|
|
|
|
Nov 20, 2006
|
(Vol. Nineteen; No. 24)
|
|
Democrat Win = "Fantastic
News" |
Hotline’s Chuck Todd: "Our line here is about 25 or 30 House
seats [for the Democrats]. If it gets over 25 or 30 House seats, you’re going
to see six Senate seats...."
MSNBC’s Chris Matthews: "Well, that’ll be fantastic news. It’ll be huge
news, I should say, because if that happens, then we have a government run by
the Democrats, and an executive branch run by the Republicans, President
George W. Bush, having to actually negotiate every aspect of national policy,
including the war in Iraq." |
 |
|

|
|
— Exchange at about 7:36pm EST during MSNBC’s election night coverage,
November 7. "The Democratic wave
that washed over American politics last night washed away Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld and swamped many Republicans who tried to use the issue of illegal
immigration to scare people into voting for them. I am delighted to say that
they got their butts kicked."
— Fox’s Geraldo Rivera, Geraldo at Large, November 8.
"I think it’s a great opportunity for her [Democrat Nancy Pelosi] and a
great opportunity for women. I think one of the most stunning, most iconic
pictures we’ll see on television in the next year is the State of the Union
address, where you have Dick Cheney, who has got that sort of, you know, fire
hydrant build sitting there with that very distinguished snarl of his, and
then this incredibly interesting person next, a woman, first time ever sitting
behind the President sharing power with the American government. It’s going to
be an amazing moment."
— MSNBC’s Chris Matthews on election night, Nov. 7.
|
|
Blaming "Far Right"
Conservatives |
"The
country is sending a signal to both parties: We want you guys to work
together to solve problems. You’ve got Republicans running from the far
right much more toward the center. You’ve got a new breed of Democrats this
year in Jim Webb in Virginia and Bob Casey in Pennsylvania, moving toward
the center. So we may be working our way toward the end of a deeply
polarized country politically at the national level."
— Former anchor Tom Brokaw on NBC Nightly News November 6,
election eve."Will Republicans move further to the right? Not if they
got the message of the election. Republicans lost because they abandoned the
center."
— CNN’s Bill Schneider on The Situation Room, Nov. 8.
|
|
Yearning for President
Obama |
"You
can see it in the crowds. The thrill, the hope. How they surge toward him.
You’re looking at an American political phenomenon. In state after state, in
the furious final days of this crucial campaign, Illinois Senator Barack
Obama has been the Democrat’s not-so-secret get-out-the-vote weapon. He
inspires the party faithful and many others, like no one else on the scene
today...And the question you can sense on everyone’s mind, as they listen so
intently to him, is he the one? Is Barack Obama the man, the black man, who
could lead the Democrats back to the White House and maybe even unite the
country?...Every-where he goes, people want him to run for President,
especially in Iowa, cradle of presidential contenders. Around here, they’re
even naming babies after him."
— ABC Nightline co-anchor Terry Moran, November 6.
|
|
Celebrating a Feminist
First |
"Let’s talk about history, because I know
history was riding along with you as you watched the results last night. I
know you have thought today about your mother. I know you have thought today
about your father, your own children and grandchildren."
— NBC’s Brian Williams interviewing House Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi for
the November 8 Nightly News.
Anchor
Katie Couric: "You will be the first woman Speaker of the House and the
highest ranking woman in the United States government. What does that mean
to you?"
Nancy Pelosi: "It’s pretty exciting, I have to say. I’m just so
excited that a Democrat will be Speaker of the House."
Couric: "So you’re a Democrat first, a woman second?"
— Interview on the CBS Evening News, November 8.
|
|
If He’s Joking, It’s Not
Funny |
"I think that Keith Olbermann may become a
model for the newscast of the future."
— MSNBC General Manager Dan Abrams, as quoted in a November 12 column by
San Francisco Chronicle columnist C.W. Nevius.
|
|
A "Jerk and a War Criminal" |
"‘The time has come, Mr. President, to face
the hard, bruising truth. Donald Rumsfeld must go.’ That is a quote from an
editorial in this week’s Military Times news-papers....‘His strategy has
failed, and his ability to lead is compromised. And although the blame for
our failures in Iraq rests with the Secretary, it will be the troops who
bear its brunt.’ They didn’t even mention that he’s also an obnoxious jerk
and a war criminal."
— CNN’s Jack Cafferty on The Situation Room, Nov. 6. Cafferty
later admitted he’d "stepped over the line."
|
|
Shame on Democrats’
Shoulders |
Host
Matt Lauer: "He [Senator John Kerry] made a joke, he says he blew the
joke and inadvertently sounded as though he questioned the intelligence of
U.S. troops in Iraq. Look me in the eye and tell me, if, with even a
fraction of your heart, you think John Kerry meant to question the
intelligence of U.S. troops in Iraq."
Former White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card: "Well, he’s had a past
bias that would allow people to believe that....Even more significantly,
it’s the Democrats that have said, ‘John Kerry stay home.’"
Lauer: "And, by the way, I think a lot of Democrats should have shame
on their shoulders, because they ran away from this guy, as opposed to
standing up and saying it was just a mistake."
— NBC’s Today, November 3.
|
|
But She Hid It So Well |
"I’m a liberal, I was born a liberal, and I
will be a liberal ‘til the day I die."
— Longtime UPI White House reporter Helen Thomas, now a columnist for
Hearst newspapers, in a Q&A published in the Philadelphia Inquirer,
November 5.
|
|
ABC Boss Admits Media Bias |
Host Hugh Hewitt: "And so everyone that
you work with, or 95 percent of people you work with, are old liberals."
ABC News Political Director Mark Halperin: "I don’t know if it’s 95
percent, and unfortunately, they’re not all old. There are a lot of young
liberals here, too. But it certainly, there are enough in the old media, not
just in ABC, but in old media generally, that it tilts the coverage quite
frequently, in many issues, in a liberal direction, which is completely
improper....It’s an endemic problem. And again, it’s the reason why for 40
years, conservatives have rightly felt that we did not give them a fair
shake."
— Exchange on The Hugh Hewitt Show, October 30.
|

|
PUBLISHER: L.
Brent Bozell III
EDITORS: Brent H. Baker, Rich Noyes, Tim Graham
NEWS ANALYSTS: Geoffrey Dickens, Brad Wilmouth, Megan
McCormack, Mike Rule, Scott Whitlock and Justin McCarthy
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE: Michelle Humphrey
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Holly Schnitzler |
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact
the MRC | Subscribe
|
|