Gibson Frets: 'Liberal Republican Gets Forced Out, What Happened to the Big Tent?'
Following a Monday night look at Tuesday's special election to fill
New York's 23rd congressional district seat in which Republican Dede
Scozzafava dropped out after falling behind the Democrat and the
Conservative Party nominee, ABC anchor Charles Gibson -- instead of
wondering why the GOP establishment failed to pick a candidate who
upholds basic Republican principles -- delivered the usual liberal
media upset over the GOP's lack of a “big tent,” a phrase you never
hear when Democrats pick left-wing candidates:
A liberal Republican gets forced out of the race by a more conservative guy who was actually not a Republican, was running on the Conservative ticket. What happened to the big tent in the Republican Party?
John Berman framed the preceding story on the “moderate” Scozzafava
“who supports abortion rights and the President’s stimulus plan,”
around the premise that going with a conservative candidate will hurt
in the long run: “A Republican drops out of a race which might
guarantee Republicans keep the seat, which might be bad for the
Republican party long term.” Berman concluded with how the conservative
candidate, Douglas Hoffman, “says not all views are welcome” as he
suggested “there's always boundaries.” To which Berman intoned:
“The question for Republicans is will those boundaries become a burden?”
Journalists are certainly trying to make them so.
In between, Berman did at least note “that Scozzafava endorsed the
Democrat Bill Owens, sparking I-told-you-so's from the right.” Viewers
then heard from Rush Limbaugh: “DeDe Scozzafava is illustrating
precisely what moderate Republicans will do.”
The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the
video to provide this transcript of the story on the Monday, November 2
World News with Charles Gibson on ABC:
CHARLES GIBSON: Now, to politics. There are off-year
elections tomorrow. In New Jersey and Virginia, governors will be
chosen. Maine has a critical vote on gay marriage. New York City
chooses a mayor. But there is nothing to compete with the House of
Representatives race in upstate New York which has taken bizarre turn
after bizarre turn. John Berman ventured up to Watertown, New York.

JOHN
BERMAN: Try to follow this: A Republican drops out of a race which
might guarantee Republicans keep the seat, which might be bad for the
Republican party longterm.
DOUG HOFFMAN, NEW YORK CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE: All along I’ve been fighting for the soul of the Republican party.
BERMAN: Thing is, Douglas Hoffman is not the Republican party
nominee. He's a third party candidate who entered the race when New
York Republican leaders selected moderate DeDe Scozzafava, who supports
abortion rights and the President’s stimulus plan, to fill a seat in a
district won by President Obama in 2008.
CLIP OF HOFFMAN AD WITH FEMALE NARRATOR: Tired of choosing between two liberals for Congress?
BERMAN: Scozzafava came under withering attack from the likes of
Sarah Palin and national conservative groups who flooded the district
with money and volunteers. Where are you from?
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: I'm actually from the Denver, Colorado area.
BERMAN: And this weekend, trailing in the polls, Scozzafava, the
handpicked Republican nominee, dropped out of the race. This was
Republican candidate Scozzafava’s campaign headquarters, now completely
shut down. This after the Republican party and its national campaign
committees spent $1 million backing her in this race. Stranger still
now that Scozzafava endorsed the Democrat Bill Owens, sparking
I-told-you-so’s from the right.
RUSH LIMBAUGH: DeDe Scozzafava is illustrating precisely what moderate Republicans will do.
BERMAN: The Republican National Committee is now backing Hoffman,
and polls show he may be able to ride the wave of conservative dissent
to victory.
FORMER REP. TOM DAVIS (R-VA): We need those people. They're going to
be a major part of who we are. But they also have to tolerate other
points of view.
BERMAN: But Douglas Hoffman says not all views are welcome. The tent can only be so big?
HOFFMAN: Well, isn't that true in life in general? There's always boundaries.
BERMAN: The question for Republicans is will those boundaries become a burden? John Berman, ABC News, Watertown, New York.
GIBSON: And our chief Washington correspondent, George
Stephanopoulos, joins us. George, let's talk about the elections
tomorrow and let's start with that House race. A liberal Republican
gets forced out of the race by a more conservative guy who was actually
not a Republican, was running on the Conservative ticket. What happened
to the big tent in the Republican Party?
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Well, what Republicans would say, Charles, is
that Dede Scozzafava is just stretching those tent poles too far:
Pro-gay rights, pro-choice/pro-abortion rights, even had the backing of
the Working Families Party, that she really wasn't part of the
mainstream of the Republican Party according to those party officials.
Democrats say that's a sign that the extremists have taken over the
party....
— Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center