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Jamison Foser
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Loose ends

October 17, 2008 8:31 pm ET

Finally, for the first time this year, a prominent media figure asked John McCain about his relationship with G. Gordon Liddy last night.

The lack of media attention to the Liddy-McCain relationship is one of the clearest double standards in recent political history. McCain and the news media have devoted an extraordinary amount of attention to Barack Obama's ties to Bill Ayers, yet until last night, McCain hadn't been asked a single question* about his ties to Liddy, a convicted felon who has instructed his listeners on how best to shoot law-enforcement agents. Liddy has held a fundraiser for McCain at his home and describes the Arizona senator as an "old friend"; McCain has said he is "proud" of Liddy.

Imagine for a moment that Barack Obama had said he was "proud" of an "old friend" who urged people to shoot law-enforcement agents in the head. Do you think maybe he would have been asked a question or three about it? Do you think maybe there would have been more than the occasional passing mention in the news of the relationship? Of course there would have been.

Yet McCain hasn't been questioned about Liddy. The media have largely ignored the relationship, even while working themselves into a frenzy about Obama and Ayers. McCain's relationship with Liddy is obviously newsworthy in its own right, but coupled with his attacks on Obama over Ayers, it's a textbook case of hypocrisy -- exactly the sort of thing that political reporters supposedly drool over. But not when it's John McCain. When it's John McCain, the nation's leading news organizations band together in what is, in effect, a blackout of information that could be damaging to their longtime favorite.

Until last night, when McCain was finally asked, point-blank, about his relationship to Liddy and the similarities between that relationship and the Obama-Ayers relationship he has attacked so harshly.

Who finally asked the question? The New York Times? The Washington Post? CNN's "best political team on television"?

Nope.

David Letterman asked McCain about Liddy, putting the nation's journalists to shame in the process.

For years, political professionals, academics, and media watchdogs have lamented the fact that some Americans get their news from late-night comedians and other entertainment. As it turns out, that might be a good thing.

Unfortunately, after Letterman broke the media's embargo on questioning McCain's relationship with Liddy, reporters quickly pretended it never happened -- or, if they did mention it, downplayed the significance of the relationship. Time's Mark Halperin described Letterman "hound[ing]" McCain over his Ayers attacks, adding, "The late-night host doesn't let up on where the former Weather Underground leader fits into the campaign." But, inexplicably, Halperin didn't so much as mention that Letterman confronted McCain about his relationship with Liddy. Several news reports that did mention the Liddy exchange described him as a Watergate felon -- omitting Liddy's much more recent statements about shooting law enforcement personnel.

But the worst was MSNBC. This morning, the cable channel played a clip of McCain on Letterman -- but not the Liddy exchange. Then, immediately after the clip, MSNBC anchor Tamron Hall referenced the McCain attacks on Ayers. At no point did Hall mention Liddy.

* Or, if he has been asked, it hasn't been reported. Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman did ask McCain's campaign about Liddy back in the spring, but despite what reporters always claim about how open McCain is, Chapman didn't get a response.

Tax clarity

Two weeks ago, I wrote that too many news reports "simply repeat charges and counter-charges or obsess over minor details while failing to provide the big picture" and, in doing so, "obscure rather than clarify the candidates' proposals and positions." News reports about the candidates' tax plans, for example, often fail to make clear the most important facts: how much the plans cost, and how the cuts are distributed -- how much the typical middle-income taxpayer would save, how much a millionaire would save, etc.

Today's New York Times offers a perfect example. Reporting on the "plumber" John McCain referred to incessantly during Wednesday's debate, the Times purported to assess how he would fare under Barack Obama's tax plan.

Well, that's not quite right: The article didn't say a word about how the actual Joe Wurzelbacher would actually fare under Obama's tax plan. Instead, it focused on the effect Obama's tax plan would have on some hypothetical version of Joe Wurzelbacher who makes considerably more money than the actual Joe Wurzelbacher does.

The accompanying chart was even worse. It was titled "A Plumber's Tax Bill," but it didn't indicate how much the typical plumber would pay in taxes under Obama and McCain. Nor did it show how much an actual plumber would pay in taxes under Obama and McCain. Instead, it showed how much an imaginary plumber who is a partner in a two-person plumbing company that makes $280,000 a year after expenses would pay in taxes under the two candidates.

While The New York Times obscures the effects of the candidates' tax plans, last weekend's Parade magazine showed just how easy it is to get it right: "If your annual salary is less than $112,000, you'd pay less in taxes under Obama's plan; if your salary is higher, McCain would cut your taxes more." That took just 27 words -- 27 words that should be in every news report about the candidates' tax plans from now until Election Day. And Parade included an easy-to-read chart that showed how much people at various income levels would save under the two candidates' plans (or how much more they would pay, in the case of people making more than $227,000 a year).

Rehabbing McCain

Even while reporting critically on John McCain's campaign tactics over the past month or so, many Beltway journalists and pundits have been quick to assert that those tactics don't reflect the "real" McCain, or to bend over backward to suggest that he is not responsible for what his campaign is doing in his name. Last week, for example, David Gergen praised McCain for sending his staff and surrogates out to deliver the nastiest anti-Obama messages rather than doing it himself.

This week, two Time reporters enthusiastically threw themselves into the McCain reputation rehabilitation project. As Glenn Greenwald documented, Ana Marie Cox offered this defense of McCain:

COX: I think McCain in his heart of heart wants to win this fair and square. He wants to win this because he's the better candidate. He doesn't want to win this because people think Obama is a Muslim or is a terrorist or he's not really American. He wants to win this on his own merits. It upsets his sense of fair play -- to win -- to think that the support he's getting is because of what he thinks are bad reasons. . .

ANN ALTHOUSE: But in the last month or so, he's been losing ground, and resorting to this terrorist meme --

COX: I think that hasn't worked for them. I think they recognize that to the extent that that does work, that's not how McCain wants to win. I adore the guy. I think he's fantastic in many ways. I respect him, I admire his service to the country. I think ultimately he's very principled and, to coin a phrase, honorable. . . .

Never mind what John McCain has actually been saying and doing and what his campaign has been saying and doing: Ana Marie Cox is here to assure you that, in his heart of hearts, John McCain is an honorable and principled man with a sense of "fair play." Judge him not by his words, or his deeds -- judge him by what Ana Marie Cox thinks is in his heart!

Ana Marie Cox, by the way, is the "liberal" half of washingtonpost.com's "Both Sides" feature, in which she is paired with Tucker Carlson to provide Post readers a balanced "debate" of "the issues and latest developments." So "Both Sides" consists of a conservative ... and a liberal who "adores" John McCain. That isn't actual balance; that's Fox News "balance."

At least Cox makes clear that her defense of McCain is based not on what he has done, but on her reading of his heart. Her Time colleague Karen Tumulty announced yesterday that both campaigns are equally negative and pretended that her conclusion was based on actual data. It wasn't. The data Tumulty pointed to showed that just 26 percent of McCain's ads have been positive, compared to 39 percent (fully 50 percent more!) of Obama's.

You might be tempted to cut Tumulty some slack; the data she pointed to came from a statement by Ken Goldstein of the Wisconsin Advertising Project, which concluded that "the tone of the McCain and Obama campaigns has been absolutely identical." So maybe Tumulty didn't read closely enough to see that the data demonstrated the falsity of Goldstein's conclusion. But when the actual data was pointed out (in reader comments on Time's website, and by me on Media Matters' blog), Tumulty said she would "go with Wisconsin on this" -- that is, she still agreed with Goldstein's claim that the "tone" of the campaigns has been "absolutely identical."

But this really isn't a matter of interpretation. Ken Goldstein's data shows that Barack Obama has run many more positive ads and that a much higher proportion of Obama's ads have been positive. That isn't interpretation: That's what the data says, right there in Ken Goldstein's press release. Therefore, it is simply false to say the "tone" of the two advertising campaigns has been "absolutely identical." There's no way around this: It's false. No matter how you look at it, 26 and 39 are not "identical." Choosing to "go with" Goldstein's claim is deliberately choosing to be wrong.

The only question is: Why would Karen Tumulty choose to be wrong? Is it because it makes McCain look better? Is it because she blindly accepts Ken Goldstein's claims, even when Ken Goldstein's data prove them to be false? Is it because she rejects out of hand accurate statements made by Media Matters and several of her readers? None of those explanations would reflect well on her as a journalist, but other explanations do not readily present themselves.

(As for Goldstein himself: I attempted to contact him for an explanation yesterday afternoon. At 9:30 this morning, I attempted to contact the PR firm listed on his press release. As of 4 p.m. today, I have not heard back from either Goldstein or his representatives. If you, too, would like an explanation of how 26 is "absolutely identical" to 39, you can find contact information here and here.)

Fraudulent reporting

If you believe what you see in the news, you'd think that voter fraud is rampant. In fact, it is so rare as to be virtually non-existent. There is ample evidence that far more people are improperly prevented from voting each Election Day than illegally vote. And there's a long history of Republican voter-suppression efforts and of bogus GOP allegations of voter fraud.

You might think, then, that news organizations who have fallen for these phony Republican allegations in the past would react to current Republican allegations of voter fraud by thinking to themselves, "Not this time." That, instead, they'd focus on voter suppression and document the GOP's history of crying "wolf."

But that isn't really the way things work. When John McCain and the GOP say, "Jump," the media ask, "How high?" So the media are flooded with overheated news reports about alleged voter fraud.

Media Matters has extensively documented flawed reporting about voter fraud over the past week:

The debates: what was missing?

Time's Massimo Calabresi found great significance in the fact that McCain and Obama didn't talk about God during their debates:

In the nearly sixteen thousand words uttered last night in the debate between John McCain and Barack Obama, one was noticeably absent: God.

[...]

Still, the fact that both Obama and McCain chose so assiduously not to invoke "God" in any form in any of their debates is noteworthy, not least to people who care about the presence of religion in politics. "Whether intentional or not the discussion of God and the role of faith appears to have been relegated to the Saddleback forum in this general election," says Tony Perkins, head of the Family Research Council, who calls the development "troubling."

Here's the presidential oath of office, in its entirety:

"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of the President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

Nothing about "God" in there. Turns out the president's job is to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution." Given the way the current president has approached that job, you might think the Constitution would have been a big topic in the debates.

Well, in the three presidential debates, the only time the word "Constitution" was used was during a discussion of abortion during the final debate. That's a continuation of what happened during the primaries, when the journalists moderating the Democratic and Republican debates all but ignored the Constitution, executive power, and civil liberties.

And yet Time thinks what was missing from the debates was discussion of God.

Jamison Foser is Executive Vice President at Media Matters for America.

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    • Author by mefirst (October 17, 2008 8:52 pm ET)
         

      i used to think, in 2000, that mccain was somewhat "honorable".  that's all over, with this sleazefest of a campaign he's run.   and on top of that, the rashest, most irresponsible selection of a vice president candidate in history, and that is covering some low ground.   how come palin can make saturday night live, but not meet the press?  what's the hockey mom afraid of? 

      liddy is definitely an issue.  he has told listeners how best to murder a federal agent and no one calls him on it.    and mccain is his buddy. 

      Report Abuse
      • Author by DAWUSS (October 17, 2008 10:23 pm ET)
           

        Apparently America's Hockey Mom was a blast over here in Indianapolis. However I wouldn't know because I wasn't there.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by Brabantio (October 18, 2008 12:45 am ET)
             

          I considered going to the Verizon music theater to see her, but I didn't feel like getting kicked in the back of my leg.  It's safer to mock her from afar.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by shoes89 (October 20, 2008 1:44 pm ET)
               

            Foser is really desperate here.

            1. Foser has provided extremely weak evidence that Liddy "instructed" people how to shoot law enforcement. At best, he takes an out-of-context remark gleaned from an article by FAIR, a well-known liberal partisan outfit.

            2. Is Foser saying that Liddy is somehow in favor of shooting law enforcement? C'mon ...

            3. To compare the actions of Liddy and Ayers is laughable. Ayers is an unrepentant terrorist who targeted our national defense infrastructure. That's pretty bad, folks.

            Nice try, Jamison, but you get an 'F' on this one.

            Report Abuse
      • Author by writingindependence (October 19, 2008 6:54 pm ET)
           

        So Ayers stalked dem students, then Obama..

        Bill Ayers was probably following a very simple junta playbook of Nixonesque dirty tricks:

        1) Pretend comradery and cross over into the enemy’s camp, i.e. student democratic associations.

        2) You don’t even need to tell them you’re building bombs/or recommend violence to the peace interests of the student democrats. 

        3)  They may or may not participate, but what if they tip the cops you’re a bombing suspect?  So don’t tell them, but hang out with them, build an association with them that incriminates the student democratic organizations.

        4)  Organize and fraternize with as many cells of peacenics as possible while converting recruits to perform actual crimes.  You want to cultivate the framing of your last move on those whom it kills, under guilt by association.

        5)  Finish the job by setting a trap that tries to kill several of them and succeeds at killing three, under a charade of protective obstruction of criminal justice, obviously under the wing of extremist right, white politicos.

        Report Abuse
    • Author by fawltylogic (October 18, 2008 12:18 am ET)
         

      It's funny how those who still defend McCain's "honor" and "integrity" claim that he's running a campaign that he disapproves of (at least that's the only conclusion I can draw - an honorable man with integrity would NOT run a campaign like this).

      Do we really want as President a man who can't even be the boss of his own campaign?

      Report Abuse
      • Author by Col. Harlan Sanders (October 18, 2008 2:25 am ET)
           

        If he can't stand up to his own campaign, how is the old geezer going to take on the terrorists?

        Seriously, McCain's deep and sensual relationship with Liddy leads me to question his character and judgement.

        Just kidding, I'm a fairly rational adult, and I understand that anybody involved in politics for more than a year or so can probably be connected to some unsavory character or another.I'd have to be an insane wingnut to consider that a major political issue.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by ajzito (October 19, 2008 10:24 am ET)
             

          I'm a little late chiming in, Col. Sanders, but I wholeheartedly agree.  Neither party has recently nominated a saint as far as I can tell.  The only point in bringing up Liddy is to point out the party parity on this issue.  Enough said.

          Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (October 18, 2008 3:43 am ET)
         

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAyK-enrF1g

      http://my.barackobama.com/page/invite/keatingvideo

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mncswlqo2D0&feature=related

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEtZlR3zp4c&feature=related

      www.stealingamerica.org (this one is about voter suppression... as opposed to the extremely rare moments of actual voter fraud!)

      These are but a few trinkets for all to enjoy......

      I'm so very happy that the media has decided to do its job!

      Thanks for nothing!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by ajzito (October 18, 2008 7:12 am ET)
         

      Los Angeles Times, October 17, 2008

      “Dozens of newly minted Republican voters say they were duped into joining the party by a GOP contractor with a trail of fraud complaints stretching across the country.

      Voters contacted by The Times said they were tricked into switching parties while signing what they believed were petitions for tougher penalties against child molesters. Some said they were told that they had to become Republicans to sign the petition, contrary to California initiative law. Others had no idea their registration was being changed. 

      "I am not a Republican," insisted Karen Ashcraft, 47, a pet-clinic manager and former Democrat from Ventura who said she was duped by a signature gatherer into joining the GOP. "I certainly . . . won't sign anything in front of a grocery store ever again."

      It is a bait-and-switch scheme familiar to election experts. The firm hired by the California Republican Party -- a small company called Young Political Majors, or YPM, which operates in several states -- has been accused of using the tactic across the country.

      The firm, which a Republican Party spokesman said is paid $7 to $12 for each registration it secures, has denied any wrongdoing and says it has never been charged with a crime…

      …The 70,000 voters YPM has registered for the Republican Party this year will help combat the public perception that it is struggling amid Democratic gains nationally, give a boost to fundraising efforts and bolster member support for party leaders, political strategists from both parties say.

      Those who were formerly Democrats may stop receiving phone calls and literature from that party, perhaps affecting its get-out-the-vote efforts. They also will be given only a Republican ballot in the next primary election if they do not switch their registration back before then.

      Some also report having their registration status changed to absentee without their permission; if they show up at the polls without a ballot they may be unable to vote.

      The Times randomly interviewed 46 of the hundreds of voters whose election records show they were recently re-registered as Republicans by YPM, and 37 of them -- more than 80% -- said that they were misled into making the change or that it was done without their knowledge.”

      http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-me-fraud18-2008oct18,0,3505611.story

      PS:  This article took time to mention that Democrats are accused of fraud in the ACORN case.  How many ACORN 'exposes' have mentioned YPM?

      Report Abuse
    • Author by jay9498 (October 18, 2008 9:09 am ET)
         

      The business from Wisconsin looks like a make good. There was a report out earlier in the week, picked up by the AP, that said the McCain campaign was overwhelmingly negative, incomparison to the Obama campaign.   Swampland commenter Paul Dirks noted this, although a little obliquely. Looking at the Wisconsin web site yesterday, there was an "in the news" section with the AP article. I assume there was pushback from the McCain campaign, which led to the tortured logic of the story Tumulty (and Jim Rutenberg in the NYT today) wrote.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by Victor Colorado (October 18, 2008 10:43 am ET)
         

      Good for Letterman. McCain should address his pal's lack of remorse for his terroristic past.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by Tobimaro (October 18, 2008 11:39 pm ET)
           

        And now we see the real reason why McCain skipped out on Letterman the first time.  But then again, skipping was the worst decision for McCain.

        Report Abuse
    • Author by MickD (October 18, 2008 11:37 am ET)
         

      Again, the cozy relationship of the corporate media and the Repubs are exposed simply by having David Letterman ask the hard questions (owns his show, doesn't care about the suits). The 24/7 channels wouldn't dare rock the boat, under threat of their bosses and/or the Rovian Rangers. It's pathetic, and yet still people rely on these corporate memos for their information.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by skatscan5624 (October 18, 2008 8:55 pm ET)
         

      And don't forget, G Gordon Liddy was one of the radio host whose rhetoric inspired Timnothy McVeigh to blow up the building in Oklahoma City.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by mefirst (October 19, 2008 10:03 am ET)
           

        and limbaugh, who was running an everyday update, "day xxx of america held hostage", after clinton took office.   limbaugh denied he was promoting action against the government, but he stopped doing that after oklahoma city.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by Cheney2012 (October 20, 2008 12:06 pm ET)
             

          Actually Rush stopped that the day after Clinton beat Dole for a second term.  Had noting to do with Oklahoma.  You are CLUENESS...which of course is a synonym for LIBERAL

          Report Abuse
    • Author by eniobob2631 (October 19, 2008 9:16 am ET)
         

      He was caught "flatfooted "big time on that question,you kind of got the feeling that he was looking for the exits.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by flounder (October 19, 2008 3:50 pm ET)
         

      Perhaps you should see this explanation Re: Liddy from Ben Pershing of the Washington Post

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2008/10/14/DI2008101402496.html

      I guess The reason McCain's Liddy hypocrisy is not news because it is not news unless Obama personally brings it up...for instance, his bowling score and his terrorist-like infatuation with drinking orange juice were not news until he started talking about them all the time.

      Boston: I'm bitter about Manny, so no, I'm not buying into your Dodgers in 2009 theory. (If indeed the Dodgers keep Manny in '09.) How can McCain get away with palling around with G. Gordon Liddy while painting Obama as a pal of Ayers? Is it just because the Democratic side doesn't need to "go there"?

      Ben Pershing: If the Dodgers asked me (and they should), they shouldn't re-sign Manny. As great as he is, he's not worth $20 million a year at his age and with his terrible defense. And as you in Boston know, he's pretty unpredictable. As for Liddy, some liberal blogs raised that point when Republicans started focusing on Ayers, but the Obama campaign and the DNC never really picked up on it.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by Joshua Simeon Narins (October 19, 2008 4:26 pm ET)
         

      Counterpunch is reporting that one of the Chairs of the McCain campaign had Ayers over as a houseguest... when Ayers was still on the run.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by writingindependence (October 19, 2008 4:58 pm ET)
         

      What a skater that Bill Ayers is.  He should by all rights of prosecution and the system be in the can sweating off three consecutive life terms, murder one, aggravated, and two consecutive attempt counts.

      FBI's favorite flower child liked to make bombs, not love..

      Obstruction left back door open for Nixon Era wrecking crew trainee to skate:  Bill Ayers.

      Those are silly obstruction ruses that only work when there is no 'probable cause', mad bombers don't qualify.

      (try simple discovery of weed in the glove compartment)

      Law enforcement and rescue response to a tripple homicide, murder one rap that blows up a townhouse doesn't skate on improper surveillance either. Aggravated intent placing others at risk with a lethal weapon or simply a trap intended to kill them under an alibi of acident--no alibi period.

      --
      http://www.freewebs.com/writingindependence/main.htm

      Report Abuse
      • Author by writingindependence (October 19, 2008 4:59 pm ET)
           

        How dare the McCain dunderheads pull a wrecking crew reversal on innocent bystander blackie.. (Obama)

        McCain = racist pig

        Report Abuse
    • Author by writingindependence (October 20, 2008 8:23 pm ET)
         

      McCain's a milfreak, so is Liddy.  They know about exocic weapons systems designed to incapacitate human targets.  How would they respond to this question:

      Who’s Poaching Dems in the Senate with mysterious head shots?

      (D)..’88 Joe Biden Jr.

      (D)..’06 Senator Tim Johnson S.D.

      (D)..’08 Senator Ted Kennedy Mass.

      (D)..’08 Stephanie Tubbs Jones, Rep. Ohio

      ..and who’s showing off with highly symbolic threats and misinformation hits to cover munky..?  Gotta have munky looking like the target of the same thing..

      (motorcade motorcycle cop #1; Bush: Hawaii 11-26-2006 dead at the wheel, unexplained pathology, no forensics, just ‘crashed’.)

      (motorcade motorcycle cop #2; Bush 9-28-07: Albuquerque NM dead at the wheel, unexplained pathology, no forensics, just ‘crashed’.)

      (motorcade motorcycle cop #3; Sen. Clinton: Dallas 2-22-08…dead at the wheel, unexplained pathology, no forensics, just ‘crashed’.)  The most controlled motorcycle riding environment possible, with blocked off regular traffic, low speed.

      Microwave weaponry, soliton, quantum communications entrain keyed to specific DNA macro molecular signal discrimination; or nanotechnology ?

      National Emergency in Progress, Limey is poaching your government, poisoning Chinese kids, and simply has a fit if he isn’t killing and inflicting somewhere at all times.

      Limey has toy, Limey makes a big show of it with crops circles and pictograms, is said to soften grass plant stalks like your kitchen microwave and bend them flat to the ground—not break them.  Limey has plant DNA and a means to focus and sequence, heating up the base of the grass stalks by resonating the DNA in those plant structures, also resonating the copy of the same basal DNA structure in the seed head, singing them.  Limey needs to be dealt with in the U.N. immediately… or dealt with regardless by whatever means of national defense we have against their activities.

      If it is H.A.R.P. or capability in their possession too, operated under joint NATO or NORRAD task forces, that needs to be answered, and if Gov. Palin and the State of Alaska where H.A.R.P. has an installation is somehow involved, the bitch needs to be dragged in front of Congressional Hearings.

      http://www.jems.com/news_and_articles/articles/Motorcade_Death_Highlights_EMS_Issue.html

      http://www.freewebs.com/writingindependence/main.htm

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