Democratic Underground Latest Greatest Lobby Journals Search Options Help Login
Google

Unfair and Unbalanced----THE RIGHT GUEST LIST:

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
Home » Discuss » Editorials & Other Articles Donate to DU
 
rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-12-06 11:56 AM
Original message
Unfair and Unbalanced----THE RIGHT GUEST LIST:




-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Progress Report: Unfair and Unbalanced
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 11:47:03 -0500 (EST)
From: American Progress Action Fund <progress@americanprogressaction.org>
To: xx




January 12, 2006


MEDIA
Unfair and Unbalanced

The Supreme Court confirmation proceedings for Samuel Alito are of incredible importance. As Judiciary Chairman Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) noted on Monday, "No senator's vote, except for the declaration of war or the authorization for the use of force, is more important than the confirmation of a nominee for the Supreme Court for a lifetime appointment." Alito's potential confirmation will directly impact the lives of millions of ordinary Americans. Given these high stakes, one would expect our major media to make a determined effort to cover the hearings accurately, fairly, and substantively. They have not. As the record below shows, coverage of the hearings this week has been beset by inaccuracies, falsehoods, and a lack of balance.

IF YOU DON'T HAVE ANYTHING ACCURATE TO SAY...: Coverage of the Alito hearings has been rife with inaccuracies. On CNN, viewers caught analyst Jeff Greenfield repeating the false claim that Judge John Roberts had not referred to the Roe v. Wade decision as "settled law" during his Supreme Court hearing when in fact he did. (This line was being used to defend Alito, who actually did refuse to call Roe "settled law" in his testimony.) On MSNBC, scrolling onscreen text "falsely suggested that Alito was in the majority in the Bray v. Marriott anti-discrimination case." (In fact, Alito dissented in the decision, which reversed a lower court's ruling on the case.) NBC correspondent Pete Williams falsely claimed that Alito "was following Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's precedent in his dissent in favor of spousal notification in an abortion-rights case," and that O'Connor subsequently "changed her mind." (Actually, O'Connor had never ruled on a spousal notification case when Alito wrote his opinion.) Meanwhile, NBC anchor Brian Williams, appearing on a radio show, crowed about how the right-wing National Review "had video refuting what said with an earlier statement. I mean this Joe Biden thing was just unbelievable!" Asked what point of Biden's the National Review had refuted, Williams was speechless: "I am not sure exactly. ... Well, I am sorry. I don't have that."

THE RIGHT GUEST LIST: Media Matters documented coverage of the Alito hearings by NBC News. During its first four hours of coverage on MSNBC, the network featured interviews with Pat Buchanan, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN), and Ed Gillespie, the White House adviser for Alito's nomination process. Not a single progressive critic was invited to comment. The network's prime-time coverage continued this trend, featuring Buchanan once again, "along with former Attorney General John Ashcroft, current RNC chairman Ken Mehlman, and former solicitor general Theodore B. Olson." Only two guests, author Edward Lazarus and Air America host Rachel Maddow, were critical of Alito. This pattern continued the following morning on NBC's Today show, which featured a single guest -- former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-TN), the White House adviser for John Roberts' nomination process -- in its report on the hearing.

MEDIA FOCUSES ON EMOTIONS, OVERLOOKS SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES: Since yesterday afternoon, media coverage has focused predominantly on Martha-Ann Alito's unfortunate, tearful exit from the hearings. While upsetting, this event should not have overshadowed the serious issues addressed yesterday that will have more far-reaching consequences, such as responses from Alito that left open the possibility he may vote to overturn Roe v. Wade. (To make matters worse, even when addressing Mrs. Alito's exit, the media couldn't get its facts straight.)


SUPREME COURT
Excuses, Excuses

After two days of questioning from the Senate Judiciary Committee, many questions still remain unanswered about Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito. While Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said Alito has been not only "responsive, but...very forthcoming," the reality is that all of Alito's talking has contained little substance. "You know, we know very little more about Judge Alito now than we knew when the hearings began," said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY). "He has talked in very broad generalities and said things that everyone would agree with and tells no one about his views." In his final day of testimony, Alito needs to stop his dodging and weaving tactics and be up front with the American public about his record.

AVOIDING QUESTIONS ON CRITICAL CASES: Alito, like Chief Justice John Roberts during his confirmation hearings, has refused to comment on his specific stance on abortion law because related cases are pending before the Supreme Court. "To do so , he said, would be to say to future parties in abortion-related cases, 'If you bring your case before my court, I'm not even going to listen to you.'" But Alito doesn't seem fully committed to his strategy. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) pointed out, "You were willing to give your view on one man, one vote. And yet there are four case pending in the court right now on one man, one vote. ... That's where I have a hard time. If you're willing to say that you believe one man, one vote is well settled and you agree with it, I have hard time understanding how you separate out Roe ."

RUNNING AWAY FROM THE PAST: Alito has continually tried to run away from 1985, instead of standing by his writings and actions. "You seemed to walk away from a lot of your own record," observed Sen. Herbert Kohl (D-WI). In a 1985 Justice Department job application Alito wrote, "I am particularly proud of my contributions in recent cases in which the government has argued in the Supreme Court that racial and ethnic quotas should not be allowed and that the Constitution does not protect a right to an abortion." Even before the nomination hearings began, Alito tried to brush off his strong statements with weak excuses. In a 1985 memo to the Reagan administration's Solicitor General, Alito wrote that the current cases before the Supreme Court afforded them the "opportunity to advance the goals of overruling Roe v. Wade and, in the meantime, of mitigating its effects." Despite his own words in 1985, Alito has tried to convince senators that he never said them: "I did not advocate in the <1985> memo that an argument be made that Roe be overruled."

ALITO'S IGNORANCE DEFENSE: Alito has been unable (or unwilling) to answer senators' questions about his 14-year membership in a right-wing alumni organization, the Concerned Alumni of Princeton, which advocated excluding women and minorities from the university. Alito listed his Concerned Alumni membership in a 1985 job application to the Reagan Justice Department. In this week's hearings, Alito has offered no legitimate explanations for his membership and has relied on the ignorance defense: "I have wracked my memory about this issue, and I really have no specific recollection of that organization." But not all senators are not buying Alito's faulty memory. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA)"expressed disbelief that Alito could recount details of each of his 67 dissents as a Third Circuit appellate court judge, but not his membership in Concerned Alumni of Princeton."

INCONSISTENCIES AND EXCUSES ABOUND: Alito has now offered three different reasons for his failure to recuse himself from a 2002 case involving the investment company Vanguard. Alito, who ruled in favor of the group, owned between $390,000 to $975,000 in Vanguard shares at the time and in his 1990 Senate confirmation hearings had promised to recuse himself from cases involving the company. Senators are becoming frustrated with Alito's excuses. "A number of us have been troubled by what we see as inconsistencies in some of the answers," said Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT). Alito has not clearly answered why he did not recuse himself in 2002, but he has given strong indication that he would not recuse himself from a case involving Vanguard if it came before the Supreme Court (and he continued to own shares in the company): "Well, under the Code of Judicial Conduct, I don’t believe that I am required to recuse myself in Vanguard cases." That answer contrasts with the answer he gave the day before, suggesting that in conflict of interest cases, his own personal standard is to "go beyond what the code of conduct for judges requires."

Under the Radar

HEALTH CARE -- 'WAL-MART BILL' BEING DEBATED IN MARYLAND THIS WEEK: Lawmakers in the Maryland House of Delegates are debating a bill this week that would require Wal-Mart to spend more on employee health care. "The legislation would require private companies with more than 10,000 employees in Maryland to spend at least 8 percent of payroll on employee health benefits or make a contribution to the state's insurance program for the poor. Wal-Mart is the only known employer that does not meet that requirement." Both the Maryland Senate and the House are deciding whether to override Gov. Bob Ehrlich's (R) earlier veto of the bill (for his part, Ehrlich has been trying to engage in revisionist history about why he vetoed the bill). By forcing Wal-Mart to offer more affordable health care coverage to its 17,000 Maryland employees, the bill would provide hope for workers like Cynthia Murray, who said, "I've worked at Wal-Mart for more than five years, and I still can't afford their health care. I know many of my co-workers can't afford it either." A recent poll indicated that 66 percent of Maryland residents support the bill.

ETHICS -- TEXAS TV STATIONS REFUSE TO AIR DELAY AD: "our Houston television stations that sold airtime for a commercial criticizing U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay refused to air it Wednesday after objections from a DeLay lawyer." The 30-second ad lists the money and travel that DeLay allegedly received from Abramoff and calls on the lawmaker to resign from Congress. Backed by a series of facts, the ad also claims DeLay has taken "48 trips to golf resorts, 100 flights aboard company jets, 200 nights at world class resorts and hotels" while serving in Congress. DeLay attorney Donald McGahn threatened that any decision by the stations to air the ads would be "actionable." "Dallas attorney Joe Chumlea, who has handled several libel and defamation cases, said McGahn likely would not have had a strong legal case against stations running the ad because the Supreme Court provides broadcasters with the highest level of protection when it comes to political ads. Broadcasters can only be liable for damages if they air something that they know is false or recklessly ignore the fact that it could be. ... omeone such as McGahn telling a broadcaster that an ad is false doesn't meet the standard."

ENVIRONMENT -- INTERIOR DEPARTMENT OPENS UP SENSITIVE ALASKA LAKE REGION TO DRILLING: "The Interior Department gave final approval to develop the Teshekpuk Lake region, setting up an oil-lease sale in September," Reuters reports. The move "could lead to oil drilling as soon as the winter of 2007-08." Teshekpuk is a 389,000 acre area approximately the size of Indiana. The lake "and the adjacent treeless, lake-pocked tundra provide ideal and critical habitat for tens of thousands of black brant and other migratory birds, which flock there each summer to molt and feed." Ironically, Reagan Interior Secretary James G. Watt - who was "often derided by environmentalists for other actions" - initially protected the area. The move to develop the area came "in response to requests by Vice President Dick Cheney's energy task force." "This plan is utterly unbalanced," the executive director of Audubon Alaska said. "Even the Reagan administration protected the waterfowl habitat around Teshekpuk Lake because of its world-class ecological and cultural value."

TAXES -- IRS FROZE TAXPAYER REFUNDS WITHOUT NOTICE OR DUE PROCESS: The National Taxpayer Advocate (NTA), who helps taxpayers sort out problems with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), released a study this week that found IRS investigators "froze more than 120,000 taxpayers' refunds last year on suspicion of fraud without notifying the taxpayers or giving them a chance to respond." The report found that two-thirds of the affected taxpayers did not commit fraud, and "many of the returns were filed by low-income workers, including some who claimed the earned-income tax credit," a tax credit "designed to reduce poverty among the working poor." The NTA examined the IRS Questionable Refund Program that uses "data-mining" software to find possible fraud. "At a minimum, this procedure constitutes an extraordinary violation of fundamental taxpayer rights and fairness," Nina Olson of NTA said. "In our view, it may also constitute a violation of due process of law."

KATRINA -- NEW ORLEANS RESIDENTS ANGRY ABOUT REBUILDING PLAN: "Angry residents expressed frustration Wednesday at the debut of rebuilding proposals for this devastated city, taking aim at a suggested four-month moratorium on new building permits in areas heavily flooded by Hurricane Katrina," the Associated Press reported. The Bring New Orleans Back Commission's other proposal to create a "powerful new authority that could use eminent domain to seize homes in neighborhoods that will not be rebuilt" led residents to accuse Commission members of acting "in the background scheming to take" their land. Meanwhile, President Bush is planning to visit the Gulf Region for the first time in three months. As Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post wrote earlier this week, "only the federal government is big enough to guarantee the money and provide the determination to make any plan a reality." And while "the soul of New Orleans is its people, and that soul is being lost forever," Robinson asked, "Where is the president now?"



Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top

Home » Discuss » Editorials & Other Articles Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2011 Democratic Underground, LLC