Over the past few years, Fox News
host Sean Hannity has repeatedly smeared progressives and Democrats by cropping
their comments in a way that misrepresented them. Most recently, during the July
8 edition of his Fox News show, Hannity spliced President Obama's answer to a Fox
News reporter's question about the Cold War to suggest that Obama did not acknowledge
the actions of past U.S.
presidents in freeing Eastern Europe. As Media Matters for America documented, Hannity edited out the
part of Obama's answer in which he said, "I'm very proud of the
traditions of Democratic and Republican presidents to lift the Iron
Curtain."
Media
Matters has documented numerous
instances
in
which Hannity has cropped quotes or clips to misrepresent what actually was said. Some
of the most egregious examples include:
- During the June 4 edition of his Fox News show, Hannity
deceptively edited a clip of Obama's June 4 speech in Cairo to claim that Obama
"decided to give 9-11 sympathizers a voice on the world stage," when Obama was in fact
specifically condemning the attacks. Hannity played Obama's comment that "I am aware that there's still
some who would question or even justify the events of 9-11." Hannity left out what Obama said next:
that Al Qaeda "chose to ruthlessly murder" 9-11 victims, who "had done nothing to harm anybody," and that "these are not opinions to be debated;
these are facts to be dealt with."
- On April 3, Hannity played a clip of Obama saying in an
April 3 speech in Strasbourg, France: "In America, there's a failure to appreciate
Europe's leading role in the world. Instead of
celebrating your dynamic union and seeking to partner with you to meet common
challenges, there have been times where America's shown arrogance and been
dismissive, even derisive." Hannity then said: "And the liberal tradition of
blame America first, well,
that's still alive." He later asked: "Why is there this anti-Americanism in
Europe?" In fact, immediately after the part of
the speech Hannity played, Obama criticized anti-Americanism in Europe and Europeans who "choose to blame America for much of what's
bad."
- During the March 6 edition of his Fox show,
Hannity purported to "go to the videotape" and "show the audience at home"
Obama's "campaign promise" of "no earmarks." He then aired several clips that
purportedly showed this "campaign promise." In fact, in three of the clips,
Obama was referring to reforming
the earmark process, and in a fourth, he was asserting that an opponent was
being hypocritical for taking earmarks and then advocating against them.
Hannity's fifth clip, which showed Obama saying, "We are going to ban all earmarks
-- the process by which individual members insert pet projects without review,"
was actually taken from a post-campaign media availability, during which Obama made clear
that he wanted to "ban all earmarks" from the "recovery and reinvestment plan,"
not from "the overall budget process."
- During the August 15,
2008, broadcast of his nationally syndicated
radio program, Hannity
falsely asserted that Obama had "openly complained about 'white folks' greed.' "
As evidence, he played a clip of Obama saying, "White folks' greed runs a world in need."
But the clip is from the Obama-narrated audiobook edition of his memoir, Dreams From My Father, in a passage in which Obama quotes parts
of a sermon by Rev. Jeremiah Wright.
- During the July 10,
2008, edition of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes,
Hannity distorted former President Bill
Clinton's remarks to claim that Clinton was "obviously
taking a shot at Senator [John] McCain." Hannity aired the following parts of
Clinton's remarks: "[E]very living soul on the planet has some often highly
justified anger"; "[I]f you know anybody who was ever a POW for any length of
time, you will see that you go along for months or maybe even years, and then
something will happen, it'll trigger all those bad dreams, and they'll come
back, and it may not last 30 seconds"; and, "It's not like all that stuff just went
away." But Clinton was discussing what former South
African President -- and political prisoner -- Nelson Mandela means to him.
Indeed, the sentence from which Hannity took his final quote actually read
in full: "It's not like all that stuff just went away, but he [Mandela]
disciplined himself and his mind and his heart and his spirit to always work to
constantly overcome it every day."
- During the October 28,
2008, broadcast of his radio show, Hannity aired
Obama's statement from
a 2001 radio interview that "[t]here's a lot of change going on outside of the
[Supreme Court] that, you know, the judges have to essentially take judicial
notice of. I mean, you've got World War II. You've got the doctrines of Nazism
that we are fighting against that start looking uncomfortably similar to what's
going on back here at home." Hannity aired the clip twice, then stated: "He's comparing -- looking
similar to what Nazism is back here at home? Has anybody picked up on this in
the media?" But Hannity left out Obama's next sentence, which made clear he
was not speaking about modern-day America: "You've got African Americans who are
returning from the war with certain expectations in terms of, 'Why is it that
I'm now in uniform and yet am denied more freedom here than I was in
France or Italy?'
"
- During the June 17,
2007,
edition of Fox News' Hannity's America, Hannity aired a clip
from a December 15, 2003, speech by then-Sen. Hillary Clinton, in
which she said, "I was one who supported giving President Bush the authority, if
necessary, to use force against Saddam Hussein. ... We have no option but to stay involved and
committed." He then asserted, "A year into the war, when most Democrats
completely turned their back on the president's decision to invade Iraq,
Hillary maintained her support." But almost immediately after the first sentence
that Hannity quoted from the speech, Clinton said: "I have had many disputes and
disagreements with the administration over how that authority has been used, but
I stand by the vote to provide the authority because I think it was a necessary
step in order to maximize the outcome that did occur in the Security Council
with the unanimous vote to send in inspectors."
- On July
15, 2007, Hannity asserted
that "Hillary's time as partner in the [Rose] law firm was closely associated
with her husband's political seat in the state of Arkansas," then stated: "George
Wells, a reporter who covered the courts for Arkansas papers, said the following
in a 1994 interview with the Baltimore Sun, quote: 'A few people would say that
the Rose Law Firm was married to Governor Clinton -- and there were businesses
that thought it was to their advantage with the state to go to Rose.' End
quote." But the next sentence in
the Sun article
quoted Wells saying: "But
no one in the firm that I know of ever solicited business based on
the governor's wife being a partner there."
Media
Matters has previously identified many instances in which other Fox
News figures have also misleadingly cropped the statements of progressives or
Democrats.
&mdash T.A.
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