Media Matters for America

Challenged by Franken, Hannity admitted he "misspoke"

July 28, 2004 4:14 pm ET

ABC Radio and FOX News Channel host Sean Hannity admitted, in a July 27 interview with The Al Franken Show co-host Al Franken, that he had accused former Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean of "saying that the president knew about 9-11 ahead of time" and said that he "misspoke" when he made the accusation. Confronted with audio from the May 11 edition of FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes, during which Hannity repeated the accusation against Dean, Hannity said, "You're right. You're right. ... I'll concede your point."

As Media Matters for America previously noted, Salon.com senior writer Eric Boehlert reported on January 13 what Dean actually said as a guest on the December 1, 2003, edition of The Diane Rehm Show (a daily talk show on NPR member station WAMU in Washington, DC, with a weekly nationwide audience of 1.4 million): "When Rehm asked Dean in a Dec. 1 interview why he thought Bush wasn't more forthcoming with the commission investigating the terrorist attacks, Dean replied, 'The most interesting theory that I've heard so far -- which is nothing more than a theory, it can't be proved -- is that he was warned ahead of time by the Saudis.'"

Challenged by Franken as to whether he had accused Dean of "saying that the president knew about 9-11 ahead of time," Hannity claimed on The Al Franken Show that "99 percent of the time," he qualifies the assertion by saying Dean "advanced the theory." Although Hannity has often said Dean "advanced the theory," MMFA discovered numerous other examples of Hannity on FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes more directly distorting Dean's statement:

Hannity has also made the accusation numerous times in which he attributed it to "Democrats," rather than to Dean himself:

Although Hannity conceded that he "misspoke," he has not been so forgiving when others have committed the same error. As Media Matters for America has noted, when the 9-11 Commission report determined that, based on former President Bill Clinton's testimony, in "wrongly recounting a number of press stories he had read," Clinton had "misspoken" in a 2002 speech, Hannity dismissed Clinton's mea culpa, calling him a "known liar."

&mdash A.S.

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