NBC and CBS Touted Lib Boycott of AZ; Silent on Offer to Turn Out L.A.'s Lights
All three broadcast evening newscasts have repeatedly touted, as if
it is a valid representation of national sentiment, the “boycott” of
Arizona by liberal municipalities such as San Francisco and Los
Angeles. But when the Arizona Corporation Commissioner on Tuesday made
a
tongue-in-cheek offer to help Los Angeles out in its boycott by shutting off the electricity flow, CBS and NBC were silent.
The only network to mention the proposal to test the depths of the
city’s commitment to liberal sanctimony was ABC, MRC intern Matthew
Hadro discovered. White House correspondent Jake Tapper first noted how
President Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderon both criticized
Arizona’s new immigration law at the White House, then reported:
JAKE TAPPER: The debate is intense. The Los Angeles
City Council voted last month to boycott all official business in
Arizona, prompting an Arizona utilities commissioner to all but
threaten to cut off the electricity Arizona power plants provide L.A.
GARY
PIERCE, ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSIONER: You can’t call a boycott on
the candy store, and then decide to go in and pick and choose candy you
really do want.
All three broadcast networks have helped spread the word about
liberals’ displeasure with the Arizona law since it passed in late
April, even though
polls consistently show that most Americans think the law is a good idea. A sampling of the media's boycott boosterism, all previously reporter in MRC BiasAlerts:
Andrea Mitchell on the April 26 Nightly News:
“Anger over the law has gone viral. On Facebook today, pages like this
one: ‘Arizona, the Grand Canyon State, welcomes you unless you're a
Mexican or look like one.’ Calls for an economic boycott. Already a
conference of immigration lawyers at a swanky Scottsdale hotel
canceled.”
Barbara Pinto on ABC’s World News, April 26:
“The call for an economic boycott has caught fire on the Internet — and
even from an Arizona state representative warning conventioneers to
stay away....The first to cancel their plans, 400 members of the
American Immigration Lawyers Association, who will lose their $92,000
deposit.”
Bill Whitaker on the CBS Evening News, April 29:
“Arizona has gone through this kind of economic pressure before. In
1987, when the state refused to observe the national Martin Luther King
holiday, there was a national boycott. The Super Bowl pulled out of
Tempe. It all cost the state $300 million. Then, Arizona backed down.
This time, state lawmakers plan to hang tough.”
ABC correspondent Eric Horng on the May 1 World News:
“Already, lawsuits have been filed challenging the law. Activists have
called for a boycott of Arizona businesses and the state has been
lampooned by comedians.”
Jon Stewart on Comedy Central: “It’s not unprecedented having to carry around your papers. It's the same thing that freed black people had to do in 1863.”
CBS’s Bill Whitaker, May 13 Evening News:
“For every action in nature there's an opposite reaction, so, too, in
politics. The city of Los Angeles, the latest to react strongly to
Arizona's tough new anti-illegal immigration law. City council voted
yesterday to ban city travel to Arizona, ban future contracts with
Arizona businesses, and to check whether $58 million in existing
contracts can be broken legally.”
ABC’s Diane Sawyer, May 13 World News:
“All around the country, a kind of emotional civil war continues. Some
people deciding to try to hit Arizona in the pocketbook. Today's
developments from Barbara Pinto.”
Barbara Pinto: “This is an
out and out brawl, a nation choosing sides....Los Angeles now joins San
Francisco and St. Paul, Minnesota, banning travel to the state....A
list of boycotts costing Arizona an estimated $90 million so far. This
heated debate is even playing out here at this suburban Chicago High
School, 1,800 miles away. Administrators cancelled the Highland Park
girls basketball team's trip to an Arizona tournament amid concerns
about the new law.”
In his letter to Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Commissioner Pierce wrote:
If an economic boycott is truly what you desire, I will
be happy to encourage Arizona utilities to renegotiate your power
agreements so Los Angeles no longer receives any power from
Arizona-based generation. I am confident that Arizona's utilities would
be happy to take those electrons off your hands. If, however, you find
that the City Council lacks the strength of its convictions to turn off
the lights in Los Angeles and boycott Arizona power, please reconsider
the wisdom of attempting to harm Arizona's economy.
People of goodwill can disagree over the merits of SB 1070 [the
immigration law]. A state-wide economic boycott of Arizona is not a
message sent in goodwill.
You can read the full letter
here.
—Rich Noyes is Research Director at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here.