All Three Morning Shows Skip Report of Ethics Investigation Into Powerful Dems
All three network morning shows on Friday skipped a
Washington
Post report revealing that powerful congressional Democrats such as John
Murtha, James Moran and others on a defense panel are the subject of an ethics
investigation for a relationship with a lobbying firm. The Democrats, and some
Republicans, are under intense scrutiny for steering over $200 million in
earmarks to clients of a company called PMA.
However, ABC’s Good Morning America, NBC’s Today show and CBS’s Early Show
somehow managed to ignore this potentially damaging problem for the Democratic
majority. Instead, NBC’s hosts found time to dress up as Star Wars characters.
(Ann Curry appeared as Darth Vader.) Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith went drag
and impersonated Julia Child for a cooking segment (See
video
and blog here.) Even though it’s October, GMA promoted a new version of A
Christmas Carol.
It seems unlikely that these news outlets would ignore a similar story that
involved possible allegations about a group of mostly Republican lawmakers who
are in charge of earmarking federal funds. Washington Post staff writer Carol D.
Leonnig explained:
Nearly half the members of a powerful House subcommittee in control of
Pentagon spending are under scrutiny by ethics investigators in Congress, who
have trained their lens on the relationships between seven panel members and an
influential lobbying firm founded by a former Capitol Hill aide.
The investigations by two separate ethics offices include an examination of
the chairman of the Appropriations subcommittee on defense, John P. Murtha
(D-Pa.), as well as others who helped steer federal funds to clients of the PMA
Group. The lawmakers received campaign contributions from the firm and its
clients. A document obtained by The Washington Post shows that the subcommittee
members under scrutiny also include Peter J. Visclosky (D-Ind.), James P. Moran
Jr. (D-Va.), Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio) , C.W. Bill Young
(R-Fla.) and Todd Tiahrt (R-Kan.).
...
Together, the seven legislators have personally steered more than $200
million in earmarks to clients of the PMA Group in the past two years, and
received more than $6.2 million in campaign contributions from PMA and its
clients in the past decade, according to an analysis by Congressional Quarterly
and Taxpayers for Common Sense.
A
second
Post article by Ellen Nakashima and Paul Kane revealed that a broader
investigation is also looking into activities by Democrat Charles Rangel:
-- Ethics committee staff members have interviewed House Ways and Means
Chairman Charles B. Rangel (D-N.Y.) about one element of the complex
investigation of his personal finances, as well as the lawmaker's top aide and
his son. Rangel said he spoke with ethics committee staff members regarding a
conference that he and four other members of the Congressional Black Caucus
attended last November in St. Martin. The trip initially was said to be
sponsored by a nonprofit foundation run by a newspaper. But the three-day event,
at a luxury resort, was underwritten by major corporations such as Citigroup,
Pfizer and AT&T. Rules passed in 2007, shortly after Democrats reclaimed the
majority following a wave of corruption cases against Republicans, bar private
companies from paying for congressional travel.
The MRC’s Tim Graham and Rich Noyes wrote about
media
silence on this story, which has been developing for months, back in
July:
Rep. John Murtha (D-PA), Rep. Pete Visclosky (D-IN) and Rep. Jim Moran
(D-VA): Three top Democrats are linked to the scandal surrounding the PMA Group,
a lobbying group that closed its doors earlier this year after being raided by
the FBI in February. The New York Times reported then that top lobbyist Paul
Magliocchetti was suspected of funneling "bogus" campaign contributions to
Murtha, Visclosky and Moran, in exchange for directing more than $100 million to
PMA clients. Rep. Visclosky had admitted being subpoenaed in May by a federal
grand jury, and temporarily stepped down as Chairman of the House Appropriations
subcommittee on energy and water development.
Hopefully, once the morning show hosts are done celebrating Halloween and
dressing up as women, they’ll find time to look into this investigation by the
Washington Post.
—Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research
Center.