Over the weekend, the Washington Post quoted Republican Senator
Jim DeMint asserting that Republicans "don't need The Washington Post to cover
things anymore ... Something can get on a conservative blog, then on Fox News,
then it's everywhere."
It's true: conservative blogs often set the agenda for Fox News shows -
with the rest of the media following
in tow. Perhaps most infamously, in 2007, Fox & Friends gave widespread
promotion to the bubbling smear on conservative blogs that then-Senator Barack
Obama attended a madrassa as a child.
And it's not just Fox News' opinion shows. Here's
the sourcing for a health care town hall report on America's
Newsroom, one of the network's purported 'straight news'
programs:

DeMint's view of Fox News as part of
the GOP's messaging strategy is echoed among other members of his party. A
quick sampling:
- Mitt
Romney: "Hey, FoxNation.com and my fans
there, they're the best. Congratulations to you guys for getting that up there,
keep it going. I hope that we get a lot of strength, and that helps us in 2010
and the years beyond.'
- Liz
Cheney: "Actually, because of shows like
this one [WOR's The Steve Malzberg
Show], shows like yours, Steve, because we've got know other radio
shows, we've got Fox, we've got a massive, sort of conservative blogosphere,
people are aware of these things, and I think that's a very positive thing that
the mainstream media doesn't have the kind of stranglehold on information that
they used to have."
- Rep. Lamar
Smith (R-TX): "The reason for the double
standard is that while MSNBC acts as a shill for the President, Fox reports the
stories that the national media ignore. For example, without Fox News, you might
not have heard about the recent ACORN scandal. You might not have heard about
the troubling political associations of the President's former green jobs czar,
which eventually led to his resignation. And you might not have heard that the
President's communications director said Chairman Mao is one of her favorite
political philosophers." [October 28, Congressional Record]
- Former Sen. (and current
Fox News contributor) Rick Santorum: "And the American
public is looking at this [health care bill], thanks to FOX News, thanks to
conservative radio, thanks to the Internet, which is increasingly powerful, and
they're getting the facts. They're looking at the facts. They're saying, You
know, Mr. President, what you're saying doesn't jibe with that you're -- the
folks over in the House and Senate re doing. So it's not going anywhere, and
that's why this is such -- in big trouble right now."
- Rep. Michele
Bachmann (R-MN): "People vote with their feet. And
they love Bill O'Reilly; they love Glenn Beck. They love the shows that are on
Fox. That's what matters. Because people want to go where they can find truth.
They obviously aren't finding truth over on some of these other channels."
Bachmann, a frequent guest on Fox News, knows how Fox News works as a political organization. Bachmann recently appeared on Hannity to promote her re-election website and a protest against health care reform. And during the debate over cap
and trade, Bachmann and Beck (who has offered to fundraise for her) implored viewers to call Congress
to oppose "that national energy tax."

The Republican chorus that Fox News
is a part of GOP messaging is something that Fox News has as much admitted, with
executives describing the network as the "voice of opposition" and "the
Alamo" during the Obama administration.
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