<<http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2003_archives/002714.html>
>

Reason's Julian Sanchez is dumbfounded by the fact that, for Republican
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist's staff, telling the truth is simply
not a consideration to be taken into account: 

Hit & Run: Doctoring the Numbers: ...a question asking visitors "Should
the President's nominees to the federal bench be allowed an up or down
vote on confirmation as specified in the Constitution?"... liberal
weblogger's readers began voting "no" in overwhelming numbers. Uh-oh. So
Frist's web folk changed the wording to make it a little more obvious
which answer they considered the "right" one. The revised question asked:
"Should the Senate exercise its Constitutional duty to provide the
President's judicial nominees with an up or down vote?" 

Unfortunately, the nays still had it by a wide margin--an even wider
margin at some points, in fact. So what did they do this time? Instead of
just pulling the poll altogether--which would be craven, but not grossly
dishonest--the majority leader's webfolk changed the question to reverse
the meaning of the "yes" and "no" answers. The question now reads:
"Should the Senate minority block the body's Constitutional duty to
provide the President's judicial nominees with an up or down vote?" 

So, will the senator reprimand his staffers for this obvious mendacity,
maybe post an apology? And if he doesn't--if lying is considered OK in
the Frist office on something this trivial--why should we trust him to be
any more scrupulous when it comes to something that actually matters?
And, more importantly, what kind of imbecile webmaster thinks that you
can pull off something this brazen without anyone calling bullshit? 

Update: You've got to be kidding... After waiting for the poll (with the
"Should the Senate minority block..." wording) to just barely tip back in
favor of the "yes" vote, the thing was tossed to the archive, but now
with the original wording. Frist's webmaster is really putting in
overtime on this one. 

But was there any reason to trust Bush, or Frist, or Delay about anything
of substance before? 


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