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Notable Quotables May 14,2001
Vol. Fourteen; No. 10

This week's examples of the media's liberal bias from the Media Research
Center.

"Respected" vs. "Controversial"

"Among the most controversial...Michael McConnell, who argued in
support of banning homosexuals from the Boy Scouts."
-- ABC's Jackie Judd reporting President Bush's first federal
judge nominations, World News Tonight, May 8.

"...Michael McConnell, a widely respected legal scholar who once
clerked for Justice William Brennan, one of the court's most
revered liberal judges."
-- Jim Angle on FNC's Special Report with Brit Hume, same night.


Indicted Democrat = Republican

"Now [Congressman James] Traficant is a Democrat, but this
indictment is actually an embarrassment to Republican leaders.
They gave him $20 million last year for a project in his district
in return for his support of the Republicans."
-- Linda Douglass, ABC's World News Tonight, May 4.

Wolf Blitzer: "Jon, is this more of an embarrassment for Democrats
or Republicans? He's a Democrat who voted for the Republican
Speaker."
Jonathan Karl: "Well, James Traficant is a lifetime Democrat, but
Democrats are very quick to point out not only did he voted for
the Speaker, but that the Republicans have courted him
aggressively. Republicans last year in Congress helped funnel some
$20 million in federal projects to Traficant's district. So the
spin from the Democrats here is that this is a Republican
embarrassment."
-- Exchange on CNN's Wolf Blitzer Reports, May 4.


Bush's "Permanent Damage"

"During the campaign, Bush sounded like an environmentalist....And
early on, he upholds Clinton restrictions on diesel fuel
pollution. But since then Bush suspends a ban on new roads in
national forests, proposes canceling new mining rules, reconsiders
Clinton wilderness designations, considers opening the Arctic
wilderness to oil drilling, reneges on a campaign promise to lower
carbon dioxide emissions and now is about to cancel a plan to save
endangered grizzlies by re-introducing them to wilderness areas
out West, a concession to Idaho's Governor....Concerned
Republicans worry Bush may have already lost pro-environment
Republicans and independents, voters crucial to the success of his
presidency, to say nothing, they say, of the more permanent damage
to the environment."
-- Andrea Mitchell, NBC Nightly News, April 30.


Shooting Down Missile Defense

"There is a little skepticism in the air here today. Some
cynicism, too. The government has an idea of how to spend $50
billion of your money. That's BILLION. It will be spent on
building a system to safeguard the national security -- but by the
government's own assessment it will probably not be foolproof, it
will unnerve America's allies, and in the end it may cost
considerably MORE than $50 billion. A more critical assessment is
that this system can never be made to work, that it will torpedo
the basis of all arms control arrangements, and that in any event,
any terrorist or ‘rogue nation' that means to wreak havoc on U.S.
soil can do so in ways that this system will not prevent."
-- Peter Jennings in his "Jennings Journal" e-mail to viewers, May
1.

"One other note. Critics often object to the animation in news
reports because the animation usually has the systems working."
-- Peter Jennings on the May 1 World News Tonight after a missile
defense story which included animation.

"President Bush is preparing a major speech on another
controversial space program, the so-called missile defense shield
designed to shoot down incoming missiles in space. This is a
concept that's at once feared and reviled, from Beijing to Moscow,
from within Washington, D.C. to European capitals."
-- Tom Brokaw, NBC Nightly News, April 30.


Lauer's Left-Wing Approach

"Critics of the President say he speaks like a moderate and acts
like a conservative, that he does one thing and says another. How
do you respond to that?"
"What about on the subject of the environment? During the campaign
he, he portrayed himself as an environmentally friendly person.
And now of course he's, he's either moved back or delayed several
initiatives that would help clean up the environment."
"In fairness though, he said that he will not go along with caps
on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, and he's going to
delay reductions in arsenic in drinking water."
"The President's gonna start talking about a national missile
defense system. How is he going to make a case for that, Karen,
when some of the fundamental tests of that system in the past have
not come out well?"
"Is it worth pursuing that at a cost of billions of dollars?"
-- Matt Lauer's questions to White House counselor Karen Hughes,
April 30 Today.


Vouching for False Ad

"Well there's nothing inaccurate in that ad."
-- Tim Russert to White House senior advisor Karl Rove, in
reference to a DNC ad in which a little girls asks, "May I please
have some more arsenic in my water, mommy?" and the announcer
asserts: "George W. Bush tried to roll back protections against
arsenic in drinking water and salmonella in school lunches," April
29 Meet the Press.

Reality Check:
"While the commercial may be effective, it is not entirely
accurate. For 60 years, the arsenic standard in drinking water has
been 50 parts per billion. Three days before President Clinton
left office, his administration decided to lower that to 10 parts
per billion -- starting in 2006. The Bush administration, in the
meantime, is conducting a review."
-- FNC's David Shuster on Special Report with Brit Hume, April 27.


Happy Earth Day -- Bush Sucks

"To commemorate the 32nd annual Earth Day, President Bush today
asked Americans to join him in renewing a commitment to protecting
the environment. But Randall Pinkston tells us for many
environmentalists, the appeal does not ring true."
-- CBS Evening News weekend anchor Jane Clayson introducing an
April 22 story.

"What about the rest of his performance? Aren't you concerned that
some of these moves to erode some of the legislation designed to
protect our environment, this stuff about arsenic and carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere, etcetera? Don't you think that some of
that is excessive in terms of undoing some of the good work done
by the Democrats or the other progressives over the years?"
-- Geraldo Rivera to Governor Jesse Ventura, April 23 Rivera Live
on CNBC.


Ted Kennedy Too Conservative?

"Senator, there are some Democrats who say that as much money as
is really needed for education will not be spent because of the
tax cut that is on its way on a fast track through the Congress.
Do you become, in cooperating with the President, do you become
complicit in that?"
"As I understand this bill, he gives up, for now, on his voucher
plan and you give up on some of the money that would have been
spent for teachers and for the renovation of some crumbling
schools. In some sense, is that a hollow compromise? I mean, does
it really do much for schools and get more teachers in the
system?"
-- Questions from Charles Gibson to Senator Ted Kennedy, May 3
ABC's Good Morning America.


Bush's "Sniping"?

"Democrats ask what happened to Mr. Bush's vaunted promise to
change the tone in Washington and put an end to partisan sniping?"
-- White House reporter John Roberts in a review of the first 100
days, seconds after he showed a DNC ad in which a little girl
asks, "May I please have some more arsenic in my water, mommy?"
Apr. 29 CBS Evening News.


Clinton Better Than Partisan Bush

Peter Jennings: "He may call this a bipartisan triumph, but in
fact, it's anything but at the moment."
Linda Douglass: "Well, that's absolutely right, Peter, because
what the President did here was ram this budget through, bypassing
a number of the normal independent analyses that are done inside
of the Congress before one votes on a budget, so that the numbers
really have not been analyzed as closely as they were, say, when
President Clinton was President."
-- Exchange on ABC's World News Tonight, May 2.


If You Really Care, Spend More

"There's a political storm brewing. In his campaign for President,
George Bush repeatedly claimed children as his issue, even
adopting the slogan of the Children's Defense Fund, to ‘leave no
child behind.' But in his administration's first budget there is
no net increase in child care funding, only tax breaks for which
low income families don't qualify. And so far Congress has no
plan."
-- John Roberts, CBS Evening News, May 6.


Alter's On-Air Gorbasm

"He's only the most important political leader alive in the world
today, historically speaking....If you look over the course of our
lifetimes, who was the most, well, you go back to Lincoln and
Franklin Roosevelt....If I look back over my lifetime, who is the
world leader who changed things the most, and I don't actually
think it is a close call."
-- Newsweek's Jonathan Alter on Mikhail Gorbachev, April 27 Imus
in the Morning on MSNBC.


Dial 1-900-ABC-Loves-Bill

Charles Gibson: "Have you ever -- it just occurred to me -- have
you ever, in the first hundred days, consulted or called former
President Clinton?"
President Bush: "No, I haven't."
Gibson: "To talk to him?"
President Bush: "No, I have not."
Gibson: "Don't feel the need?"
-- Exchange during taped interview aired on the April 25 Good
Morning America.


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