Good Morning America's Ashleigh Banfield on Sunday spun Bill Clinton's
continuing attack on talk radio as a "war of words" between the ex-President and
the "right-wing polemics [sic]." The former MSNBC host joined ABC in 2009 after
a bitter departure from that cable network. [Audio available
here.]
On Sunday, Banfield provided no ideological description for Clinton. Yet,
regarding Rush Limbaugh and other conservative voices, she complained, "And
[Clinton] has really entered- I like to call it cable chaos- the war of words
over the right-wing polemics [sic], with regard to the language that's been used
lately, especially leading up to this anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing."
(Presumably, Banfield meant polemicists and not polemics.) The MRC's Brent
Baker, in an March 26, 2004
CyberAlert,
recounted some of Banfield's more blatant examples of liberal bias:
Ashleigh and Al's First Date?
"The last time I was this excited about a two-minute warning for a telephone
call was when I was waiting for my prom date to call and invite me to the prom
- and I'm not going to tell you how many years ago that was."
- MSNBC anchor Ashleigh Banfield to reporter Norah O'Donnell just before a
November 27, 2000 photo-op public conference call amongst Al Gore, Joe
Lieberman, Dick Gephardt and Tom Daschle.
Inviting Jesse Reveals "Savvy"
"It is interesting that the Taliban would be so media savvy about the
Reverend's position in a lot of national and international affairs. Thinking
back to obviously 1999, his visit to Belgrade and the way he was able to work
his way into the situation with those three trapped soldiers who were caught
crossing over the Macedonian border. For a government that essentially doesn't
allow television or media in the entire country, it is interesting that they are
as media savvy as they are to make that kind of a contact with someone like
Jesse Jackson."
- MSNBC reporter Ashleigh Banfield on her network's simulcast of Imus in the
Morning on September 28, 2001 referring to reports, later denied, that Taliban
leaders had asked Reverend Jackson to visit Afghanistan.
Banfield also ran into trouble at MSNBC after she criticized journalistic
coverage of the Iraq war in an April 2003 speech:
ASHLEIGH BANFIELD: What didn't you see? You didn't see where those bullets
landed. You didn't see what happened when the mortar landed. A puff of smoke is
not what a mortar looks like when it explodes, believe me. There are horrors
that were completely left out of this war. So was this journalism or was this
coverage-? There is a grand difference between journalism and coverage, and
getting access does not mean you're getting the story, it just means you're
getting one more arm or leg of the story. And that's what we got, and it was a
glorious, wonderful picture that had a lot of people watching and a lot of
advertisers excited about cable news. During the same address, she also attacked
Fox News.
The entire speech can be found
here.
A partial transcript of the April 18 segment, which aired at 8:11am EDT,
follows:
BANFIELD: Let me take a right turn, because I know you have your big
exclusive interview with former President Clinton. And he has really entered-
I like to call it cable chaos- the war of words over the right-wing polemics,
with regard to the language that's been used lately, especially leading up to
this anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. What did he say towards the
Rush Limbaugh battle he's been engaged in?
JAKE TAPPER: Well, what happened is on Friday, he said people in positions of
responsibility need to be careful with the words they choose, because they're-
you're speaking not only to the serious but delirious. And words and actions
have consequences. Rush Limbaugh said if there are any acts of violence they are
therefore on President Clinton's shoulders. And I asked President Clinton about
that.
BILL CLINTON: Doesn't make any sense. The only point I try to make we ought
to have a lot of political dissent, a lot of political argument. Nobody is right
all of the time. But, we also have to take responsibility of the possible
consequences of what we say.
TAPPER: And President Clinton did say- he did cite somebody on the left, a
member of the labor union, a teacher's union that criticized- made a joke about
how Republican governor should die. So, he said he's not limiting his criticism
to the right, Ashleigh.
-Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on
Twitter.