of the coverage on the CJR
website, and it suggests that the vote for Clinton in New
Hampshire was in some way a vote against MSNBC's Chris
Matthews, as the sort of breathing, saliva-spewing symbol of a general media
dump on Hillary. When we talk about groupthink, is he the leader of the
pack?
HAYES: I think he's one of them. I mean, he's certainly the
most voluble of the bunch. And I think also the amazing thing about
Chris Matthews is that when he gets something in his sights, he just won't let
it go. And so, sometimes, instead of interviewing, whatever idea he just came up
with, he just sort of throws it out and says, "Isn't that true? Right? But isn't
that true?" And then if they try to deviate from the line, he cuts them off and
steers them back.
GLADSTONE: You know,
it does seem that he's gotten a lot of the press in the wake of New Hampshire. Is it
simply that because his narratives seem to be so immovable once set, that he's
just, as you say, an example of the extreme campaign reporter?
HAYES: Yeah, I think that's exactly
it. I mean, I think that he's ascended to the
level of kind of icon of the frustration that people have with the media,
particularly the media's relationship with the Clintons. I actually think that
going into Tuesday, before the actual primary had happened, my thought was that
the biggest story that I was seeing was this crazy degree of schadenfreude on
the part of the national press corps directed towards the Clintons. I mean, it was
almost like they were gathered on the shores as the Titanic was sinking and kind
of sadistically waving at the people scrambling for life rafts. And it was so
palpable. It kind of brought people back to the late 1990s and Ken Starr and
Monica Lewinsky. And that's a real raw emotional place for your average
Democratic primary voter. And I've talked to a lot of people who are not Hillary
Clinton supporters at all and they felt this desire to kind of defend the
Clintons and to
kind of tell the media to buzz off.
18:39
On the January 13 edition of NBC's Meet the
Press, host Tim Russert challenged
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) on her vote in 2002
giving President Bush the authority to use military force against Iraq, asking
her: "Do you wish you had read the National Intelligence Estimate, which had a
lot of caveats from the State Department and the Energy Department as to whether
or not Saddam Hussein really had a biological and chemical and active nuclear
program?" Russert has asked similar questions of other Democratic presidential
candidates who voted for the Iraq war resolution. Yet in two
separate interviews on Meet the
Press, Russert did not challenge Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) assertion
that "every single intelligence agency in the world believed he [Saddam] had
weapons of mass destruction"; he did not ask McCain if McCain wishes he had read
the NIE, which was made available to all members of
Congress before the vote, according to The
Washington Post. During the June 5, 2007, Republican presidential debate, McCain admitted that he did not read
the NIE before the 2002 vote on the Iraq war authorization. Russert also
aired a statement from Democratic strategist Donna Brazile criticizing former
President Bill Clinton for using the phrase "fairy tale" in reference to Sen.
Barack Obama (D-IL), but not her subsequent comments that Clinton had
"clarif[ied] his remarks" and that she "take[s] the president at his
word."
The upcoming January 15 Democratic
presidential debate in Las Vegas will
be moderated by NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams, "[j]oined by"
Russert and Today's Natalie
Morales.
Media Matters for America has noted
numerous instances of misinformation from Russert and Williams, including asking
Democratic candidates questions based on misrepresentations and
falsehoods. Moreover, following the October 30, 2007, debate in which 14 of the
30 distinct questions Russert asked the Democratic candidates were either
directed to Clinton or to other candidates about
Clinton, several media figures asserted
that Russert and Williams had acted as Clinton's
"opponent[s]."
Russert's double
standard -- Dems and McCain
During the January 6 edition of Meet the Press, Russert asked McCain,
"Looking back at the beginning of the war, back in March of 2003 ... if you had
known then, if the intelligence came out and said, 'We know that Saddam Hussein
does not have biological, ... or, or chemical, or a nuclear program' ... would you
still have voted to authorize the war?" In his response, McCain said, "I'd love
to get into thousands of historical hypotheticals with us. But what we knew at
the time and the information we had at the time that every single intelligence
agency in the world believed he had weapons of mass destruction." Similarly,
during the May 13, 2007, edition of Meet the Press, Russert asked McCain, "In
hindsight, was it a good idea to go into Iraq?" but did not challenge McCain's reply that
the invasion of Iraq "was
certainly justified" because "[e]very intelligence agency in the world, not just
U.S., believed that Saddam Hussein
had weapons of mass destruction."
As
Media Matters documented, while Russert failed to
ask McCain about the caveats in the NIE, he had previously challenged two other
Democrats -- former Sen. John Edwards (D-NC) and Sen. Joseph Biden (D-DE) --
over their 2002 votes giving President Bush the authority to use military force
against Iraq, citing the NIE "caveats." In
those interviews, Russert mentioned the "caveats" in the October 2002 NIE in
which the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) dissented
from the intelligence community's majority judgment that Iraq was
reconstituting its nuclear weapons program. On the February 4, 2007, edition of Meet the Press, Russert challenged Edwards
on his vote to authorize military force against Iraq, asking him, "Why were you
so wrong?" and later noting that "the [October 2002] National Intelligence
Estimate that was given to you, and now made public, had some real caveats."
Russert then quoted from a conclusion reached by the INR in the 2002 NIE:
"The activities we have detected do not add up to a compelling case that
Iraq is currently pursuing what [the
INR] would consider to be an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquire
nuclear weapons." In addition, on the April 29, 2007, edition of Meet the Press, Russert asked Biden
regarding the prewar intelligence: "How could you, as a U.S. senator, be
so wrong?" Russert said that "there are a lot of caveats put on the level of
intelligence about the aluminum tubes and everything. General [Anthony] Zinni ... said
when he heard the discussion about the weapons of mass destruction that Saddam
had, he said, 'I've never heard that' in any of the briefings he had as head of
the Central Command."
Russert's
quotation problem
During his January 13 interview with
Hillary Clinton, Russert aired a statement Brazile made on the
January 8 edition of CNN's The
Situation Room regarding Bill
Clinton's assertion that Obama's characterization of his position on the
Iraq war was "the biggest fairy tale
I've ever seen." On the January 8 Situation
Room, Brazile asserted: "As an African-American, I find his words and
his tone to be very depressing." After airing the video clip, Russert added, "So
these are people who are not supporters of Obama, who are listening." But
Russert did not note that on the January 11 edition of The Situation Room, Brazile said,
"President Clinton went on several nationally syndicated black radio stations
today to clarify his remarks. Look, I take the president at his word, that he
was not being condescending; he was not being insulting. Rather, he was pointing
out Senator Obama's previous statements on Iraq and where
he perhaps might stand now." Brazile added, "I think the president understands
now that when you use those words some people take offense. But we know Bill Clinton. We love Bill Clinton. Bill
Clinton has soldiered in the fields for people of
color."
In addition to falsely purporting to
show Brazile's full comments on the issue of Bill Clinton's remarks while
omitting Brazile's subsequent remarks, during
the same interview with Clinton, Russert played a truncated quote from
Bill Clinton and falsely asserted that he was showing viewers "exactly what
President Clinton said." Referring to January 7 comments Bill Clinton made about
Obama, Russert told Hillary Clinton: "It just isn't Senator Obama who is taking
offense. This is exactly what President Clinton said in Dartmouth. Here is the
tape." Russert then proceeded to air video of Bill Clinton saying: "Give me a
break. This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen." In fact,
Russert did not show viewers "exactly what President Clinton said." He did not
show what Clinton said immediately before the
"fairy tale" quote, when Clinton referred to
Obama's statements from 2004 about the Iraq war. Indeed, The New York
Times' Mark
Leibovich noted on January 13 that in
using the words "fairy tale," Clinton "was referring specifically to the
perception that Mr. Obama was totally pure in his opposition to the Iraq war."
In addition to showing the truncated video, Russert read an excerpt from Bob
Herbert's January 12 New York Times column, in which Herbert claimed that Bill Clinton
"sa[id] of Mr. Obama's effort: 'The whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've
ever seen.' "
Russert also read from a January 11
Times
article that purported to
quote a comment Hillary Clinton made about civil rights, and Russert noted
Herbert's assertion that Hillary Clinton had "tak[en] cheap shots at, of all
people, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." But the Times
article that Russert read truncated Hillary Clinton's
actual statement, omitting from the quote her reference to President John F.
Kennedy and "[t]he power" of King's dream.
Russert's "quotation problem" is not
limited to his January 13 interview with Clinton. During his November 11, 2007, Meet the Press interview with Obama,
Russert asserted that "critics
will say you've not been a leader against the [Iraq] war," then
read a quote he attributed to Obama: "In July of 2004, Barack Obama: 'I'm not
privy to Senate intelligence reports. ... What would I have done? I don't know,'
in terms of how you would have voted on the war." However, in citing Obama's
comment "What would I have done? I don't know," Russert did not quote the very
next sentence of Obama's statement, which was, "What I know is that from my
vantage point the case was not made."
Further, two of the questions
Russert asked during the October 30, 2007, Democratic presidential candidates
debate were based on falsehoods: He misrepresented debate
exchanges on Social Security and fabricated a quote he
attributed to Clinton to accuse her of having "one public position and one
private position" on the issue of raising the cap on income on which Social
Security taxes must be paid. He also falsely claimed that a 2002 letter written by Bill
Clinton to the National Archives "specifically ask[ed] that any communication
between [then-first lady Hillary Clinton] and the president not be made
available to the public until 2012." Several media figures have since
uncritically used Russert's false assertion about Clinton's letter to the
National Archives in reporting on the Clintons' records, as Media Matters documented (here, here, here, and here).
Other
Russert/Williams misinformation
Two of the questions Williams asked
during the April 26, 2007, Democratic presidential candidates debate were also
based on falsehoods. He falsely
suggested that the so-called Feingold-Reid Bill would mandate that all
U.S. troops be withdrawn from
Iraq by "about a year from
now," when in fact, the bill would have allowed the continued deployment of
U.S. troops in
Iraq for three "limited purposes."
Williams also quoted former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani's (R) claim that "America will be
safer with a Republican president," before asking Clinton, "How do you think,
Senator, it happened that that notion of Republicans as protectors in a
post-9-11 world has taken on so?" In fact, at the time, several recent polls had found that
Democrats had an advantage on the issues of national security and foreign
policy.
On the February 11, 2007, edition of
Meet the Press, Russert advanced
the false notion that Democrats rarely discuss their faith, telling
Washington Post columnist David
Broder that during Obama's presidential announcement speech, "My ear heard
something that I had not heard from Democratic candidates in some time. Up
front, Senator Obama began his speech with references to his faith, and then
came back to that same issue in the speech." In fact, numerous prominent
Democrats have publicly discussed their faith, including Edwards, who had
discussed his United Methodist upbringing with Russert on Meet the Press the week
before.
From the January 13 edition of NBC's
Meet the Press:
RUSSERT: It just isn't Senator Obama
who is taking offense. This is exactly what President Clinton said in Dartmouth. Here's the
tape.
BILL CLINTON
[video clip]: Give me a break. This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've
ever seen.
RUSSERT:
Congressman James Clyburn of South
Carolina, who's neutral --
CLINTON:
Mm-hmm.
RUSSERT: --
said this: "To call that dream a fairy tale, which Bill Clinton seemed to be
doing, could very well be insulting to some of us."
CLINTON: Tim, let
me -- let me just stop you right there.
RUSSERT:
But, no --
CLINTON: No, wait a
minute.
RUSSERT: No,
I didn't stop you. Let me just go through --
CLINTON: No, but
you did not give the entire quote and so --
RUSSERT: No,
but you --
CLINTON: The entire
quote was clearly about the position on Iraq.
RUSSERT: But
I'm --
CLINTON: It was not
about the entire candidacy. It was not about the extraordinary, you know,
abilities.
RUSSERT: But
Congressman -- but Congressman Clyburn has been covering this race. Donna
Brazile, herself a longtime activist in the Democratic Party, this is what she
said. Here's Donna Brazile.
DONNA
BRAZILE (Democratic strategist) [video clip]: As an African-American, I find his
words and his tone to be very depressing.
RUSSERT: So
these are people who are not supporters of Obama, who are listening. Now, let me
just go to the Martin Luther King thing because you had your opportunity to talk
about this at the beginning of the show and I just want to lay this out for our
viewers. This is how The New York
Times categorized it: "In an interview with Fox News on Monday, Mrs.
Clinton tried to make a point about presidential leadership. 'Dr. King's dream
began to be realized when President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of '64,'
Mrs. Clinton said in trying to make the case that her experience should mean
more to voters than the uplifting words of Mr. Obama. 'It took a president to
get it done.' " Again, Congressman Clyburn: "We have to be very, very careful
about how we speak about that era in American politics. That bothered me a great
deal."
[...]
RUSSERT: Again, learning from a
mistake. Do you wish you had read the National Intelligence Estimate, which had
a lot of caveats from the State Department and the Energy Department as to
whether or not Saddam Hussein really had a biological and chemical and active
nuclear program?
CLINTON: I was
fully briefed by the people who wrote that. I was briefed by the people from,
you know, the State Department, the CIA, the Department of Defense; all of the
various players in that. And many people who read it -- well, actually, not very
many people read the whole thing because we were getting constant briefings. And
people -- some people read it and voted for the resolution, some people read it
and voted against the resolution. I felt very well briefed. And it wasn't just
what the Bush administration was telling us in the NIE; I went way outside of
any kind of Bush administration sources -- independent people, people from the
Clinton
administration, people in the British government. I looked as broadly as I could
at how to assess this.
And if, of
course, you see the vote as I saw it, as opposed to how it's been characterized,
I thought it was a vote to put inspectors back in, to make it very clear that
Saddam Hussein wouldn't be able to go off unchecked. If those inspectors had
been permitted to do the job that they were set up to do, we would have avoided
war. It became clear in retrospect, Tim, once people started writing books and
information came out of the administration, the president had no intention of
letting the inspectors do their job. That's not what I was told by the Bush
White House. That's not what we were told in constant briefings from high-level
Bush administration officials. That's not what the president told the country in
his speech in Cincinnati shortly before the vote. If you
remember, he said this vote was the best chance to avoid some kind of
confrontation.
From the January 11 edition of CNN's
The Situation Room:
WOLF BLITZER (CNN host): Bill Clinton made
some waves this week on the eve of the New
Hampshire primary when he complained that the portrayal of Barack
Obama's Iraq war stance was, quote, "a fairy
tale." Today, the former president went on the Reverend Al Sharpton's radio show
to explain what he meant. President Clinton says he wasn't talking about Obama
himself or Obama's campaign. Listen to this.
BILL CLINTON [audio clip]: First of all, that's not true. I
have given hundreds of speeches on Hillary's behalf on this campaign. I don't
believe I've given a single one where I did not applaud Senator Obama in his
candidacy. It's not a fairy tale. He might win. I think he's a very impressive
man, and he's run a great campaign. I was addressing a specific argument that
had never been brought up in the debates.
BLITZER: So if Bill Clinton said
what he meant, meant what he said, why is he out there today having to clarify
his so-called "fairy tale" remark?
Joining us
from New York,
our CNN contributor Carl Bernstein. He's the author on the book on Hillary
Clinton entitled A Woman
in Charge -- the book now out in paperback. And with us here in
Washington our CNN contributor and Democratic strategist Donna
Brazile.
Let me ask you, Donna. What do you
think? Did the former president resolve this matter? Did he, you know, sort of
clarify exactly what he meant?
BRAZILE: President
Clinton went on several nationally syndicated black radio stations today to
clarify his remarks. Look, I take the president at his word that he was not
being condescending; he was not being insulting. Rather, he was pointing out
Senator Obama's previous statements on Iraq and where he perhaps might stand
now.
Look, Wolf, this is a very exciting
moment for Democrats. It's a historic moment. If Dr. King were alive he would be
excited to see at least the Democratic Party offering an African-American man
and a white woman as our two top choices for the presidency. Not to take
anything away from Senator John Edwards, who Dr. King would also applaud for
raising the issue of poverty in this race.
I think the president understands
now that when you use those words some people take offense. But we know Bill Clinton. We
love Bill Clinton.
Bill Clinton has soldiered in the fields for people of color. And I think
at this moment, we're going to let things just lie and just go on and continue
to compete for all the votes out there: black, white, gay, lesbian, women, men,
rural, everybody -- 'cause that's what the Democrats do.
From the January 6 edition of NBC's
Meet the Press:
RUSSERT: Looking back at the
beginning of the war, back in March of 2003 --
McCAIN:
Yep.
RUSSERT: --
if you had known then, if the intelligence came out and said, "We know that
Saddam Hussein does not have biological," --
McCAIN:
Mm-hmm.
RUSSERT: --
"or, or chemical, or a nuclear program" --
McCAIN:
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
RUSSERT: --
would you still have voted to authorize the war?
McCAIN:
Well, obviously, given information that we have changes your decision-making
process. But Saddam Hussein was still a threat. The sanctions were breaking
down. There was a multibillion-dollar Oil for Food scandal in the United
Nations. The -- every day American airplanes were being shot at. Saddam Hussein
had used and acquired weapons of mass destruction in the past, and there was no
doubt there was going to be in the future. The problem in Iraq, my friend,
was not whether we went in or not; it's the way it was mishandled after the
initial invasion.
RUSSERT:
Yeah, but, Senator, it's an important question because President Bush
--
McCAIN: It's
an important --
RUSSERT:
President Bush has said --
McCAIN:
Yeah.
RUSSERT: --
"Even if I knew he did not have biological, chemical, or nuclear program"
--
McCAIN:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
RUSSERT: --
"I still would go into Iraq to topple Saddam Hussein." Would
you have?
McCAIN: I --
yes, but the point is that if we had done it right, it's been well chronicled in
many, in many books, you and I wouldn't be even discussing that now. The
mishandling after the war. Look, I met with a high-ranking former Al Qaeda
operative in Iraq recently. And I asked him, "How
did you succeed?" He said, "The lawlessness after the initial invasion and Abu
Ghraib." And so they were able to recruit people because of the disorder and the
mishandling. So you would not be asking me if it hadn't been mishandled, you
would've said -- because we succeeded and established a stable
Iraq - you'd have said, "Aren't you
glad we went in? Because Saddam Hussein, one of the most brutal, most terrible
dictators in history, who fought in several wars, used weapons of mass
destruction, invaded his neighbor, is now gone from the world scene." That's
what you'd be saying.
RUSSERT: But
I think there'd be a real debate with the, with the -- amongst the American
people if we were told he did not have biological, chemical, and nuclear
weapons.
McCAIN: If
frogs had wings -- look, Tim, we can talk about lots of hypotheticals. Would we
have, would we have stopped Saddam Hussein from going into Kuwait back in
'91 when, when he went in? Would we have, would we have said that the Chinese
aren't going to cross -- would we have known -- if we had known that the Chinese
were going to cross the Yalu in the Korean War, would we have done it
differently? I'd love to get into thousands of historical hypotheticals with us.
But what we knew at the time and the information we had at the time that every
single intelligence agency in the world believed he had weapons of mass
destruction. So --
RUSSERT: So
bottom line, the war was not a mistake?
McCAIN: The
war, quote, the invasion was not a mistake. The handling of the war was a
terrible mistake.
17:54
On the January 13 edition of the
syndicated program The McLaughlin Group,
while discussing Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-NY) presidential
campaign, host John McLaughlin asked guest, conservative radio host
Monica
Crowley: "Let's go
to the big enchilada, who is, of course, Hillary. What did you think of
Hillary's performance?" Crowley responded: "Yes, well, you know, she's
like Glenn Close at the end of Fatal
Attraction. You think she's dead and then she sits bolt-upright in
the bathtub."
In director Adrian
Lyne's 1987 film Fatal
Attraction, Glenn Close plays Alex Forrest, a woman
who begins stalking her co-worker Dan Gallagher and his family following a
one-night-stand. In the film's climax, Alex attempts to kill
Dan's wife, Beth, with a butcher knife while she's preparing for a bath. Dan
hears the attack and wrestles Alex into the bathtub, appearing to have drowned
her until Alex suddenly springs from the water, wielding the knife at Dan. Alex
is then shot by Beth, who had gone to get a gun Dan bought to protect the family
from Alex.
Crowley also stated,
referring to a campaign event in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, during which
Clinton's voice broke as she talked about why she
is seeking the presidency, "Look, I think that both [Newsweek contributing editor] Eleanor
[Clift] and [MSNBC contributor] Pat [Buchanan] are correct when they say that
the moment was probably authentic on her part, and she certainly leveraged it to
her advantage." McLaughlin pressed: "No setup question? ... No counterfeit there
at all?" to which Crowley responded: "Well, look, I think she has
been told to soften her approach. She's been told to wear softer colors, and I
think she saw an opening where she could speak in the softer Jackie
Kennedy-esque tones and if an emotional moment came up, grab it -- and she
did."
From the January 13
edition of the syndicated program
The McLaughlin
Group:
McLAUGHLIN: Let's go
to the big enchilada, who is, of course, Hillary. What did you think of
Hillary's performance?
CROWLEY: Yes, well, you know, she's like Glenn Close at the end
of Fatal Attraction. You think
she's dead, and then she sits bolt-upright in the bathtub. Look, I think that
both Eleanor and Pat are correct when they say that the moment was probably
authentic on her part, and she certainly leveraged it to her advantage
--
McLAUGHLIN: No setup question?
CROWLEY: -- because -- well
--
McLAUGHLIN: No counterfeit there at all?
CROWLEY: Well, look, I think she has been told to soften her
approach. She's been told to wear softer colors, and I think she saw an opening
where she could speak in the softer Jackie Kennedy-esque tones and if an
emotional moment came up, grab it -- and she did. But now, she's
turned the race essentially into an X versus Y -- an X chromosome versus a Y
chromosome race -- where she is appealing constantly to women. She did again
this weekend.
17:31
On the January 11 broadcast of his
nationally syndicated radio show, Michael Savage referred to Media Matters for America as "a
homosexual, fascist website." He continued: "Let me explain who Media Matters is. ... It's run by a bunch of
fascist homosexuals. They're the brownshirts of our time." The brownshirts were
Nazi storm troopers who aided Adolf Hitler's rise to power. Savage made his
comments while discussing a lawsuit he
has filed against the Council on American-Islamic Relations
(CAIR).
Savage also claimed that Media Matters was "founded by [Sen.]
Hillary Clinton [D-NY]." As it has repeatedly noted, Media Matters is a progressive nonprofit
organization unaffiliated with any candidate or political
party.
Savage has attacked Media Matters on several occasions,
calling the organization a "hate group"; a "group of gay Mafioso"; "the homosexual Mafia"; and "a gay smear sheet."
Additionally, on the June 12, 2007, broadcast of his radio show, Savage compared
the "progressive movement" to the Nazi storm troopers, saying, "[T]hey are the
brownshirts of
today."
Talk Radio Network, which syndicates
Savage's show, says that Savage is heard on more than 350 radio stations. And according to Talkers Magazine, The Savage
Nation reaches more than 8 million listeners each week,
making it one of the most listened-to talk radio shows in the nation, behind
only The Rush Limbaugh
Show and The Sean Hannity
Show.
From the January 11 edition of Talk
Radio Network's The
Savage Nation:
SAVAGE:
It fell in my hands. I didn't choose this
fight. I never
liked CAIR, but I never figured they
were going to be my
enemy, but, like everyone else, it's not my problem. Well, then, they made themselves my problem. They attacked me. They went after all my
advertisers. They learned good from their friends at Media Matters, that rat-bum -- it's a homosexual,
fascist website. Let me
explain who Media Matters
is. It was founded by
Hillary Clinton. It's
run by a bunch of fascist homosexuals. They're the brownshirts of our time.
When are you
gonna wake up to the fact that liberals are not liberal? When are you gonna wake up to the fact that
the liberals are the new fascists.
They are the brownshirts! And they're gonna take this country over the
cliff if you don't
stand up to them and stop them.
That's why I'm putting myself on the
line. And if you think
it's a joke, it's not a joke.
I walk with my head swiveling. I look over my
shoulder. I live as
though I am the hunted one.
And that's because you are not the hunted one. That's because you are a
coward. And that's
because your government doesn't protect its citizens.
15:30
Gibson on Matthews' "mind-blowing" comment: "[Y]ou listen to this and you tell me who the sexist is"
On the January 10 broadcast of his
nationally syndicated Fox News Radio show, John Gibson aired a clip of recent remarks by MSNBC's Chris Matthews
concerning Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) that "the reason she's a
U.S. senator, the reason she's a
candidate for president, the reason she may be a front-runner is her husband
messed around." Before airing the clip, Gibson declared Matthews' comments
"mind-blowing" and added, "[T]hose women out here who called me a sexist last
night, you listen to this and you tell me who the sexist
is."
During the January 9 broadcast of
his radio show, Gibson characterized Clinton's
manner of speaking as a "screech" and said that "in a great bit of Clinton jujitsu, she used
the Oprah Winfrey rule," which he described as: "You know, speak softly. Be
vulnerable ... Shed a tear to beat the guy who had Oprah on his side. Wasn't that
fabulous?" Later during the January 9 show, a caller complained that Gibson's
comments were "extremely sexist." Gibson asked if the caller was voting for
Clinton, and an associate producer, identified only as "Christine" on the show,
said the caller had hung up. Gibson replied: "Now, isn't that just like a woman?
... That is the equivalent of walking out of the room and slamming the
door."
Gibson on January 10 also referred
to the purported "Oprah-fication of the presidential race" after reading from an
article in the Houston Chronicle that claimed that
"[w]omen who've spent years in Texas politics said yes, they believe Hillary
Clinton when she came perilously close to shedding a tear on the campaign trail
earlier this week."
From the January 9 broadcast of Fox
News Radio's The John Gibson
Show:
GIBSON: Did Hillary really win
because she was emotional --
CLINTON [audio
clip]: It's not easy.
GIBSON: And
vulnerable.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: It's not easy. And I couldn't do it if I didn't just, you know,
passionately believe it was the right thing to do.
GIBSON: And
teary. Here it comes.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: You know, I have so many opportunities from this country.
GIBSON: So many.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: I just don't want to see us fall backwards.
GIBSON: [feigning crying] Oh, me
either. Me either.
GIBSON: Maybe Hillary just discovered she has a voice other
than that screech we normally hear. Maybe it was nice to hear Hillary
speaking softly. And maybe women related to that.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: I come tonight with a very, very full heart. And I want especially to
thank New
Hampshire over the last week. I listened to you and in
the process I found my own voice.
GIBSON: Well, I think there's a
falsehood buried in that. "Over the last week, I listened to you." No, no, she
listened to herself. She listened to all those tapes of her screeching.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: That was to equip us to do what needed to be done in reforming Social
Security the right way. Reforming Medicare and Medicaid the right
way.
GIBSON: Ow.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: Making investments --
GIBSON: Ow.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: -- in clean, alternative energy. Dealing with global climate change.
GIBSON: Ow-w-w.
CLINTON [audio
clip]: Making health care available and affordable to
--
GIBSON:
Ow!
CLINTON [audio
clip]: -- every single American!
GIBSON: That
hurt!
CLINTON [audio
clip]: That's what that was for!
GIBSON: Ouch! I need health care
now. My eardrums!
ANGRY RICH (executive producer): I
need to blow my brains out.
GIBSON: So, somebody said to her,
"Hillary, speak softly."
CLINTON [audio
clip]: I felt like we all spoke from our hearts and I'm so gratified that you
responded. Now together, let's give America the kind of comeback that New Hampshire has just
given me.
GIBSON: She learned something there. I mean, you know, she
just was not as screechy. And of course, what's the ultimate irony of this is
that people are going around saying Oprah Winfrey's going to win this for Barack
Obama. And in a great bit of Clinton jujitsu, she used the Oprah Winfrey
rule.
AUDIO CLIP: Hi, Oprah.
GIBSON: You know, speak softly. Be vulnerable.
ANGRY RICH: Cry.
GIBSON: Shed a tear to beat the guy who had Oprah on his
side. Wasn't that fabulous?
[...]
GIBSON: The tears of a clown, baby.
Was it the tears that did it? Kim in Michigan, what do you
think?
CALLER: You know, I think what you said is just extremely
sexist.
GIBSON:
Why?
CALLER: You know, I drove all the way up from work
and I'm listening to this about Hillary and the interview
--
GIBSON:
Yeah?
CALLER: -- and this or that about
cleaning the closets out. And, you know, if it was George W. exercising or
jogging, or on a fishing trip, or Dick Cheney hunting, that's OK to be talked
about, but when you ask a woman what she would rather do or she does for a
hobby, it's all of a sudden feminine.
GIBSON: Do you believe it? Do you
believe she cleans her closets?
CALLER: You know, why not? Who cares? It could be
a way she deals with stress.
[crosstalk]
GIBSON: And by the way, Kim, how am
I being sexist? She went on that show, and she said these things. She wanted to
get to you and say these things.
CALLER: But you know what? I don't vote
Democratic. I'm Republican and I wouldn't vote for her because of her politics
anyway.
GIBSON: Well, but, I mean, you know
your friends will, right?
CALLER: But you know what? It's the way you did
it, just to kind of get our reaction. That's just the whole way society thinks
--
[crosstalk]
GIBSON: Is there or is there not, Kim, an Oprah effect in
this society.
CALLER: You know what? I don't pay attention to
it, to be honest with you. I'm too busy working to sit home and watch all that
garbage.
[crosstalk]
GIBSON: Well, you think you're most
women, or you think that you're in the minority?
CALLER: You know, I think I'm the majority. Women
are out there working nowadays.
GIBSON: Then why does she have a
billion dollars a year from a show aimed at women?
CALLER: You know, because -- I guess, I don't
know. I can't explain that.
GIBSON: Well, but that's my point,
Kim, is you may be one of those women that I hear talk show hosts talking about
now that don't fit in what I'm talking about. They're out there working, they're
not paying attention to this. My wife has never seen an Oprah show. Ever.
But I'm telling you, they're there.
And you know who they are, and you know as well as I do that this was, this was
a moment that a lot of women bonded with.
CALLER: You know, I don't think so. I think people
are just out there, and they're following her 'cause of her politics. And I
really like the way you say "one of those women." You know? I don't know, I
--
GIBSON: All right. Well, let me put
it this way, Kim: Have you ever seen the Oprah
show?
CALLER: Yeah. When I'm away on
vacation.
GIBSON: What do you see in the
audience?
CALLER: Women. Of course.
GIBSON: One of those women. Those
are the women I'm talking about.
CALLER: Oh yeah, and there's not a man out there
that doesn't watch Oprah, right?
ANGRY RICH: There's not a real man.
GIBSON: Yeah, right.
CALLER: Come on, there's a lot of men out there
that watch Oprah.
CHRISTINE: There are men out there
that watch that show. They're in the audience, too. I see
them.
GIBSON: Oh, I know what kind of men
those are.
AUDIO CLIP: Gorgeous.
ANGRY RICH: -- from San
Francisco.
CALLER: Yeah, there you go. There are 200 women in
the audience, out of all the people that watch it, no man ever watches it. Come
on, guys. Now you're just being silly.
GIBSON: Well, listen -- no I'm not
being silly. That show is aimed at women, Kim. You are in denial if you think
it's not. You are in denial if you think that Oprah is a billionaire because she
appeals to men.
CALLER: You just insinuated that if you're a man
that in some way, shape, or form, you're one of those men that watch
Oprah.
GIBSON: I did.
CALLER: Yeah.
GIBSON: I know -- we know who we're
talking about here.
CALLER: Oh yeah, you sure do.
GIBSON: Well, you know
--
CALLER: You can't reason with people like you. And
that's exactly the reason why the country's in the state it's in.
ANGRY RICH: It's your fault, John.
GIBSON: Are you voting for
Hillary?
CHRISTINE: She hung up.
GIBSON: She hung up.
ANGRY RICH: She's in denial,
John.
GIBSON: Now, isn't that just like a woman?
CHRISTINE: You're really digging yourself into a
hole.
GIBSON: That made her mad.
CHRISTINE: You made her mad.
GIBSON: That made her mad. Kim hung up on me because she
didn't want to discuss it anymore. That is the equivalent of walking out of the
room and slamming the door.
CHRISTINE: There's nothing wrong
with what she said. She was right on. She made her point and she didn't feel
like talking to you anymore.
From the January 10 broadcast of
The John Gibson Show:
GIBSON: Meantime, Hillary said today
in this quote, "Maybe I have liberated us to actually let women be human beings
in public." As Mary Matalin said today on my television show, her new campaign
theme is "Four more tears! Four more tears!" What,
Christine?
CHRISTINE: It's clever.
GIBSON: It is good, isn't it?
Hillary expands on her Oprah-fication
project, fully embracing it: "Maybe I have liberated us to actually let women be
human beings in public."
AUDIO CLIP: Hi, Oprah.
GIBSON: She is woman. You will not hear her roar. She will
instead speak softly and shed just the teeniest of tears.
There are some of
those who haven't got the memo. I mean, I actually thought this was unbelievable
and I think so many things that Monkey Man says are unbelievable. But for Chris
Matthews to say the following was just mind-blowing. You -- those women out here
who called me a sexist last night, you listen to this and you tell me who the
sexist is.
MATTHEWS [audio clip]: I think the
Hillary appeal has always been somewhat about her mix of toughness and sympathy
for her. Let's not forget -- and I'll be brutal -- the reason she's a
U.S. senator, the reason she's a
candidate for president, the reason she may be a front-runner is her husband
messed around. That's how she got to be senator from New York. We keep
forgetting it.
She didn't win there on her merit.
She won because everybody felt, "My God, this woman stood up under humiliation,"
right? That's what happened. That's how it happened. In 1998 she went to New
York and campaigned for Chuck Schumer as almost like the grieving widow of
absurdity, and she did it so well and courageously
--
GIBSON:
Ow.
MATTHEWS [audio clip]: -- but it was
about the humiliation of Bill Clinton.
GIBSON: Geez, that hurts. Man. Can
you -- I know people ignore him because he says so many idiotic
things.
AUDIO CLIP:
Ha!
GIBSON: But just supposing I had
said something like that last night, that she really was voted into office in
the U.S. Senate and is going to win the presidency because her husband fooled
around on her.
BILL CLINTON [audio clip]: It's all
my fault.
GIBSON: I mean, confirming all of
this is, here's a Houston
Chronicle. Now, this is well, well out of the way of the Washington-New York-L.A. political treadmill. This is Houston. And two female reporters writing for
the Houston Chronicle, Jeanine
[sic: Jeannie] Kever and Claudia Feldman, are doing this story about the tears.
And they say, "Women who've spent years in Texas politics say the tears were for real.
They believe Hillary Clinton when she came perilously close to actually shedding
a tear. 'I saw the tears. I connected, and I'm sure a lot of women did,' said
Sylvia Garcia, a Harris County commissioner who supported [New
Mexico Gov.] Bill Richardson. 'At that moment, she wasn't a candidate being
handled, she wasn't following her talking points. She was just herself, excited
and passionate.' " Once again, the
Oprah-fication of the presidential race.
"Lyn Ragsdale, dean of
Rice University's School of Social
Sciences, predicted Clinton will steadily gain support from women
as the campaign moves to bigger states.
"But even among women who are
backing other candidates, Clinton's display of emotion
resonated.
" 'I guess I've spent my whole adult
life trying to get women in public office, including me,' Ragsdale [sic: Sissy
Farenthold, "a former state legislator and two-time candidate for Texas governor"] said.
'The tears, I guess I can't help but relate and think of my own experiences.'
"
I said it last
night, and you were so mad at me, but:
AUDIO CLIP: Gibson was right. Again.
14:50
In a January 14 Washington Post article, staff writers Anne E.
Kornblut and Perry Bacon Jr. joined other media -- including journalist Marjorie Valbrun in a January 13 Post op-ed --
in truncating a comment by Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) on the passage of
civil rights legislation in the 1960s, omitting a portion of her remarks in
which she referred to President John F. Kennedy. The Post wrote:
" 'Dr.
[Martin Luther] King's
dream began to be realized when President [Lyndon] Johnson passed the Civil
Rights Act,' [Clinton]
said, adding that 'it took a president to get it done.' Critics
read that as playing down King's
importance in the civil rights movement." But as Media Matters for America has documented, Clinton's full quote
was:
CLINTON: I would point to the fact
that Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, when he was
able to get through Congress something that President Kennedy was hopeful to
do, the president before had not even tried, but it took a president
to get it done. That dream became a reality. The
power of that dream became real in people's lives because we had a president
who said, "We are going to do it," and actually got it accomplished. [emphasis
added]
Kornblut and Bacon excluded Clinton's reference to
Kennedy despite reporting later in the article that "Clinton defended her
remark about King" -- during a January 13 appearance on NBC's Meet the Press -- where "[s]he said she was responding to a
speech [Sen. Barack] Obama [D-IL] made comparing himself to both John F.
Kennedy and to King":
Clinton defended
her remark about King, made the day before the New Hampshire primary, in a sometimes
contentious appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" Sunday morning. She
said she was responding to a speech Obama made comparing himself to both John
F. Kennedy and to King, and she elaborated on her view of King's role as a
change agent.
"Dr. King had been on the front
lines. He had been leading a movement," Clinton said. "But Dr. King understood, which is why he
made it very clear, that there has to be a coming to terms of our country
politically in order to make the changes that would last for generations beyond
the iconic, extraordinary speeches that he gave. That's why he campaigned for
Lyndon Johnson in 1964. That's why he was there when those great pieces of
legislation were passed. Does he deserve the lion's share of the credit for
moving our country and moving our political process? Yes, he does. But he also
had partners who were in the political system."
12:49
On the January 13 edition of CNN's Reliable Sources, host and Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz
claimed that in a 2004 Chicago Tribune
article, Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL)
"said there wasn't much difference between his position and George Bush's
position on the [Iraq] war."
But Kurtz left out three key words from Obama's quote in the
Tribune -- "at this stage" -- as well as the context of his remarks provided in the
Tribune article, both of
which indicate that Obama was discussing how best to stabilize
Iraq from mid-2004 onward. Obama was
not, as Kurtz suggested, asserting agreement with Bush on the war
itself. The July 27, 2004, Tribune
article quoted Obama as saying:
"There's not that much difference between my position and George Bush's
position at this stage" [emphasis added]. The article went on to
note that Obama "opposed the Iraq invasion before the war. But he
now believes U.S. forces must remain to stabilize
the war-ravaged nation
-- a
policy not dissimilar to the current approach of the Bush
administration."
From the July 27, 2004, Chicago Tribune article:
Barack Obama, who will deliver the
keynote address at the Democratic National Convention, said Monday that he
believes the Iraq war will be the deciding factor in the presidential contest,
but that he does not think there is a great difference "on paper" between
presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry and President Bush on the
issue.
Instead, Obama, the U.S. Senate
candidate from Illinois, said he believes the
Bush administration has lost too much credibility in the world community to
administer the policies necessary to stabilize Iraq.
"On Iraq, on
paper, there's not as much difference, I think, between the Bush administration
and a Kerry administration as there would have been a year ago," Obama said
during a luncheon meeting with editors and reporters of Tribune newspapers.
"There's not that much difference between my position and George Bush's position
at this stage. The difference, in my mind, is who's in a position to
execute."
[...]
Obama, a state
senator from Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood, opposed the Iraq
invasion before the war. But he now believes U.S.
forces must remain to stabilize the war-ravaged nation --
a policy not dissimilar to the current approach of the Bush
administration.
The problem, Obama said, is the low
regard for Bush in the international community.
"How do you
stabilize a country that is made up of three different religious and in some
cases ethnic groups, with minimal loss of life and minimum burden to the
taxpayers?" Obama said. "I am skeptical that the Bush administration, given
baggage from the past three years, not just on Iraq.
... I don't see them having the credibility to be able to
execute. I mean, you have to have a new
administration to execute what the Bush administration acknowledges has to
happen."
From the January 13 edition of CNN's
Reliable Sources:
KURTZ: So, does Clinton have a point about
the Obama coverage?
Joining us now to talk about the
media and the campaign, and pundits behaving badly, in Springfield, Massachusetts, Rachel Maddow, who hosts
The Rachel Maddow Show on Air
America Radio. And in Seattle, Michael Medved, host of The Michael Medved Show on the Salem Radio
Network.
Michael Medved, what about Bill
Clinton's point that the press hasn't really scrutinized Obama's record on
Iraq or, some would say, on much of
anything else?
MEDVED: Well, I think that's
probably a valid point, because Obama has been such an, quote, "exotic new face," fresh. And I remember when Joe Biden said
that he was clean and articulate. People don't really know what to make of him
entirely, and then there was that whole rock star factor that you were talking
about before.
But frankly, I truly don't know if
the Clinton campaign should welcome the idea of going back and looking at
people's positions on the war in the past, because however ambiguous Obama's
position has been -- and it has been -- it was not in favor of the war as
Hillary Clinton's was. So, if you're going to argue about who was against the
war first and how much were they against the war, this is something that
actually hurts Democrats, both Obama and Clinton.
KURTZ: Just to provide some context, Rachel Maddow, the former
president referring to two interviews that Obama gave in 2004. One, he told The New York Times he didn't think the case
for war had been made, but he didn't know how he would have voted had he had
access to classified information at the time, because he was not in the United
States Senate. And one with the Chicago
Tribune which he said there wasn't much difference between his
position and George Bush's position on the war.
Now, the press has covered this a
bit, but, you know, about 1,000th of the attention devoted to Hillary choking
up.
MADDOW: It's true, they haven't
covered this as much. But also consider the context that I think Barack Obama's
appeal, certainly his bipartisan appeal, his sort of general election appeal
that he's been making, is not necessarily fundamentally about his record. I
mean, he hasn't been in public office that long. He's not necessarily running on
his record.
He's running on -- trying to make
the case that he represents a clean break from the politics of the past. That's
the contrast that he's tried to set up, in terms of his campaign: that he's not Hillary
Clinton, that he doesn't represent the past, he doesn't represent the battles of
the '90s. And so, because he hasn't necessarily been running so much on his
record, I think that in part explains why that hasn't been the grounds on which
he's been covered.
January 13, 200817:58
On the January 13 edition of the
NBC-syndicated Chris Matthews Show,
host Chris Matthews appeared to offer
another reason for his
view of where Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton (NY) stands in the Democratic primary when he said: "I personally
don't see how she loses at all running as the woman candidate." He added,
"Most Democratic voters are women." Several days earlier,
on the January 9 edition of MSNBC's Morning
Joe, Matthews said of Clinton:
"Let's not forget -- and I'll be brutal -- the reason she's a U.S. senator,
the reason she's a candidate for president, the reason she may be a
front-runner is her husband messed around. That's how she got to be senator
from New York.
We keep forgetting it. She didn't win there on her merit. She won because
everybody felt, 'My God, this woman stood up under humiliation,' right? That's
what happened."
Matthews' comment that "I personally
don't see how she loses at all running as the woman candidate" came
in response to panelist and National Public Radio host Michele Norris' statement that Clinton may be
able to reach out to voters "[w]hen she talks about breaking those glass
ceilings and starts trying to connect with other women, who have felt that, who
have, you know, butted their head and their shoulders up against those glass
ceilings." Norris continued: "[T]hat may be a real opportunity to
say, 'You know what, I understand what it's like.' "
From the January 13 edition of the NBC-syndicated Chris Matthews Show:
NORRIS: She has an
opportunity right now, if you look at the way that so many women said that they
responded to that moment where she showed some emotion and they saw something
different. When she talks about breaking those glass ceilings and starts trying
to connect with other women, who have felt that, who have, you know, butted
their head and their shoulders up against those glass ceilings, that may be a
real opportunity to say, "You know what, I understand what it's
like."
MATTHEWS: I personally don't see how she loses at all running
as the woman candidate. Most Democratic voters are women.
GLORIA BORGER (CNN senior
political analyst): Well, she's now talking it about being a woman, and in that
last debate she said, "Look, guys, I embody change. I'm a woman. He's not
the only person who looks like change. I look like change." But I think
Hillary Clinton has a really difficult problem here because as a woman candidate,
she bent over backwards to show us how tough she was. Don't forget, this
is a woman we've been watching for more than a decade. We think we know who she
is already. OK? So she bent over backwards to show us how tough she is, and now
she's going the other way to show us how likable she is. "Oh, you hurt my
feelings." That was a brilliant line.
MATTHEWS: Wait a minute.
Are you suggesting contrivance?
BORGER: Oh, you think? A little bit.
MATTHEWS: No, I'm
wondering. I don't think it was contrived. Do you?
BORGER: I think the tearing up was absolutely real, but now I
think we're at a point where this is contrivance, because it works for her, and
I'm not saying that in a bad way.
17:49
In his cover story for the
January 21 issue of Newsweek,
editor Jon Meacham mischaracterized quotes by former President Bill Clinton and
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY). Discussing January 7 comments by Bill
Clinton, Meacham reported as fact that "Bill Clinton appeared to dismiss [Sen.
Barack] Obama's [D-IL] campaign as 'the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen,' a
remark that infuriated many African-Americans." Similarly, in a January 12 Washington Post article,
staff writers Anne E. Kornblut and Shailagh
Murray wrote: "Bill Clinton ... appeared to
dismissively describe the campaign platform of hope and change offered by the
strongest black presidential contender in history as the 'biggest fairy tale
I've ever seen.' " In fact, Clinton was
referring to Obama's statements about his position on the Iraq war; he
was not talking about the Obama campaign as the "biggest fairy tale."
Indeed, in a January 13 piece for The
New York Times' Week In Review section, reporter
Mark Leibovich noted that in using the
words "fairy tale," Clinton "was referring specifically to the perception that
Mr. Obama was totally pure in his opposition to the Iraq war."
Both Meacham's Newsweek article and Kornblut and Murray's
Post article reported that Clinton discussed his
remarks in a January 11 interview on The Al
Sharpton Show. Meacham wrote that "Clinton called Al Sharpton's
radio show to clarify, arguing that the 'fairy tale' remark was limited to
Obama's claim that he would have opposed the Iraq War if he had been in the
Senate in 2002-03 despite expressing some doubts to The New York Times in
2004." The Post article reported:
"In a call-in interview on Al Sharpton's
radio show, Clinton said he had meant only that Obama's statements about his
position on the Iraq
war are a 'fairy tale,' because Obama (D-Ill.) had voted to fund the war upon
arriving in the Senate after saying he opposed the invasion." But neither Newsweek nor the Post noted that Clinton's remarks to Sharpton were consistent
with his original comments at the January 7 campaign appearance.
Further,
the Newsweek
cover story, a Washington Post op-ed
by journalist Marjorie Valbrun, and a New
York Times article by Adam
Nagourney and Patrick Healy all truncated a comment by Hillary Clinton on the
passage of civil rights legislation in the 1960s.
Meacham wrote in Newsweek that
"Hillary Clinton noted that while Martin Luther King Jr. marched, it 'took
a president' -- Lyndon Johnson -- to get civil-rights legislation passed and
signed." Valbrun wrote: " 'Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President
Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act,' Clinton
said. 'It took a president to get it done.' " Valbrun added, "In other
words, 'I have a dream' is a nice sentiment, but King couldn't make it reality.
It took a more practical and, of course, white president, Lyndon Johnson, to
get blacks to the mountaintop." And Nagourney and Healy reported: "This was
what Mrs. Clinton said on Monday: 'Dr. King's dream began to be realized when
President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It took a
president to get it done.' "
However, each of these pieces omitted the
middle portion of Hillary Clinton's quote, in which she referred to President
John F. Kennedy. Following
is Clinton's full quote:
I would point to the fact that Dr. King's
dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, when he was able to get
through Congress something that President Kennedy was hopeful to do, the
president before had not even tried, but it took a president to get
it done. That
dream became a reality. The power of that dream became real in people's lives
because we had a president who said, "We are going to do it," and
actually got it accomplished. [emphasis added]
Indeed, Nagourney and Healy's article
gave no indication that anything had been omitted from Hillary Clinton's
comments, quoting two different parts of Clinton's statement as one
continuous quote without ellipses. As Media
Matters for America documented, The New
York Times has repeatedly cropped Clinton's civil rights comments.
Nagourney and Healy's Times article
did report that Bill Clinton used "the phrase 'fairy tale' in talking about Mr.
Obama's views on the war in Iraq."
From the January 7 campaign event with Bill
Clinton, as transcribed by Congressional
Quarterly:
QUESTION: Thanks. One of
the things that Senator Obama talks about a lot is judgment and I'm curious to
hear your thoughts on the recent criticism of Mark Penn, who is Hillary's chief
strategist, who's been criticized for being somewhat out of touch with reality.
For instance, he
circulated a memo about Iowa,
saying "Where's the balance," [sic: bounce] and then the next day,
there was a 12-point jump for Obama.
CLINTON: He was wrong. He was wrong about that, because the balance [sic]
always occurs on the second day, not the first day. It always occurs on the
second day, not the first day.
But since you raised the
judgment issue, let's go over this again. That is the central argument for his
campaign. "It doesn't matter that I started running for president less
than a year after I got to the Senate from the Illinois state senate. I am a great speaker
and a charismatic figure and I am the only one that had the judgment to oppose
this floor [sic: war] from the beginning, always, always, always."
First, it is factually
not true that everybody that supported that resolution supported Bush attacking
Iraq
before the U.N. inspectors withdrew. Chuck Hagel [NE] was one of the co-authors
of that resolution, the only Republican Senator that always opposed the war,
every day, from the get-go.
He authored the
resolution to say that Bush could go to war only if they didn't cooperate with
the inspectors and he was assured personally by [then-National Security
Adviser] Condi Rice, as many of the other Senators were. So, first, the case is
wrong that way.
Second, it is wrong that
Senator Obama got to go through 15 debates trumpeting his superior judgment and
how he had been against the war in every year, enumerating the years and never
got asked one time, not once, "Well, how could you say that when you said
in 2004 you didn't know how you would have voted on the resolution? You said in
2004 there was no difference between you and George Bush on the war and you
took that speech you're now running on off your Web site in 2004 and there's no
difference in your voting record and Hillary's ever since."
Give me a break.
[applause]
This whole thing is the
biggest fairy tale I've ever seen. So you can talk about Mark Penn all you want. What did you think
about the Obama thing, calling Hillary the "Senator from Punjab?"
Did you like that? Or what about the Obama handout that was covered up, the
press never reported on, implying that I was a crook, scouring me, scathing
criticism over my financial reports.
[Former independent
counsel] Ken Starr spent $70 million and indicted innocent people to find out
that I wouldn't take a nickel to see the cow jump over the moon. So you can
take a shot at Mark Penn if you want, it wasn't his best day. He was hurt, he
felt badly we didn't do better in Iowa.
But, you know, the idea
that one of these campaigns is positive and other is negative, when I know the
reverse is true and I have seen it and I have been blistered by it for months,
is a little tough to take. Just because of the sanitizing coverage that's in
the media doesn't mean the facts aren't out there.
[applause]
Otherwise, I do not have
any strong feelings about that subject.
[laughter]
Go ahead. I've got to
take a question back here and then I -- go ahead.
From the January 21 issue of Newsweek:
In New Hampshire,
Bill Clinton appeared to dismiss Obama's campaign as "the biggest fairy
tale I've ever seen," a remark that infuriated many African-Americans. "When
has 'black' and 'fairy tale' ever been mentioned in the same sentence?"
asked Todd Boyd, professor of African-American and Critical Studies at the University of Southern California. "That was just
insulting, and he needs to be very careful." Clinton called Al Sharpton's radio show to
clarify, arguing that the "fairy tale" remark was limited to Obama's
claim that he would have opposed the Iraq War if he had been in the Senate in
2002-03 despite expressing some doubts to The New York Times in 2004:
"What would I have done? I don't know. What I know is that from my vantage
point the case was not made." And when
Hillary Clinton noted that while Martin Luther King Jr. marched, it "took
a president" -- Lyndon Johnson -- to get civil-rights legislation passed and
signed, the comment prompted some Obama supporters to say that Clinton was minimizing King. By
late last week, South Carolina Rep. James E. Clyburn felt compelled to issue a
statement calling for a ceasefire: "I encourage the candidates to be
sensitive about the words they use. This is an historic race for America to have
such strong, diverse candidates vying for the Democratic nomination." John
Lewis, the Georgia
congressman, civil-rights veteran and perennial optimist, said, "I hope we
will put these issues of gender and race to rest and return to the marketplace
of politics."
From the January 12 Washington Post article by Kornblut and
Murray:
The
comments have come from Clinton (D-N.Y.) and several of her most prominent surrogates,
including New Hampshire
ally Billy Shaheen, who made insinuations about Sen. Barack Obama's
admission of past drug use, and Clinton's husband, Bill Clinton, who appeared to dismissively describe the campaign platform
of hope and change offered by the strongest black presidential contender in
history as the "biggest fairy tale I've ever seen."
[...]
Bill
Clinton spent much of the day trying to explain his remarks and regain the
confidence of a community that historically has provided some of the Clintons' strongest
support. In a call-in interview on Al Sharpton's
radio show, Clinton said he had meant only that
Obama's statements about his position on the Iraq
war are a "fairy tale," because Obama (D-Ill.) had voted to fund the
war upon arriving in the Senate after saying he opposed the invasion.
From Valbrun's January 13 Washington Post op-ed:
Clinton
herself has made racially tinged comments that could be taken as either
insensitive or patronizing. The most widely noticed was in her efforts to
dismiss Obama's talk of "hope" and "change" as empty
idealism. In doing so, she offhandedly diminished the important role played by
Martin Luther King Jr. in pushing America to meet its promise of
equality for millions of black Americans. "Dr.
King's dream began to be realized when President Johnson passed the Civil
Rights Act," Clinton
said. "It took a president to get it done."
In other words, "I have a dream" is a nice
sentiment, but King couldn't make it reality. It took a more practical and, of
course, white president, Lyndon Johnson, to get blacks to the mountaintop. Of course no black man could have hoped to be president 44 years
ago. And, for that matter, neither could any woman.
What
was Clinton
thinking? King's name is sacrosanct in most black households, and for poor and
struggling blacks whose lives have yet to reflect King's ideals,
"hope" is more than just a notion. Clinton managed to insult a beloved black
leader in her eager attempt to insult a rising black leader.
From Nagourney and Healy's January 13 New York Times article:
Mr.
Clyburn said he was disappointed by what Mrs. Clinton had said and by former
President Bill Clinton's use of the phrase "fairy
tale" in talking about Mr. Obama's views on the war in Iraq.
[...]
This was what Mrs. Clinton said on Monday: "Dr. King's dream
began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act
of 1964. It took a president to get it done." At a later stop, she said that her remark had not captured what
she had sought to portray.
Mrs.
Clinton seemed prepared to address the question Saturday the second she stepped
in front of reporters, and she went into the attack as soon as she was asked
about Mr. Clyburn.
16:27
During a January 13 interview with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) on NBC's Meet the Press, host Tim Russert played a
truncated quote from former President Bill Clinton and falsely asserted that he
was showing viewers "exactly what President Clinton said."
Referring to January 7 comments Bill Clinton made about Sen. Barack Obama
(D-IL), Russert told Hillary Clinton: "It just isn't Sen. Obama who is
taking offense. This is exactly what President Clinton said in Dartmouth. Here is the tape." Russert
then proceeded to air video of Bill Clinton saying: "Give me a break.
This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen." In fact,
Russert did not show viewers "exactly what President Clinton said."
He did
not show what Clinton said immediately before
the "fairy tale" quote, when Clinton referred to Obama's statements about the Iraq war. Indeed, The New York Times' Mark Leibovich noted on January 13 that in using the words "fairy
tale," Clinton "was referring
specifically to the perception that Mr. Obama was totally pure in his
opposition to the Iraq
war." In addition to showing the truncated video, Russert read an
excerpt from Bob Herbert's January 12 New
York Times column, in which Herbert claimed
that Bill Clinton "sa[id] of Mr. Obama's effort: 'The whole
thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen.' "
Russert also read from a January 11 New York Times article that purported to quote a comment Hillary Clinton made about civil rights, and Russert noted Herbert's assertion
that Hillary Clinton had "tak[en] cheap shots at, of all people, the Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." But the
Times article that Russert read truncated Hillary Clinton's actual statement, omitting from the quote her reference to President John F. Kennedy.
Quoting from the January 11 Times article's description of what he referred to as "the
Martin Luther King thing," Russert claimed to "lay this out for our
viewers":
RUSSERT:
So these are people who are not supporters of Obama, who are listening. Let me
just go to the Martin Luther King thing, because you had your opportunity to talk about this at the
beginning of the show and I want to lay this out for our viewers. This is how The New York Times categorized it.
"In an interview with Fox News on Monday, Mrs. Clinton ... tried to make a
point about presidential leadership. 'Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Johnson
passed the Civil Rights Act of '64.' Mrs. Clinton said in trying to make the
case that her experience should mean more to voters than the
uplifting words of Mr. Obama. 'It took a president to get it done.'"
In fact, Clinton's actual quote --
made during a January 7 interview with Fox News'
Major Garrett -- contained the reference to Kennedy below in bold, something that both the
Times article and Russert
omitted:
CLINTON: I would, and I would point to the fact that that Dr. King's dream
began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act
of 1964, when he was able to get through
Congress something that President Kennedy was hopeful to do, the president
before had not even tried, but it took a president to get it done.
That dream became a reality. The power of that dream became real in people's
lives because we had a president who said, "We are going to do it,"
and actually got it accomplished.
From the January 7 Dartmouth campaign event with Bill
Clinton, as transcribed by Congressional
Quarterly:
QUESTION: Thanks. One of
the things that Senator Obama talks about a lot is judgment and I'm curious to
hear your thoughts on the recent criticism of Mark Penn, who is Hillary's chief
strategist, who's been criticized for being somewhat out of touch with reality.
For instance, he
circulated a memo about Iowa,
saying "Where's the balance," [sic: bounce] and then the next day,
there was a 12-point jump for Obama.
CLINTON: He was wrong. He was wrong about that, because the balance [sic]
always occurs on the second day, not the first day. It always occurs on the
second day, not the first day.
But since you raised the
judgment issue, let's go over this again. That is the central argument for his
campaign. "It doesn't matter that I started running for president less
than a year after I got to the Senate from the Illinois state senate. I am a great speaker
and a charismatic figure and I am the only one that had the judgment to oppose
this floor [sic: war] from the beginning, always, always, always."
First, it is factually
not true that everybody that supported that resolution supported Bush attacking
Iraq
before the U.N. inspectors withdrew. Chuck Hagel [NE] was one of the co-authors
of that resolution, the only Republican Senator that always opposed the war,
every day, from the get-go.
He authored the
resolution to say that Bush could go to war only if they didn't cooperate with
the inspectors and he was assured personally by [then-National Security Adviser]
Condi Rice, as many of the other Senators were. So, first, the case is wrong
that way.
Second, it is wrong that
Senator Obama got to go through 15 debates trumpeting his superior judgment and
how he had been against the war in every year, enumerating the years and never
got asked one time, not once, "Well, how could you say that when you said
in 2004 you didn't know how you would have voted on the resolution? You said in
2004 there was no difference between you and George Bush on the war and you took
that speech you're now running on off your Web site in 2004 and there's no
difference in your voting record and Hillary's ever since."
Give me a break.
[applause]
This whole thing is the
biggest fairy tale I've ever seen. So you can talk about Mark Penn all you want. What did you think
about the Obama thing, calling Hillary the "Senator from Punjab?"
Did you like that? Or what about the Obama handout that was covered up, the
press never reported on, implying that I was a crook, scouring me, scathing
criticism over my financial reports.
[Former independent
counsel] Ken Starr spent $70 million and indicted innocent people to find out
that I wouldn't take a nickel to see the cow jump over the moon. So you can
take a shot at Mark Penn if you want, it wasn't his best day. He was hurt, he
felt badly we didn't do better in Iowa.
But, you know, the idea
that one of these campaigns is positive and other is negative, when I know the
reverse is true and I have seen it and I have been blistered by it for months,
is a little tough to take. Just because of the sanitizing coverage that's in
the media doesn't mean the facts aren't out there.
[applause]
Otherwise, I do not have
any strong feelings about that subject.
[laughter]
Go ahead. I've got to
take a question back here and then I -- go ahead.
From the January 13 broadcast of
NBC's Meet the Press:
RUSSERT:
When we arrived in South Carolina
yesterday, this was The State
newspaper, and the headlines that
greeted us. And let me share it
with you and our viewers: "Clinton Camp Hits Obama, Attacks 'painful' for black
voters. Many in state offended by criticism of Obama and remarks about Martin
Luther King." Bob Herbert, in The New York Times, a columnist, weighed in this way: "I could also sense how
hard the Clinton
camp was working to undermine Senator Obama's main theme, that a campaign based
on hope and healing could unify rather than further polarize the country. So there was the former
president chastising the press for the way it was covering the Obama campaign
and saying of Mr. Obama's effort, quote, 'The whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've
ever seen.' And there was Mrs. Clinton telling the country we don't need, quote, 'false hopes,' and taking cheap shots at, of all people, the
Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. We've
already seen Clinton
surrogates trying to implant the false idea that Mr. Obama might be a Muslim,
and perhaps a drug dealer to boot."
What is
this all about?
CLINTON: Well, beats me, because there's not one shred of truth in what
you've just read. And I regret that, because obviously a lot of people have
been, you know, given information or an impression that is absolutely false.
First,
with respect to Dr. King, you know, Tim, I was 14 years old when I heard Dr.
King speak in person. He is one of the people that I admire most in the world,
and the point that I was responding to from Senator Obama himself in a number
of speeches he was making is his comparison of himself to President Kennedy and
Dr. King. And there is no doubt that the inspiration offered by all three of
them is essential. It is critical to who we are as a nation, what we believe
in, the dreams and aspirations that we all have. But I also said that, you
know, Dr. King didn't just give speeches. He marched, he organized, he
protested, he was gassed, he was beaten, he was jailed. He understood that he
had to move the political process and bring in those who were in political
power, and he campaigned for political leaders, including Lyndon Johnson,
because he wanted somebody in the White House who would act on what he had
devoted his life to achieving.
[...]
HILLARY
CLINTON: And let me address the point that Bill was making. Because again, I
think it's been unfairly and inaccurately characterized. What he was
talking about was very directly about the story of Senator Obama's
campaign being premised on a speech he gave in 2002. And that was to his
credit. He gave a speech opposing the war in Iraq. He gave a very impassioned
speech against it and consistently said that he was against the war, he would
vote against the funding for the war. By 2003, that speech was off his website.
By 2004, he was saying that he didn't really disagree with the way that
George Bush was conducting the war. And by 2005, -6, and -7, he was voting for
$300 billion in funding for the war.
The
story of his campaign is really the story of that speech and his opposition to Iraq.
I think it is fair to ask questions about, "Well, what did you do after
the speech was over?" And when he became a senator, he didn't go to
the floor of the Senate to condemn the war in Iraq for 18 months. He didn't
introduce legislation against the war in Iraq. He voted against timelines
and deadlines initially. So I think it's important that we get the
contrasts and comparisons out. I think that's fair game. You know, I
think that we don't want anyone, any of our supporters, anyone -
and that's why in my campaign, anytime anybody has said anything that I
thought was out of bounds, they're gone. You know, I have gotten rid of
them. I have said that is not appropriate in this campaign. You know, when
Senator Obama's chief strategist accuses me of playing a role in Benazir
Bhutto's assassination, there's silence. So let's have one
standard.
This is
an exciting and historic campaign. One of us is going to make history, which is
thrilling to me. I've worked all my life on behalf of civil rights, and
women's rights, and human rights. And so I want a good, vigorous campaign
about the differences between us and our various qualifications and experiences
to be the president that America
needs.
RUSSERT:
It just isn't Senator Obama who is taking
offense. This is exactly what President Clinton said in Dartmouth. Here is the tape.
BILL
CLINTON [video clip]: Give me a break. This
whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen.
RUSSERT:
Congressman James Clyburn (D) of South
Carolina, who's neutral, said this. "To call
that dream a fairy tale, which Bill Clinton seemed to be doing, could very well
be insulting to some of us."
HILLARY
CLINTON: But Tim, let me just stop you right there. Now wait a minute.
RUSSERT:
I didn't stop you.
HILLARY
CLINTON: No, but you did not give the entire quote.
RUSSERT:
No, but you --
HILLARY
CLINTON: The entire quote was clearly about the position on Iraq. It was not about the entire
candidacy. It was not about the extraordinary --
RUSSERT:
But Congressman Clyburn --
HILLARY
CLINTON: -- you know, abilities.
RUSSERT:
But Congressman -- but Congressman Clyburn has been covering this race. Donna
Brazile, herself a longtime activist in the Democratic Party, this is what she
said. Here's Donna Brazile.
BRAZILE [video clip]: As an African-American, I find his words
and his tone to be very depressing.
RUSSERT:
So these are people who are not supporters of Obama, who are listening. Let me just go to the Martin Luther King thing, because you had your opportunity to talk about this at the
beginning of the show, and I want to lay this out for our viewers. This
is how The New York Times
categorized it. "In an interview with Fox News on Monday, Mrs. Clinton ...
tried to make a point about presidential leadership. 'Dr. King's dream began to be realized when
President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of '64.' Mrs. Clinton said in
trying to make the case that her experience should mean more to voters than the uplifting words of Mr. Obama. 'It took a president to get it done.' " Again, Congressman
Clyburn, "We have to be very, very careful about how we speak about that
era in American politics. ... That bothered me a great deal."
15:52
In a January 13 article
on the upcoming Nevada caucuses, Washington
Post staff writers Paul Kane and Alec MacGillis wrote, "In New
Hampshire, [Sen. Hillary Rodham] Clinton [D-NY]
fared best among working-class and middle-class voters, while [Sen. Barack] Obama [D-IL]
did better with higher-income voters and in college towns -- a demographic that
Clinton at one point mocked as people who 'don't need a president.' " Kane and
MacGillis did not report the origin of the Clinton quote. A Media Matters for America review of
Google and the Nexis database found an article
from the Muscatine (Iowa) Journal
that reported that Clinton
said at a December 31 appearance: "Rich people don't need a president. They
have been doing fine, and have been having a run of luck with George Bush." The
Muscatine Journal article also
reported that Clinton
said: "Children need a president who cares about them and their futures." But Media Matters could
find no reports that quoted Clinton
saying people "in college towns" don't need a president.
Nexis and Google searches also found that
media outlets -- including The Washington Post's blog
The Trail -- reported that Clinton
said on December 20: "It's tempting anytime things
seem quieter for a minute on the international front to think that we don't need a president who is up to speed on foreign affairs and military matters.
Well, that's the kind of logic that got us George Bush in the first place"
(emphasis added).
From the January 13 article in The Washington
Post:
The unusual venue has
set the scene for a different confrontation between Obama and Clinton, the two
front-runners, than occurred in Iowa or New Hampshire.
In New Hampshire, Clinton
fared best among working-class and middle-class voters, while Obama did better
with higher-income voters and in college towns -- a demographic that Clinton at one point
mocked as people who "don't need a president."
But in Las
Vegas, Clinton, a senator from New York,
is supported by many hotel and casino executives, while Obama has the backing
of two key unions -- the Nevada
chapter of the Service Employees International Union and the culinary workers,
which announced its endorsement Wednesday after fierce lobbying from all three
Democrats.
January 12, 200818:52
As blogger and media critic Greg Sargent
noted, a January
11 New York Times
article
by Carl Hulse truncated Democratic presidential candidate Hillary
Rodham Clinton's January 7 comments about civil rights, omitting
Clinton's reference to former President John F. Kennedy. A January 9
New York Times
editorial,
as well as a January 7 blog
post by Sarah Wheaton on the
Times' politics blog, The Caucus, and a January 7 blog
post
titled "Clinton and Obama, Johnson and King"
by
Politico senior political writer Ben Smith, also omitted the reference to Kennedy. Each of these
pieces
quoted Clinton saying
that
"Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson
passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964" and that "it took a president to
get it done." But each of them omitted
the middle portion of
Clinton's full quote, which
was: "I would point
to the fact that that Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
when he was able to get through
Congress something that President Kennedy was hopeful to do, the
president before had not even tried, but it took a president to get it done" [emphasis added].
As Sargent also
noted, the full quotation
including the reference to Kennedy appeared in a January 11
post
in The Caucus.
Smith later repeated Clinton's full comment in a separate
post on his
Politico blog titled "Clinton, Kennedy, King" and updated his earlier post to provide a link to the later post.
In
a January 7 interview,
Fox News political correspondent Major Garrett asked Clinton if she would react to a portion of a
quote from Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama: "False hopes?
...
Dr.
King standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial looking out over the
magnificent crowd, the reflecting pool, the Washington Monument:
'Sorry, guys. False hope. The dream will die. It can't be done.'
" Clinton said:
I would, and I would point to the fact that that Dr. King's dream began to be realized when
President Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, when
he |