Media Matters releases
video on Fox News employees taking cues from network chief's political past
Washington, DC - Today, Media
Matters for America released a video calling attention to Fox News,
which -- under the leadership of former Republican media consultant Roger Ailes
-- routinely employs the same appeals to racial fears and biases when stirring
up opposition to the Obama administration that Ailes used while working for
Richard Nixon, George H.W. Bush, and Rudy Giuliani.
WATCH
VIDEO HERE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MnNyEKAZIO4
BACKGROUND
Before being
tapped by Rupert Murdoch to create Fox News in 1996, Ailes spent the better
part of his career working as a Republican media consultant, during which time
he became known for appealing
to racial fears and biases for political gain. Examples
include:
· As Nixon campaign
consultant, Ailes reportedly looked for a "Wallaceite cab-driver" to bring up
race at televised town hall meetings.
· Ailes on 1988 strategy against Dukakis: "The
only question is whether we depict Willie Horton with a knife in his hand or
without it."
· Ailes' 1989 attacks on Dinkins for Giuliani "prey[ed]
upon the fears of the Jewish community."
Under his
leadership, Fox News now routinely employs these same tactics in their ongoing
campaign to destroy the Obama administration and the progressive agenda:
- Beck caps off week of race-baiting by calling Obama a
"racist."
During the week of July 23, Glenn Beck put forth a steady
stream of race-baiting and race-based fearmongering on his television
show and radio program. Beck's comments culminated in his remarks that
President Obama "has a deep-seated hatred for white people or the
white culture" and "is, I believe, a racist," a statement
he subsequently claimed to stand by, in spite of growing criticism.
- Hannity just can't "get over" his Rev. Wright
obsession.
Sean Hannity -- who claimed he "broke the story" about Obama's
controversial former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, during the 2008
campaign -- mentioned Wright on at least 45 different episodes of his Fox
News show between Obama's inauguration and July 31. Indeed, his repeated
references to Wright -- most recently in discussions about Obama and
race relations in America
-- have prompted his own guests to comment, "You always want to bring
up Reverend Wright," and "Sean, you need to get over it."
- Rev. Wright
redux: Media use Jones controversy to revive Wright smear. Conservative media figures used
the controversy over former White House adviser Van Jones' past statements
as an excuse to again link Obama to Wright. On Fox News, Glenn Beck, Bill
O'Reilly, and Charles Krauthammer all invoked Wright while discussing
Jones in order to question Obama's associations.
- Guest-hosting O'Reilly, Ingraham claims Obama
"channeled his best Jeremiah Wright accent" in NAACP speech. While guest-hosting Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, radio host Laura
Ingraham stated, "Last night President Obama spoke to the NAACP and channeled
his best Jeremiah Wright accent." After airing a clip of Obama's
remarks, Ingraham added, "Now, why does the first African-American
feel the need to affect an accent that he clearly does not possess? Or is
that the way people speak in Honolulu?
It's a cheap attempt to pander to an audience that already supports
him" [The O'Reilly Factor,
7/17/09].
- After asking, "Do the Obamas have a race problem of
their own?" Hannity continued to smear Barack and Michelle Obama. Hannity falsely asserted that
Wright "honored [Louis] Farrakhan for lifetime achievement, saying,
quote, 'He truly epitomized greatness.' " In fact, the managing editor
of a magazine founded by the church wrote those words, not the minister.
Hannity also stated that Michelle Obama "wrote in her [undergraduate]
thesis that we see at Princeton, you
know, the belief -- 'because of the belief that blacks must join in solidarity
to combat a white oppressor.' " However, as the full context of the
passage makes clear, she was discussing views that black students who
attended Princeton in the 1970s may have held, not asserting her own views
[Hannity's America, 3/5/08].
- Ignoring Obama's statement on award, Hannity suggested
that Obama "associated" himself with Farrakhan. Hannity suggested that Obama
had "associated" himself with Nation of Islam leader Louis
Farrakhan, who had received an award from a magazine founded by Obama's
church. But Hannity, who described Farrakhan as "an anti-Semite
racist," did not note that Obama issued a statement
"condemn[ing]" Farrakhan's "anti-Semitic statements"
and saying of the award: "[I]t is not a decision with which I
agree" [Hannity & Colmes, 1/18/09].
- Morris: McCain "doesn't have to" engage in
Willie Horton-like campaign because O'Reilly is already doing so. After airing portions of a
controversial sermon by Wright, Bill O'Reilly -- who described Wright's comments
as "anti-American, to say the least" -- asked Dick Morris ,
"If you were [Sen. John] McCain, do you use this against Obama?"
Morris replied, "He doesn't have to. You just did. And the talk radio
people around the country" will. Morris continued: "[T]he other
media, the other conservative media can make a big deal of it" [The O'Reilly Factor, 3/13/08].
- Hannity smeared Gates as anti-white radical by
distorting 1994 interview. Hannity repeatedly misrepresented Harvard
professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s 1994 interview
on C-SPAN's Booknotes to
suggest that Gates had recently said he agreed with Malcolm X that the
"white man was the devil" and to smear Gates as
"extreme" and a "radical." In fact, in that interview,
Gates was talking about events in 1959, specifically his witnessing his
mother's positive reaction to a documentary they watched together about
Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam [Hannity,
7/28/09].
- Conservative media figures falsely suggest that Reich
proposed excluding white males from stimulus package. Michelle Malkin and Hannity
have falsely
asserted or suggested that Robert Reich, speaking at a congressional
forum, proposed that jobs created by the economic stimulus package should
exclude white males. In fact, Reich has repeatedly stated that he favors a
stimulus plan that "includ[es] women and minorities, and the
long-term unemployed" in addition to skilled professionals and white
male construction workers, not one that is solely limited to them.
- O'Reilly tease: "[S]hould white Americans be
concerned about Judge Sotomayor?" O'Reilly stated, "Next on the rundown:
Should white Americans be concerned about Judge Sotomayor? Later, far-left
Hispanic group says if you oppose the judge, you could be racist" [The O'Reilly Factor, 7/13/09].
- Fox News is just asking about Sotomayor's "wise Latina"
remarks: "New Racism?" During On The
Record, guest-host Martha MacCallum stated, "The battle
over Sonia Sotomayor's nomination intensifies tonight. Some conservatives
continue to hammer Sotomayor and they are focused on this comment, which
we've seen a lot this week." MacCallum then aired text of Sotomayor's
comments under a headline stating, "New Racism?" [On the Record, 5/31/09].
- Beck: Sotomayor "sure sounds like a racist
here."
Beck said Sotomayor's "wise Latina"
comment "smacks of racism" and is "one of the most
outrageous racist remarks I've heard." Beck later added: "I hate
the charges and cries of racism. But when I hear this -- I mean, gee. She
sure sounds like a racist here" [Glenn
Beck, 5/26/09].
- Reporting on Sotomayor, "identity politics,"
and "the immigration debate," Fox shows video of apparent
immigrants in detention. Wendell Goler reported, "Many observers saw
President Obama's election as a validation of a post-racial campaign, and
they see identity politics in Sotomayor's nomination -- an appeal to
Hispanic voters, many of whom turned against Republicans in the
immigration debate. But [Linda] Chavez, whose group doesn't support
Sotomayor, says the Hispanic community doesn't march in lock-step."
As he spoke, Fox News showed footage of apparent immigrants in detention [Special Report, 5/29/09].
- Tucker Carlson claimed Sotomayor made "racist
statement." Fox News contributor Tucker Carlson claimed that
Sotomayor had said that "because of your race or gender, you're a
better or worse judge, that female Latina
judges are likely to render wiser decisions than white male judges."
Carlson continued, "That's a racist statement, by any
calculation" [The Live Desk,
5/26/09].
- Krauthammer declares Sotomayor "a believer in the
racial spoils system." Krauthammer stated on Special Report that Sotomayor's dismissal of the Ricci case "tells us that she
really is a believer in the racial spoils system" [Special Report, 5/26/09].
- Rev. Peterson: Obama was elected "mostly by black
racists and white guilty people." Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson said,
"I think we all agree that Barack Obama was elected by, mostly by
black racists and white guilty people" [Hannity, 2/3/09].
Peterson also asserted that Obama is "no different than" Rev.
Wright and the NAACP, who he claimed "hate white Americans, and they
especially hate the white man" [Glenn
Beck, 6/24/09].
WATCH
VIDEO HERE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MnNyEKAZIO4
###
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for America is a progressive research and information center
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