Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Media Matters for America, July 25, 2007

Hannity got "Worst Person" "silver" for using cucumber, condom to misrepresent Obama's stance on sex ed

On the July 24 edition of MSNBC's Countdown, host Keith Olbermann named Fox News host Sean Hannity the "silver" in his nightly "Worst Person in the World" segment for previewing a discussion of July 17 comments by Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) regarding age-appropriate sex education during the July 20 edition of Hannity & Colmes by asking "[W]hat is it that Barack Obama was thinking when he said he supported sex ed for kindergartners?" while Fox News aired video of a woman applying a condom to a cucumber. As Media Matters for America documented, the Obama campaign has made clear what the candidate "was thinking": "He said we needed to teach even kindergartners what kind of touching is OK, and what kind is not."
Read more



Wash. Post reprinted online user comment attacking Clinton and Obama

On July 25, The Washington Post published a user comment from its website attacking Sens. Barack Obama (D-IL) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) following the most recent Democratic presidential debate: "Hillary is so calculating, she is almost robotic. ... And Obama?? I'm still waiting. Other than an excellent cheerleader, who is he???" The comment was written in response to a July 24 entry by staff writer Dan Balz on the Post's presidential politics blog, The Trail. The comment was then published in the July 25 edition of the Post in a new section also titled "The Trail." The section did not feature any other comments from The Trail blog, although numerous other comments to Balz's entry complimented Clinton and Obama. As Media Matters for America has documented media outlets frequently portray Clinton as "calculating" or overly ambitious, while rarely offering actual examples or support. Moreover, Media Matters has also documented media baselessly suggesting that Obama is "all style and little substance."
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O'Reilly asked: "[W]hat's the difference between David Duke" and Daily Kos?


On the July 24 edition of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, during an interview with Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-NY) presidential campaign communications director Howard Wolfson, host Bill O'Reilly again compared the blog Daily Kos to white supremacist David Duke, asking: "[W]hat's the difference between David Duke and the hate stuff that he puts on his website with his bloggers and this? What is the difference?"

Wolfson responded that, unlike Daily Kos, "David Duke's entire organization is rooted in hate and racism." O'Reilly then asked, "And the Daily Kos is not?" Wolfson replied: "No, it certainly is not ... It is primarily hundreds of thousands, as I said, good American citizens who are participating in our democracy." Wolfson later accused O'Reilly of "cherry-picking comments that are objectionable and attempting to smear an entire community of people. And it's wrong." Read more



CNN's Blitzer failed to note Hayes' false Iraq-Al Qaeda reporting, Cheney connections

On the July 24 edition of CNN's The Situation Room, host Wolf Blitzer interviewed Weekly Standard writer Stephen F. Hayes about his recently released book on Vice President Dick Cheney, Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President.

During the interview, Hayes claimed that Cheney and President Bush "initially ... both thought there was a possibility that Saddam Hussein had had some role in the September 11th attacks," and that "pretty much everybody thought" Iraq "had weapons of mass destruction, and these terrorist groups that were -- in some cases, had overlapping relationships with Saddam ... and his intelligence services."

Blitzer offered no challenge to Hayes' Iraq/Al Qaeda statements, despite the fact that Hayes wrote several articles and a book alleging connections between Al Qaeda and Iraq that were later discredited, and that Hayes' flawed work was touted by Cheney as the "best source of information" regarding the alleged connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Indeed, at no point during the interview did Blitzer note Hayes' steadfast support of the Bush administration's national security policies. Nor did CNN identify Hayes as a writer for the conservative Weekly Standard. Read more



DeLay's Politico column on "failures" of the Democratic Congress rife with falsehoods

In his July 23 Politico column, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-TX) wrote that "the defining characteristic of the new Democrat [sic] majority in Congress has been failure." DeLay claimed that the "collapse of the immigration bill is a perfect case study in the legislative idiocy that is right now posing as leadership in the Democratic Party," adding: "The Democrats wrote the immigration bill like it was 1977, when they commanded huge majorities -- behind closed doors, details kept even from their own caucus, as if confident their ideological pals at the networks and major newspapers would keep the story from the American people." At no point, however, did DeLay acknowledge that the immigration bill was actually written by a bipartisan group of Republican and Democratic senators, as well as Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez. Read more



Wash. Post: Cong. "Democrats in particular" have high disapproval -- in fact, disapproval of GOP much higher

An article in the July 25 edition of The Washington Post by staff writer Peter Baker asserted that despite President Bush's low approval numbers, "the president's team takes solace from the fact that the public holds Congress in low esteem too," adding that "[m]ore than half" of respondents in a Washington Post/ABC News poll taken July 18-21 "disapproved of Congress generally, and Democrats in particular." In fact, according to the Post/ABC poll, congressional Republicans have a substantially higher disapproval rating than congressional Democrats. Read more



Politico's Allen uncritically quoted McConnell claiming Democratic Congress has "not been very productive"

In his July 25 "Politico Playbook," Politico chief political correspondent Mike Allen uncritically quoted Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) claiming that "the first six or seven months of this Congress have basically not been very productive." According to McConnell: "We've had excessive Iraq votes, excessive investigations, and not much legislating. Managed to keep the lights on and managed to do a troop-funding bill that was important, but that's
really about it for the first seven months." Allen offered no challenge to McConnell's attack on Congress' "productiv[ity]"; in fact, Republicans have repeatedly blocked legislation proposed by the Democratic majority in the Senate. As Media Matters for America noted, McClatchy Newspapers reported on July 20: "This year Senate Republicans are threatening filibusters to block more legislation than ever before." Read more

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