December 22, 2004 5:26 pm ET
A December 21 Associated Press article on President Bush's expected tax reform proposals used the same language as the White House to describe Bush's agenda on taxes. And the article quoted five supporters of that agenda but no dissenters.
AP economics writer Martin Crutsinger opened the article by unquestioningly referencing "President Bush's campaign to make the tax code simpler, fairer and more pro-growth." This description echoed nearly verbatim a December 15 White House economic fact sheet that advocated for Bush's tax reform agenda by contending that "America's taxpayers deserve, and our future economic prosperity demands, a simpler, fairer, pro-growth system." After noting opposition in Congress to a proposal to "eliminate state and local income tax deductions" that would "nick" Democratic-leaning states more than they would hurt Republican-leaning states, Crutsinger wrote: "The money, though, has to come from somewhere."
Rather than providing a balanced report and analysis of Bush's likely proposals, the article featured comments from five individuals, all of whom are supportive of the Bush administration and its tax agenda and three of whom are current or former Bush administration officials:
Two of the individuals quoted represent conservative organizations:
The NFIB Political Action Committee gave $750,416 in contributions to federal candidates in 2004; 98 percent of that amount went to Republicans. The AP reported on November 4 that the NFIB "welcomed Bush's reelection."
Stephen Moore is president of the political action committee Club for Growth, a group committed to electing candidates that favor lower taxes. Moore is also a contributing editor for the conservative journal National Review who claimed in a November 17 column that polygamy is a "core value" of the American Left and suggested that liberals "create a workers' paradise off the shores of France" where "You can all speak French, allow Janet Jackson to show both her breasts, create a cradle-to-grave welfare state, drink Starbucks lattes, read the New York Times every day, scramble the satellite signal for Fox News, and worship your new leader, Michael Moore!"
&mdash J.C.
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