June 03, 2005 7:10 pm ET
In highlighting author Candice E. Jackson and her recent book attacking Bill and Hillary Clinton, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough, The Washington Times and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review omitted two key facts: 1) according to the book jacket, Jackson wrote the book as "a wakeup call to stop Hillary Clinton from ever getting back into the White House"; and 2) Jackson is a former staffer of a conservative legal organization best known for its numerous lawsuits against the Clinton administration.
In profiling Jackson's Their Lives: The Women Targeted by the Clinton Machine, published by conservative imprint World Ahead Publishing and praised by right-wing pundits David Horowitz and Lucianne Goldberg, the conservative news website CNSNews.com reported that "Jackson admits that one of her goals it [sic] to prevent Sen. Hillary Clinton [D-NY] from being elected president in 2008. ... 'We have let the Clintons go to the White House once and I think this is a serious enough abuse issue to prevent them from going there again,' Jackson said."
Jackson worked for the California office of Judicial Watch, a conservative legal organization founded by Larry Klayman that "peppered the Clinton administration with no fewer than 18 lawsuits." [The Washington Post, 5/30/1998]
Here's how reporting on the Jackson book from The Washington Times, the Tribune-Review, and Scarborough stacked up:
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