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Revenge of the Crybabies |
"Americans learned the Vice President had shot a
man only when a newspaper in Corpus Christi, Texas, posted a story on its Web
site 18 hours later. The White House Press Secretary, Scott McClellan, faced
tough questions today about why the White House did not inform the public."
— Co-anchor Elizabeth Vargas on ABC’s World News Tonight, February 13.
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"What took so long? Tonight, the White House under fire over the Vice
President’s hunting accident....What happened and why didn’t the public learn
about the accident sooner?...Tonight, the questions mostly have to do with why
it took so long for word to get out that a man had been wounded by a shot
fired by the Vice President."
— Brian Williams starting the February 13 NBC Nightly News.
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Co-host Charles Gibson: "Next to the
growing political fallout from all this: Why didn’t the White House tell
everyone when this accident happened? Why did they wait so long, and did that
make a bad situation even worse?..."
Reporter Jessica Yellin: "It took the Vice President’s office nearly 24
hours to go public with news of the shooting. That delay has prompted some
speculation online and on talk radio that perhaps Mr. Cheney was hoping to
cover up the incident."
— ABC’s Good Morning America, February 13."A source that I
can characterize as close to this administration says the people inside the
White House are, quote, ‘livid’ about this. This source also tells us that,
quote, ‘it’s no longer about indulging Dick Cheney’s views of press
management.’ Instead, he says, ‘it’s now about Iraq and Katrina and a range of
other issues that play into the public’s views of this administration’s
arrogance.’"
— Reporter Gloria Borger, CBS Evening News, February 14.
Co-host Matt Lauer: "The White House, already criticized for waiting a
day to announce the actual accident occurred, now we’ve got Scott McClellan
standing in front of the press corps yesterday already knowing that Mr.
Whittington has, has a minor heart attack and doesn’t say a word about it.
Doesn’t that seem to add insult to injury?"
NBC Washington Bureau Chief Tim Russert: "Yes, and it reinforces this
storyline of an administration that seems to relish or enjoy secrecy or an
administration that, in the eyes of the national press corps, is suspect in
terms of credibility because of issues like Iraq, like Katrina."
— Exchange on NBC’s Today, February 15.
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We’re Not Biased, Fox News
Is |
"CBS News has learned that it was President
Bush’s political enforcer, Karl Rove, who finally got the Vice President to
speak publicly about his hunting accident....The Vice President chose to make
his first public comments on Fox News Channel’s Special Report, a
broadcast Mr. Cheney sees as friendly and has turned to before."
— White House reporter Jim Axelrod on the CBS Evening News, February
15.
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"It didn’t exactly represent a profile in courage for the Vice President to
wander over there to the F-word network for a sit-down with Brit Hume. I mean,
that’s a little like Bonnie interviewing Clyde, ain’t it?...I mean, running
over there to the Fox network to, I mean, that’s — talk about seeking a safe
haven. He’s not going to get any high hard ones from anybody at the F-word
network. I think we know that."
— CNN’s Jack Cafferty on The Situation Room, February 15.
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"The Vice President of the United States has
accepted responsibility for the accidental shooting of a Texas attorney
...just 95 hours and 10 minutes after it happened. Not in a news conference,
nor in a written statement, nor to a panel of interviewers from a variety of
news organizations, but rather before the more malleable cameras of Fox News."
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann on Countdown, February 15.
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Liberal Sense of Humor |
"These things
fairly or unfairly tend to become a metaphor for a Presidency, and don’t be
surprised if you see lots of jokes about, you know, the Vice President was,
you know he’s trigger happy or, you know, he might have had better aim if
he’d served in Vietnam. You’ll see jokes like that."
— Time’s Matthew Cooper discussing the Cheney shooting accident on
CBS’s The Early Show, February 13.
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"A Blessing" for Cheney Bashers |
"The shooting
could hardly be a better metaphor for Cheney. It neatly packages his faulty
judgment, insularity and arrogance in a story that is not cataclysmic on its
own terms but will prove hard to forget. That’s too bad for Cheney, and
certainly for Harry Whittington. But it is a blessing for anyone hoping to
restore some accountability to a government that increasingly believes it is
a law unto itself."
— Newsweek Senior Editor Jonathan Alter in a column published in
the February 27 issue.
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Will Cheney End Up in Slammer? |
"Yesterday, Mr.
Whittington appeared to have minor injuries, moved out of the I.C.U, this
was all ruled an accident. Now he’s had this heart attack. They think he’ll
recover. Of course, everybody hopes he will. But do the changes in his
health alter how the event is viewed legally and, under the worst case
scenario, could negligent homicide actually come into play?"
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann to Paul Burka, Executive Editor of Texas
Monthly, on Countdown, February 14.
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ABC’s White House Secrets
Expert |
Co-host Bill
Weir: "Before I let you go, I want to get your comment on the big story
of the week, the Dick Cheney hunting accident. Your wife came out and said
it was another example of this administration’s cloud of secrecy. Your
friends Paul Begala and James Carville want more investigation. Do you
agree?"
Former President Bill Clinton: "...I think the White House should
have said something sooner, but I think it’s gotten a little more life than
it would have because the administration has an enormous penchant for
secrecy — for not telling anybody anything about anything."
— ABC’s Good Morning America, February 19.
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Stunned by Support for War |
"I was
astonished: Almost all of them support the war, despite the fact that it’s
taken such a toll on them. We asked them flat out: Should we be there? And
the ones that are the most severely hit believe yes, we should have been
there. They are not angry at the President, they’re not angry at the
establishment. I promise you, you’ll be astonished if you’re up that late on
Sunday night."
— CBS’s Mike Wallace on MSNBC’s Imus in the Morning February 10,
where he was promoting his 60 Minutes story on four severely wounded
veterans of the Iraq war.
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America’s Osama bin Laden |
"Cheney is a
terrorist. He terrorizes our enemies abroad and innocent citizens here at
home indiscriminately. Who ever thought Harry Whittington would be the
answer to America’s prayers. Finally, someone who might get that lying,
thieving Cheney into a courtroom to answer some direct questions."
— Actor/left-wing activist Alec Baldwin in a February 17 blog entry
posted at HuffingtonPost.com.
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Wilmouth, Megan McCormack, Mike Rule, Scott Whitlock RESEARCH ASSOCIATE: Michelle
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