On April 26, The Washington
Post published a baseless attack on Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV) by columnist David Broder ---
with the headline "The Democrats' Gonzales" -- in
which Broder characterized Reid as an "embarrassment"
for recently stating that the war in Iraq "is lost." The
column inspired Media Matters for America
to review Broder's recent columns and offer examples of Broder's
unfounded attacks on Democrats, glaring misstatements of fact, unwarranted
praise of President Bush and congressional Republicans, off-the-mark political
predictions, and in at least one case, what was, by his own admission, a cringe-worthy embarrassment:
- Bush
"comeback." In his February 16 column, Broder
argued that President Bush could be "poised for a political comeback"
and falsely claimed that Bush, during a
February 14 press conference,
"endors[ed] the good motives of" the critics of his Iraq troop
increase by "rejecting the notion that their actions would damage U.S.
troops' morale or embolden the enemy." In fact, when asked at the press
conference if he "believe[d] that a vote of disapproval of your [Iraq] policy emboldens the enemy," Bush
specifically refused to "reject[] the notion that their actions would
damage U.S.
troops' morale or embolden the enemy," as Broder put it. At the press conference, Bush said: "As
to whether or not this particular resolution is going to impact enemy thought,
I can't tell you that." Also, despite Broder's prognostications,
Bush's job approval ratings
since February 16 have been stalled in the mid- to low 30s, and even went as
low as 29 percent in a February 23-27 CBS News/New
York Times poll, and 28 percent in an April 20-23 Harris poll. As the weblog Think Progress noted, Broder
claimed in a March 30 online discussion on washingtonpost.com that he would
"revisit and revise" his prediction, but has yet to do so.
- Democrats and the
military. In his February 6 column, Broder
wrote that retired Gen. Wesley Clark was "[o]ne of the losers" among
the potential Democratic presidential candidates who spoke before the
Democratic National Committee on February 2 because he forgot "that few in
this particular audience have much experience with, or sympathy for, the
military." Broder offered no support for this claim, which
reflected the assumption -- expressed frequently among the media and documented by Media Matters for America -- that Iraq war supporters are
"pro-military," and conversely that those opposed to the Iraq war
must be anti-military.
- Detainee
legislation. In his September 21, 2006, column, Broder
heaped praise on Sens. John McCain (R-AZ), Lindsey O. Graham (R-SC), and John
Warner (R-VA) for their "revolt ...
against President Bush's insistence on a free hand in treating terrorist
detainees." According to Broder: "These are not ordinary men.
McCain, from Arizona,
is probably the leading candidate for the 2008 presidential nomination. Graham,
from South Carolina,
is the star among the younger Republican senators. Warner, from Virginia, embodies the
essence of traditional Reagan conservatism: patriotism, support for the
military, civility." That same day, however, these senators and the White
House reached a "compromise" on terror-detainee legislation
characterized by Border's Post
colleague Dan Froomkin as a
situation in which "[t]he Republican senators essentially agreed to look
the other way." Froomkin explained: "On the central issue of
whether the CIA should continue using interrogation methods on suspected
terrorists that many say constitute torture, the White House got its way,
winning agreement from the 'maverick' Republican senators who had
refused to go along with an overt undoing of the Geneva Conventions." As Media Matters noted, the Post reported
on September 29, 2006, that the compromise was reached largely on
administration terms: "Written largely, but not completely, on the
administration's terms, with passages that give executive branch officials
discretion to set details or divert from its protections, the bill is meant to
provide what Bush said yesterday are 'the tools' needed to handle
terrorism suspects U.S. officials hope to capture." Broder has yet to address this "compromise" on terror
detainee treatment.
- Hurricane
Katrina. In his September 4, 2005, column, Broder
wrote: "We cannot yet calculate the political fallout from Hurricane
Katrina and its devastating human and economic consequences, but one thing
seems certain: It makes the previous signs of political weakness for Bush,
measured in record-low job approval ratings, instantly irrelevant and opens new
opportunities for him to regain his standing with the public." Broder
himself later acknowledged that this column was "wildly off
target." He wrote in his December 29, 2005, column:
On Sept. 4, I published a column so
wildly off target that it could have gotten me indicted by a special
prosecutor. It was written in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, as
President Bush was flying back from vacation to organize the federal response
to that catastrophe.
Without waiting for him to actually
do anything, I saluted his performance, leading off with the assertion that
"it took almost no time for President Bush to put his stamp on the
national response to the tragedy that has befallen New
Orleans and the Gulf
Coast."
And then this howler: "Because
the commander in chief is also the communicator in chief, when a crisis emerges
the nation's eyes turn to him as to no other official. We cannot yet calculate
the political fallout from Hurricane Katrina and its devastating human and
economic consequences, but one thing seems certain: It makes the previous signs
of political weakness for Bush, measured in record-low job approval ratings,
instantly irrelevant and opens new opportunities for him to regain his standing
with the public."
What it opened, of course, was an
abyss of doubts about the president's awareness of what was happening and about
the competence of his administration. He's still paying for that episode.
But if Bush were as vindictive
toward the press as is sometimes reported, he could well turn to me and say:
"You're doing a heck of a job, too, Davey."
- The case for war.
During a March 25, 2003, online discussion
on washingtonpost.com, Broder wrote that he was "unaware of any efforts
by the administration to link Iraq
to 9/11." In fact, prior to the U.S.
invasion of Iraq, Vice
President Dick Cheney repeated several times
the now-discredited claim that 9-11
ringleader Mohamed Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence official in Prague in 2001. On March
21, 2003, Bush sent a letter to the speaker of the House and the
president pro tempore of the Senate saying
that "the use of armed force against Iraq is consistent with the United
States and other countries continuing to take the necessary actions against
international terrorists and terrorist organizations, including those nations,
organizations, or persons who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the
terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001."
&mdash S.S.M.
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