Tim Russert and Dante's Inferno
Tum Russert is Damned. That much is
clear. But where and how ? Dante neglected to specify which circle of hell a
soul is consigned to after betraying the Nations Children for the sake of politics.
Traitors are of course consigned to the innermost circles, ranging from traitors to their
kin, lords, country and benefactors. No space appears to have been left for traitors
to the Children.
The thought struck us that hell is long overdue for a make-over. The business of sin
has changed substantially since Dante's day. Not only are many of the sins archaic
(it seems doubtful at this point that Protestants are damned as schismatics) but as in the
Russert case, Dante has failed to keep up with the times. What is the punishment for
TV evangelists, Political Liars, Political Theives, or for that matter for Political
Pundits who mask their partisan bigotry behind a supposedly neutral TV News Show such as
Meet the Press.
Whatever Russert's concern about gathering
hard evidence to bolster his position to report on politics, anyone who betrays
Journalistic Ethics and is so blatently partisan in that calculating manner deserves the
fate that Dante would assign him: being trapped in ice up to the neck in the deepest
pit of the Inferno, where treachery against basic human bonds is punished and where Satan
himself, once the brightest of the rebel angels, beats his bat's wings.
Good Luck Tim, Satan is coming for you
anytime now - he remembers when you sold your soul and he's coming to collect!!!
We will leave it up to the reader to
determine whether Tim Russert has made serious errors in in judgment. Although at
his Meet The Press Gig he is supposed to be non-partisan. Tim has supported a
Conservative Republican position especially when it comes to Church and State issues, but
it is apparent from the data collected, that the first amendment may be in danger from his
past and future actions.
When we contacted Tim Russert's office,
they stated that his position is that Christianity is the only "Real"
religion." What is a real religion, Mr. Russert? What you have been
practicing? If what you have been practicing is "Real Christianity",
it obviously should be made illegal. According to evidence, his actions have been
corrupt, dishonest, and unethical. Read the following and remember: "By their
Works may they be known." This is a summary of information collected from
several sources, including Salon Magazine, Wall Street Journal, New York Times,
Washington Post, The New Republic, and The Hill, about Tim Russert.
(Remember it is best to investigate on
your own when looking at allegations about anyone. Don't believe us,
think for yourself and investigate for yourself! And remember, the First Amendment
Coalition does not represent any political party nor do we recommend any political
candidate, nor are we involving ourselves in the political process. This information
is only for students of Tim Russert )
Personal
Life
Timothy John Russert, Jr. (born May 7, 1950) is an American journalist who has hosted NBC's Meet the Press since 1991. He is the Washington
Bureau Chief for NBC News,
and hosts Tim Russert, a weekly interview program on MSNBC. He is also a frequent correspondent
and guest on other NBC News programs, such as The Today Show
and Hardball. He
co-hosts the network's presidential Election Night
coverage. He also presents the polling results of the NBC News/Wall
Street Journal survey on the NBC Nightly News alongside the
anchor of the show.
Born in Buffalo, New York to Irish American
Catholic parents,
Russert is an alum of Canisius High School in Buffalo,
New York and a graduate of John Carroll University
and Cleveland-Marshall
College of Law at Cleveland State University.
Although Russert was of age during the peak of the Vietnam War, he has no military
service. He admitted, on Meet the Press, that he went to Woodstock
"in a Buffalo
Bills jersey with a case of beer." Russert was admitted to the bar in New York and the District of Columbia. Before
joining NBC News, Russert served as counselor in New York Governor Mario Cuomo's office in Albany in 1983
to 1984 and was chief of staff to Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan
from 1977 to 1982. An avid fan of the American Football team the Buffalo Bills,
Russert usually closes Sunday broadcasts during the football season with some type of
pro-Bills comment. He has also ended his show by mentioning the successes of Boston College
football and basketball.
In 2004, Russert penned a bestselling biography, Big
Russ and Me, which chronicled his life growing up in a predominantly Irish
working-class neighborhood in South Buffalo as well as his education at Canisius
High School. Russert's father, a World War II veteran held down two
jobs after the war, conveyed to his young son, through the methods of the "carrot and
the stick," the importance of maintaining strong family values, the reverence of faith, and of never taking a
short cut to reach a goal. He claimed to have received over 60,000 letters from people in
response to the book, detailing their own experiences with their fathers. In 2005 he
released Wisdom
of Our Fathers: Lessons and Letters from Daughters and Sons, a collection of some
of these letters, which also became a bestseller.
Tim Russert is married to Maureen Orth, who has been a special
correspondent for Vanity Fair since 1983. They have a son, Luke, who
attends Boston
College and hosts the XM radio show 60/20 Sports with James Carville. Russert is a Washington
Nationals and Washington Wizards season
ticket holder.
Ongoing CIA Leak Scandal
Scooter Libby, chief of staff for Vice
President Dick
Cheney, told special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald that Tim
Russert was the first to tell him of the identity of Central Intelligence
Agency officer Valerie Plame (Mrs. Joseph C.
Wilson). Russert testified previously and again in United
States v. I. Lewis Libby that he did not tell Libby of Mrs. Wilson's CIA identity.
Tim Russert testified again in the trial on Wednesday, February 7, 2007.
During the trial, another witness, former Cheney
communications director Cathie
Martin, testified that she "suggested we put the vice president on 'Meet the Press,'"
hosted by Russert on NBC, and
that it was "a tactic we often used....It's our best format."
Meet The Real Tim Russert - Biased, Bigoted,
Misleading and Unethical
"It's never the question that's the problem,
Matt, it's the answer."
-- NBC's
Tim Russert
"It's 'never the question that's the problem'? Really?
Spoken like the guy who gets to ask the questions."
-- CJR's
Liz Cox Barrett
March 1, 2008
MSNBC recently began running commercials touting its
coverage of "Decision 2008." One begins with on-screen text asking, "Why do
people care about politics?" Viewers then hear Tim Russert explain: "It's about
the war. Our sons and daughters. It's about the economy. Our jobs. It's about education.
Our schools. It's about health care. Our families' well-being. It's about everything that
matters." The ad ends with the on-screen declaration: "That's why you care.
That's why we cover it."
The serious and high-minded approach to political coverage Tim Russert brags about would
be a welcome change from the political coverage for which Russert is responsible.
During this week's Democratic presidential debate, Tim Russert didn't ask a single
question about global warming, continuing his longstanding
habit of all but ignoring the topic. He didn't ask a single question about the
mortgage crisis. (As one Cleveland resident noted,
"We've got the mortgage industry's toxic waste scattered all over this city, but Mr.
Blue-Collar-Buffalo-and-Cleveland-Marshall-Guy Russert couldn't be bothered with a
question about it.") He didn't ask a single question about executive power, the
Constitution, torture, wiretapping, or other civil-liberties concerns. But that shouldn't
come as a surprise; of all the questions he has asked while moderating presidential
debates during this campaign, only one has dealt with any of those topics.
He has, however, asked Dennis Kucinich what he felt compelled to insist was a "serious
question" -- whether Kucinich has seen a UFO. And he has asked
about John Edwards' expensive haircut.
Funny, Russert doesn't mention UFOs or haircuts in that MSNBC promo.
Tim Russert's performance as a moderator of this week's debate has drawn widespread
criticism. Most appalling was his bizarre fixation on Louis Farrakhan.
Russert asked
Barack Obama about Louis Farrakhan's praise for the Illinois senator. Obama, who had
previously denounced Farrakhan, did so again. Then Russert asked about Farrakhan again. So
Obama reiterated his denunciation. Then Russert, (who, I can only assume, was not
bothering to listen to Obama's responses) asked about Farrakhan again. So Obama again
reiterated his denunciation. Russert, plowing ahead, asked yet another question about
Farrakhan, prompting Obama to answer yet again.
Josh Marshall summed
up Tim Russert's behavior nicely: "It was a nationwide, televised, MSM version of
one of those noxious Obama smear emails."
This wasn't the first time Tim Russert made the odd
decision to ask Obama about controversial comments made by a famous African-American.
During a 2006 interview, Russert asked Obama about controversial comments Harry Belafonte
made the day before. But Belafonte, as Jane Hamsher noted
at the time, had made similar comments two weeks before, and Russert had never asked any
guest about them. Russert gave no indication of why Obama was uniquely qualified or
required to comment on Belafonte's comments. (The only other time Russert has ever asked
anyone about any comments made by Harry Belafonte, according to Nexis? 2003, when Russert
asked then-Secretary of State Colin Powell about comments Belafonte made about U.S.
actions toward Cuba.)
Given Tim Russert's badgering of Obama about Farrakhan, you might be wondering how he
handles endorsements by controversial figures who have a history of statements that are
widely considered to be anti-Semitic ... when the endorser and the endorsed are both white
Republicans.
Last November, Pat Robertson endorsed Rudy Giuliani during a joint event at the National
Press Club where Giuliani praised
Robertson as "a person of great, well-deserved reputation." Robertson
has endorsed Jerry Falwell's claims that 9-11 was the fault of "abortionists,"
feminists, and the ACLU. He has suggested that the annual Gay Days event at Disney World
would result in "the destruction of your nation. It'll bring about terrorist bombs,
it'll bring earthquakes, tornadoes and possibly a meteor." He has linked Hurricane
Katrina to legalized abortion. He has said
"Jewish people" are "very thrifty" and "very wise in
finance."
Robertson wrote a bizarre conspiracy theory book called New World Order that,
Anthony Lewis noted,
"relied [so] heavily on a British anti-Semitic writer of the 1920's, Nesta H. Webster
... one sometimes thinks of plagiarism." Lewis concluded of Robertson: "Perhaps
Pat Robertson in his heart is not an anti-Semite. He just thinks a satanic conspiracy led
by Jews has threatened the world for centuries. The best you can make of such a defense is
that he is a plain, ordinary crackpot."
That's who Pat Robertson is; that's who Rudy Giuliani praised as "a person of great,
well-deserved reputation." Now: How did Tim Russert react to Giuliani's enthusiastic
acceptance of Robertson's endorsement? On Today on November 8, 2007, Russert said
it would be "helpful" to Giuliani. In early December, Russert hosted Giuliani on
Meet the Press. Russert didn't ask Giuliani a single question about Robertson. On
January 24, Russert moderated a GOP debate. Russert didn't ask a single question about
Robertson -- even though the debate took place in Florida, which was central to Giuliani's
campaign "strategy" and which is home to a large number of Jewish voters who
might not look kindly on Robertson's theories about a "satanic conspiracy led by
Jews."
So: During this week's Democratic debate, Tim Russert grilled Barack Obama about Louis
Farrakhan, who Obama had repeatedly denounced prior to the debate, whose praise Obama did
not accept, and who Obama reiterated his denunciation of multiple times during the debate.
Yet Tim Russert never once asked Rudy Giuliani about his
enthusiastic acceptance of Pat Robertson's endorsement or about his praise for Robertson.
Not one question. He never said on NBC or MSNBC a single word about Robertson's history of
inflammatory comments causing problems for Giuliani.
The double standard couldn't be clearer. The only question is, what it is about Barack
Obama and Rudy Giuliani that makes Tim Russert treat them so differently?
Why does Tim Russert think Barack Obama and Colin Powell are uniquely required and
qualified to talk about Harry Belafonte? Why does Tim Russert think Barack Obama has to
explain praise from Louis Farrakhan that he did not accept, but Rudy Giuliani
doesn't have to explain an endorsement from Pat Robertson that he did accept?
Glenn
Greenwald has more.
Given the intensity with which Tim Russert questioned Obama about Louis Farrakhan -- a
person whom Obama has nothing to do with -- two of Tim Russert's own associations may be
of interest:
- At the beginning of Russert's June 2004 appearance on Rush
Limbaugh's radio show, Limbaugh noted:
"We don't have guests on this program, but we made an exception here for our friend
Tim Russert of NBC News." Russert replied, "It's an honor to be here, Rush.
Thank you very much. " Later, the two reminisced about sharing a steak dinner.
Although the appearance came just weeks after Limbaugh's comparison of the torture at Abu
Ghraib to a fraternity prank, Russert politely chose not to ask his host about the
comments, or about any of Limbaugh's countless inflammatory statements about women and
minorities.
- Russert was a frequent
guest on Don Imus' radio show and appeared just two days after Imus' comments about
the Rutgers women's basketball team that ultimately led to his firing. Russert
didn't say anything to Imus about the comments, nor did he comment on the Imus controversy
in any other forum. Phil Noble noted in the Columbia Journalism Review in
2000 that at least one of Russert's appearances on Imus' radio show featured the two men
engaging in what Noble described as "kidding" about homosexuality. Noting
Imus' lengthy history of anti-gay rhetoric, Noble concluded: "Russert's kidding was
the equivalent of sharing a watermelon joke with David Duke."
Back to this week's debate. Tim Russert asked Obama
a question about "keeping your word." When Russert sets up a question by
announcing that it is about the candidate's character, there's a pretty good chance that
he is about to reveal something about his own. (Last fall, Russert began
a question to Hillary Clinton by announcing that the question "goes to the issue of
credibility." He was right; the question went to his credibility: Everything
he said after that was false. More on that below.) In this case, Russert asked about
Obama's position on accepting public financing in for the general election if he is the
Democratic nominee:
RUSSERT: Senator Obama, let me ask you about motivating,
inspiring, keeping your word. Nothing more important. Last year you said if you were the
nominee you would opt for public financing in the general election of the campaign; try to
get some of the money out. You checked "Yes" on a questionnaire. And now Senator
McCain has said, calling your bluff, let's do it. You seem to be waffling, saying, well,
if we can work on an arrangement here. Why won't you keep your word in writing that you
made to abide by public financing of the fall election?
This is horribly misleading. In fact,
in response to the questionnaire Russert referred to, Obama wrote: "Yes. ... If I am
the Democratic nominee, I will aggressively pursue an agreement with the Republican
nominee to preserve a publicly financed general election."
So when Obama now says, as Tim Russert puts it, "if
we can work on an arrangement," that isn't "waffling," that is entirely
consistent with his response to the questionnaire. Russert mischaracterized Obama's
response to the questionnaire in order to accuse him of "waffling" and not
"keep[ing] your word."
In response, Obama correctly noted that what he had
previously said was that if he is the nominee, he will "sit down with John
McCain" to pursue an agreement. Tim Russert then followed up: "So you may
opt out of public financing. You may break your word." But as Obama had just
explained (and as his answer to the very questionnaire Russert cited confirms) the
"word" Obama had given was that he would pursue an agreement with the Republican
nominee -- exactly the position he holds now. Russert was dishonest in saying that Obama
would be breaking his word if he opts out of public financing.
As bad as his performance this week was, it wasn't as bad
as his handling of last fall's Democratic debate in Philadelphia. That may have been the all-time
worst performance by a debate moderator. To cite just two examples: Annenberg's
FactCheck.org agreed
that Russert's question about the Clinton archives was "breathtakingly
misleading." Another question misrepresented previous questions Hillary Clinton had
been asked (including one of Russert's own questions), misrepresented her answers, quoted
her saying things she did not say, then concluded by suggesting that Clinton is a
liar. Somebody was lying, all right, but it wasn't Hillary Clinton. I explained
Russert's stunningly bad performance in greater detail at the time.
It takes a special kind of dishonesty to falsely describe
someone's previous comments in order to accuse them of lying and breaking their word.
There should be a word for that kind of behavior. In light of Tim Russert's question to
Clinton last fall and to Obama this week, perhaps it should be called "pulling a Tim
Russert."
After Tim Russert was blasted by FactCheck.org for a
"breathtakingly misleading" question to Clinton about the archives, you'd think
he would be extra careful to get it right next time, wouldn't you? In this week's
debate, Russert again asked Clinton about the archives -- and Russert
again got the facts wrong.
Tim Russert's mishandling of the influence that comes
with his lofty perch atop the political media food chain is by no means limited to his
conduct during presidential debates.
Last year, Tim Russert was interviewed for a Bill Moyers
report about how the Bush administration "misled the country" into the Iraq war
with the help of a "compliant press ... [that] pass[ed] on their propaganda as news
and cheer[ed] them on." During the interview, Tim Russert famously
complained that, during the run-up to the war, nobody called him to tell him they had
concerns about the administration's case for war: "My concern was, is that there were
concerns expressed by other government officials. And to this day, I wish my phone
had rung, or I had access to them."
Though the image of one of the nation's most influential
reporters staring at the phone, waiting for it to ring rather than actively seeking out
the news might strike you as appallingly poor journalism, it isn't the most self-damning
thing Russert said during the interview.
When Moyers asked him about the three networks' reliance
on the Bush administration for their Iraq stories, Tim Russert responded: "It's
important that you have an opposition party. That's our system of government"
-- suggesting that the reason the media relied on the Bush administration for Iraq
reporting was the lack of an opposition party. The notion that the media shouldn't
challenge the government unless the political party out of power does so first is
self-evidently wrong. But Russert was also
wrong about the lack of an opposition party, as I explained last year:
There was an "opposition party" during
the run-up to the Iraq war. The majority of congressional Democrats opposed invading Iraq
and voted against the law authorizing the use of force. Among the Democrats who voted
against the authorization were some of the party's most prominent and powerful members,
including Sens. Ted Kennedy, Barbara Boxer, and Dick Durbin, and Reps. John Conyers, Nancy
Pelosi and Charlie Rangel.
Given that the majority of congressional Democrats voted
against the authorization, including such household names as Ted Kennedy and Barbara
Boxer, how could Tim Russert suggest there was no "opposition party" during the
Iraq debate?
Maybe because there was scant evidence of an opposition
party on Russert's Meet the Press during the run-up to the Iraq war. On his
personal blog earlier this year, Media Matters for America Senior Fellow Duncan
Black examined
five months of Meet the Press guest lists, starting on the day Congress
authorized the use of force against Iraq to the day coalition forces actually invaded. Of
the appearances by Democrats that involved a discussion of Iraq, eight appearances were by
Democrats who voted for the authorization, and only three were by Democrats who voted
against it.
Remember, a majority of Democrats voted against the
authorization; but on Russert's Meet the Press, there were nearly three times as
many Democratic supporters of the authorization as opponents.
Is it any wonder that Tim Russert said there wasn't an
"opposition party" during the Iraq debate?
In November 2006, Tim Russert demonstrated that he still
didn't have room for the "opposition party" on his television show: The first
broadcast of Meet the Press after Democrats won control of both houses of
Congress, due in large part to their opposition to the Iraq war, featured two guests: John
McCain and Joe Lieberman. Neither was elected as a Democrat. Both are among the
staunchest supporters of the Iraq war.
Over the years, Russert has regularly smeared Democrats
and progressives over issues large and small:
- Last year, John McCain launched a petty attack on Barack
Obama over an Obama press release that spelled "flack jacket" with a
"c" in the word "flack." You might think that a United States senator
treating a debate over war as though it was a spelling bee would be mocked by the media
for trivializing questions of life and death. Not when the senator is John McCain; not
when the media figure is Tim Russert.
Here's how
Russert reported the flap: "Senator Obama talked about Senator McCain going to an
Iraqi marketplace warring a flak jacket and surrounded and protected by American troops,
but misspelled the word flak. And Senator McCain seized on that, suggesting that Senator
Obama doesn't have the necessary experience in military and security affairs."
Other than the inanity of repeating McCain's attempt to
correct Obama's spelling, Russert made another mistake: He didn't bother to check to see
if McCain was right. In fact, Webster's, NBC congressional correspondent Mike Viqueira,
and several U.S. military websites all agree that "flack" is an acceptable
spelling of the word. So Russert's repetition of McCain's attempt to spell-check Obama's
press releases was not only inane, it was also fundamentally false.
- During a January
interview with Hillary Clinton, Russert aired a truncated quote by former President
Bill Clinton to falsely suggest that Bill Clinton had been talking about Obama's
presidential campaign when he said, "This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've
ever seen." In fact, Bill Clinton's "fairy tale" comment had been about
Obama's record of opposition to the Iraq war, not about his bid for the presidency. Before
airing a clip of Bill Clinton's remarks, Russert told viewers: "This is exactly what
President Clinton said in Dartmouth. Here is the tape." But the clip showed Clinton
saying only 15 words, and omitted the sentences immediately prior, which make clear that
Clinton was talking about Obama's position on Iraq. Russert's use of the video clip was
beyond misleading and well into dishonest -- the whole dispute was about the context of
the "fairy tale"; the transcript shows Russert was clearly wrong, and he played
a video clip that omitted any of that context and acted as though it proved he was
correct.
- Russert blamed Bill Clinton for the fact that North Korea
had purportedly expanded its nuclear weapons program from having the ability to build two
nuclear devices in 1993 to 13 in 2006: "When President Clinton said that, the North
Koreans probably had the potential to build two nuclear devices. It's now up to 13. And if
nothing is done, when George Bush leaves office, it could reach 17. It seems as though the
United States talks tough with North Korea, but allows the program to go forward."
Russert omitted the rather important detail that, as Media Matters noted,
"North Korea did not produce any plutonium, nor build or test any nuclear bombs,
during Clinton's eight years in office."
- Five months after Democrats won control of both houses of
Congress in a campaign in which the Iraq war was a central issue, Russert announced
that "Democrats have always had a difficulty being competitive with the Republicans
in the public voters' mind on national security and foreign policy issues." Not only
was Russert's claim contradicted by the results of the most recent elections, it was
contradicted by contemporaneous polling.
- In June 2006, Russert asked a guest if same-sex marriage
was an issue "that the Republicans used successfully to demonstrate that the
Democrats were out of sync on cultural -- and values." But, as Media Matters
noted,
polling leading up to the 2004 election "found that the public was split equally on
which party better represented their values," and that "[m]ore recent polling
indicates that more people think Democrats better represent their values than do
Republicans."
- Immediately following the January 15, 2008, Democratic
presidential debate he moderated, Russert misrepresented
statements by Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John Edwards in order to suggest that
their positions had shifted since a September 2007 debate Russert moderated. (Russert, in
other words, "pulled a Russert.")
- In October 2006, Russert falsely claimed that
"one-third of [convicted lobbyist Jack] Abramoff's money went to Democrats." In
fact, Abramoff, a powerful Republican activist, never gave a
dime to any Democrat. This is not an obscure fact; the false GOP talking point that
Abramoff had contributed to Democrats had been debunked long (and often) before Russert
made the claim. Earlier in the year, Washington Post ombudsman Deborah Howell
faced a barrage
of public criticism for repeating the false claim.
- In November 2006, Russert suggested that Senate Democratic
Leader Harry Reid (NV) opposed lobbying reform and the creation of the Office of Public
Integrity. In
fact, Reid had introduced lobbying-reform legislation calling for the creation of that
office.
- Speaking about Hillary Clinton earlier this year, Russert suggested
that there is irony in a "self-avowed feminist" having shown "some
emotion," as though feminists are the dour, humorless beings Rush Limbaugh and Tucker
Carlson think they are. At least Russert stopped short of using the term
"feminazis."
- In February 2007, Russert said:
"My ear heard something that I had not heard from Democratic candidates in some time.
Up front, Senator Obama began his speech with references to his faith, and then came back
to that same issue in the speech. ... What's that about?" This is abject nonsense. It
is a Republican lie to say that Democrats do not discuss their faith.
Just the week before -- seven short days -- Democratic
presidential candidate John Edwards had talked about his religious upbringing. Where? In
an interview on Meet the Press. Tim Russert's Meet the Press. How did
the topic come up? Russert read Edwards a quote of Edwards saying, "I was raised in
the Southern Baptist church and so I have a belief system that arises from that. It's part
of who I am. I can't make it disappear." Edwards responded in part: "I grew up
in the Southern Baptist church, I was baptized in the Southern Baptist church, my dad was
a deacon. In fact, I was there just a couple weeks ago to see my father get an award.
It's, it's just part of who I am."
So: On February 4, 2007, Tim Russert read John Edwards a
quote of Edwards talking about his faith. Tim Russert then (presumably) listened as
Edwards spoke of his faith, of having been baptized, of his father being a deacon. Seven
short days later, Tim Russert told America that it had been "some time" since he
last heard a Democratic candidate talk about faith.
Other examples of Democrats discussing their faith
abound: Hillary Clinton. Bill Clinton. John Kerry (including in his speech accepting the
2004 Democratic presidential nomination, which, presumably, Russert listened to at some
point). Name a significant Democrat; it's a near certainty he or she has discussed his or
her faith. It is simply false to suggest otherwise, as Russert did. Russert wasn't telling
the truth; he was peddling a right-wing smear of Democrats.
- In 2006, as Democrats were criticizing the Bush
administration's decision to allow a company owned by the government of Dubai to run
terminals at six U.S. ports, Russert suggested
that Democrats were criticizing the deal in order to exploit it for political gain.
"Here's the situation," Russert told viewers. "Democrats believe they can
look tough on national security." Russert made no mention of the other
possibility: that Democrats were talking about port security because they had been
talking about port security for years.
The most prominent Democrats in the country -- Bill and
Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, and John Edwards among them -- had been discussing port
security for years. They had been doing so in the most high-profile ways available to
them: in speeches at the 2004 Democratic convention, during presidential debates. Even on
Tim Russert's Meet the Press, where, presumably, Russert was listening to them.
Yet, in 2006, Russert suggested Democrats had just
discovered and were cynically exploiting the issue. (A few weeks later, Democratic Sen.
Joe Biden appeared on Meet the Press and told Russert:
"I heard you on another show with [Today host] Katie Couric, Tim, saying
something, in effect that the Congress hadn't done much either. Back in 2001, we
introduced legislation for port security and rail security; 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005. It's
been repeatedly spurned by the administration.")
- Last year,
during congressional debate over Iraq, Russert said that "the Democratic leadership
realizes to vote against funding for the troops would be seen in a general election as not
supporting the troops." Russert said nothing similar about Republicans who had voted
against a previous version of the bill. To Tim Russert, Democrats who vote against a
war-spending bill are voting "against funding for the troops" and will be seen
as "not supporting the troops." But when Republicans vote against a war spending
bill ... no problem.
Russert is also a serial misinformer about Social
Security, frequently parroting bogus talking points produced by conservatives who want to
privatize the program:
- In questioning guests about Social Security, Russert
uses a pro-privatization talking point about the declining ratio of workers per
retiree to join the privatizers in suggesting that the system is in crisis: "When
Social Security was created there were ... 42 workers for every retiree. There are now
going to be, soon, two workers per retiree."
But economists Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot explained in
their book Social Security: The Phony Crisis that this statistic is grossly
misleading: "[T]he decline in this ratio has actually been considerably steeper in
the past. ... These figures also neglect to take into account the reduced costs faced by
the working population from having a smaller proportion of children to support. A more
accurate measure of the actual burden faced by the employed labor force would be the total
dependency ratio, which includes both retirees and children relative to the number of
workers."
In using the alarmist pro-privatization rhetoric, Russert
neglected to mention that the decline in the worker-to-retiree ratio has been steeper in
the past. Nor does he mention that the total dependency ratio is, and is projected to
remain, considerably lower than it was in the past.
- Contrary to his carefully cultivated reputation as a tough
interviewer who won't let guests get away with anything, Russert allows
advocates of Social Security privatization to spin and mislead with impunity.
- Russert employs
crisis rhetoric favored by the privatization lobby and frowned upon by those who
prefer to discuss Social Security accurately. He does so in part by trumpeting
a decade-old quotation of Bill Clinton talking about the Social Security trust fund (and
by attempting to use the quotation as a gotcha when interviewing Democrats). Clinton's
comments were based on projections that were accurate at the time, but more recent
projections show the trust fund to be in much better shape. Russert's use of Clinton's
1998 comments based on 1998 projections to argue that Social Security is in crisis now
is like a child going to her parents in the dead of winter and citing a weather report
from the previous July to argue that she should be able to wear shorts to school.
Along with his carefully cultivated image as a
blue-collar son of South Buffalo, the thing everybody knows about Tim Russert is what a
tough questioner he is. Like his regular-guy shtick, everybody knows this in large part
because Russert himself keeps telling us it's true. He told Time magazine, for
example, "I just don't let any kind of personal feelings interfere with my
professional job, with my professional mission of trying to elicit information and ask
questions. I believe very deeply, particularly about someone running for president, that
if you can't answer tough questions then you can't make tough decisions. And so I apply
that standard to all candidates from all parties."
In a piece headlined "How to beat Tim Russert,"
Slate.com's Jack Shafer wrote,
"Plotting his interviews out like chess matches, he deploys aggressive openings,
subtle feints, artfully constructed traps, and lightning offenses to crack the
politicians' phony veneer and reveal the genuine veneer beneath. ... If you've switched
your position on anything, or if your views on, say, the balanced budget clash with your
advocacy of new tax cuts, expect Russert to grill you."
But this popular (and Russert-approved) view of Russert
isn't quite right. There are a variety of ways you can avoid such tough questioning.
You could, for example,
advocate Social Security privatization. If you do that, you can not only use a variety of
phony arguments and bogus claims to buttress your position, you can do so with the
confidence that if you need a moment to catch your breath, Russert
himself will fill in for you.
Or you could be a Republican senator and presidential
candidate talking about the decision to go to war in Iraq. Important Safety Tip: Do not
skip the part about being a Republican.
In the first few months of 2007, Russert interviewed John
McCain, John Edwards, and Joe Biden. All were running for president. All had been in the
Senate for the 2002 vote authorizing the use of force in Iraq. Russert asked all of them
about the decision to go to war. Russert asked Biden and Edwards why they voted to
authorize the use of force despite the "caveats" in the 2002 NIE that cast doubt
on the notion that Iraq was a threat to the U.S. But when Russert interviewed McCain a few
weeks after interviewing Biden, he let McCain assert that the invasion of Iraq "was
certainly justified" because "[e]very intelligence agency in the world, not just
U.S., believed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction."
Oddly, Russert -- the notoriously tough questioner who
won't let anyone get away with anything and who brags he applies the same "standard
to all candidates from all parties" -- didn't
challenge McCain about the doubts expressed by American intelligence agencies in the
NIE. (A year earlier, McCain had claimed on Meet the Press that "every
intelligence agency in the world believed that he [Hussein] had weapons of mass
destruction." Russert didn't
challenge McCain that time, either. He does keep asking
Democrats about the NIE, though.)
Media Matters has documented many other examples
of Russert lobbing softballs to conservatives and letting them get away with misleading
spin and false claims:
- Russert allowed
former Reagan adviser Ken Adelman to claim that "no one knew" that intelligence
indicating Iraq had WMD "wasn't true." In fact, many, people had challenged the
accuracy of that intelligence. The "no one knew" claim has long been the GOP's
defense against criticisms of its decision to go to war, but Russert was either unprepared
to challenge it or uninterested in doing so (just as he would later give McCain a pass on
the same.)
- On the May 20, 2007, edition
of Meet the Press, guest Newt Gingrich asserted that an alleged plot to carry out
an armed attack on Fort Dix was evidence that terrorists "don't plan to stop in
Baghdad. They are coming here as soon as they can get here." This is a common
right-wing talking point, but it has been repeatedly disputed by experts. In the weeks
prior to Gingrich's appearance, The Washington Post, McClatchy, and NPR had all
run reports that included intelligence officials and other experts disputing the claim.
NPR cited, among others, retired Army Lt. Col. James Carafano, a research fellow at the
conservative Heritage Foundation. According to NPR, "calls asserting that terrorists
will follow U.S. troops home naive and poor rhetoric." The NPR report also featured a
clip of Carafano saying, "There's no national security analyst that's really credible
who thinks that people are going to come from Iraq and attack the United States -- that
that's a credible scenario." But rather than challenging Gingrich's claim, Russert
turned to his Democratic guest and instructed him to respond to Gingrich's far-fetched
assertions.
- In early 2006, Russert hosted Gen. Peter Pace,
then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and failed to
challenge a series of dubious assertions Pace made in support of his claim that the
Iraq war was "going very, very well."
- In 2004, Russert asked
Jerry Falwell about his comments that abortion rights advocates, feminists, and
homosexuals, among others, were responsible for the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Falwell falsely claimed that he "likewise" held responsible "a sleeping
church, a lethargic church." Falwell wasn't telling the truth, but Russert let him
get away with it. Russert also asked Falwell about a study that showed that "[t]he
states with the highest level [of divorce] are the so-called Bible Belt, in the
South." In response, Falwell asserted that "born-again, Bible-believing
Christians who take the Bible as the word of God," the divorce rate is lower. That
wasn't true, either -- but again, Russert failed to challenge Falwell. Keep in mind:
Russert brought both of these topics up. He presumably had Falwell's 9-11 quote handy;
after all, he read it to Falwell. But when Falwell falsely described his comments, Russert
let him get away with it.
- Interviewing Sens. John Warner, a Republican, and Joe
Biden, a Democrat, Russert asked Warner about whether the Bush administration distorted or
withheld evidence that the aluminum tubes sought by Saddam Hussein didn't have anything to
do with WMD. When Warner dodged the question, not saying anything about the aluminum tubes
but instead simply asserting that Bush "would not intentionally take any facts and
try and mislead the American public," Russert did not press
Warner either on that dubious assertion or on his failure to answer the question. Instead,
he turned to Biden and grilled him on his vote to authorize the use of force, asking Biden
about the 2002 NIE that contained caveats about the WMD intelligence. Russert didn't ask
Warner why he voted to authorize force despite the NIE caveats.
- Russert allowed
Richard Perle to suggest that former Vice President Al Gore supported the invasion of Iraq
in a 2002 speech. In fact, during that speech Gore opposed the invasion.
- Russert repeatedly
failed to challenge false and dubious claims by Vice President Cheney during a
September 2006 interview.
- In 2005, amid speculation that the investigation into the
Bush administration's outing of CIA agent Valerie Plame would yield indictments on perjury
and obstruction of justice charges, conservatives were frantically trying to downplay the
seriousness of those charges. Appearing on Meet the Press, Republican Sen. Kay
Bailey Hutchison did so by claiming "there were charges against former President Bill
Clinton besides perjury and obstruction of justice" during his 1999 Senate trial on
impeachment charges. In fact, there were not, as Russert should have known; the
impeachment trial was a fairly high-profile event. Nevertheless, Russert let
Hutchison's false claim go uncorrected.
- In 2005, Russert hosted RNC chair Ken Mehlman, who claimed
that the 9-11 Commission had "totally discredited" the notion that the Bush
administration manipulated prewar intelligence. Given that the 9-11 Commission didn't even
address the administration's use of prewar intelligence, this was a pretty big falsehood.
But Russert let Mehlman
get away with it.
- In early 2007, Russert let John McCain make a series of
wild claims without challenging them. McCain claimed Joe Lieberman's re-election in
Connecticut was evidence that it was not "clear-cut" that the public opposed the
Iraq war. Russert failed to
note that exit polls showed that Lieberman was re-elected in spite of his support for
the war, not because of it. Nor did Russert note that Lieberman spent the bulk of the
campaign frantically pretending to be a war critic and trying to convince voters that he
intended to end the war and bring the troops home.
McCain also claimed that at the time of the first Gulf
War, "only 15 percent of the American people thought we ought to go to Kuwait and get
rid of Saddam Hussein there." In fact, a Gallup poll taken the day before the launch
of Operation Desert Storm found 79 percent of Americans supported going to war in the
Gulf. McCain could hardly have been more wrong, yet Russert didn't
correct the glaring falsehood.
- Interviewing Republican California Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger, Russert asked such hard-hitting questions as whether or not Schwarzenegger
agreed with the assessment that he had a "mastery of the state's rising independent
center"; whether Schwarzenegger thought a description of him as a
"moderate" was "fair," the open-ended "What is an Arnold
Republican?" and, best of all: "You're a Republican winning in California, a
Blue State, in a Democratic year. People would have you on the short list for the
Republican nomination in 2008. But they can't for one reason: You were not born in the
United States. Is that fair?" Russert had a follow-up to that one: "You've been
a citizen for 23 years, shouldn't you have an opportunity to run for president?" In
between tossing
Schwarzenegger softballs, Russert let him get away with whoppers like his claim that
"we have the lowest unemployment rate in 30 years or so." That was true -- if by
"30 years or so" Schwarzenegger meant "six years."
Russert doesn't just toss softballs to conservatives when
he interviews them. He carries their water in other ways, too.
- As Media Matters' Eric Boehlert has explained,
during the 2004 election, Russert apparently knew that then-Cheney aide Scooter Libby had
given false testimony to the special counsel investigating the Bush administration's
outing of Valerie Plame -- but Russert
kept this information secret.
- President Bush and his press secretary indicated during
the Plame leak investigation that anyone who had anything to do with the leak would be
fired. When it was clear that Karl Rove had participated in the leak, Russert
helped the Bush administration move the goalposts, describing Bush as having
"said early on in this [investigation] that if anyone broke the law, that he would
deal with it." Since Rove was never convicted of anything, under this standard, Bush
wouldn't have to fire him.
- Russert adopted
the GOP's inflammatory description of a Democratic Iraq proposal as
"slow-bleed."
- Russert falsely
claimed there was "no evidence" that former head of the Iraqi National
Congress Ahmed Chalabi "was associated with Curveball," a relative of a top
Chalabi aide who became the most influential source for U.S. intelligence on Iraq's
biological weapons program. In fact, independent reporting and the then-recently released
Robb-Silberman report on intelligence regarding WMDs (to which Russert referred) indicated
a clear connection between Chalabi and Curveball.
- During the fight over President Bush's nomination of
Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, Russert twice
claimed that when former President Bill Clinton nominated Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen
Breyer to the Supreme Court, Senate Republicans voted for them despite ideological
differences with the "two liberal jurists." Russert also claimed that Alito's
judicial philosophy is "no more conservative than Ginsburg and Breyer's were
liberal." Russert
wasn't telling the truth. Ginsburg and Breyer were seen as moderate nominees, not
liberal, and had in fact been recommended for nomination by Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of
Utah.
- Immediately after the 2004 vice presidential debate
between John Edwards and Dick Cheney, Russert repeated Cheney's claim during the debate
that he had previously never met Edwards until moments before the debate started -- a
claim Cheney made in order to suggest that Edwards didn't show up for work at the Senate.
The next morning, Russert noted that in fact the two had met multiple times before,
including one morning in 2001 when they were both on Meet the Press and,
according to Russert, "they stopped and shook hands." Russert said that, during
the debate, he "thought that John Edwards would call him on it right at that very
moment." So -- according to his own statements -- Russert knew while watching the
debate that Cheney had lied. Yet after the debate, he repeated
Cheney's lie, without giving viewers any indication that it wasn't true.
Is it any wonder that Cheney's staff believes they can
control the message on Meet the Press? The Washington Post's Dana
Milbank reported
during the Scooter Libby trial:
Memo to Tim Russert: Dick Cheney thinks he controls you.
This delicious morsel about the "Meet the
Press" host and the vice president was part of the extensive dish Cathie Martin
served up yesterday when the former Cheney communications director took the stand in the
perjury trial of former Cheney chief of staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby.
Flashed on the courtroom computer screens were her notes
from 2004 about how Cheney could respond to allegations that the Bush administration had
played fast and loose with evidence of Iraq's nuclear ambitions. Option 1:
"MTP-VP," she wrote, then listed the pros and cons of a vice presidential
appearance on the Sunday show. Under "pro," she wrote: "control
message."
"I suggested we put the vice president on 'Meet the
Press,' which was a tactic we often used," Martin testified. "It's our best
format."
If you still aren't persuaded that on Meet the Press,
it is often the question -- and the questioner -- that is the problem, spend a
few hours poking around Bob
Somerby's Daily Howler archives. Be sure to seek out his analysis of Russert's
interviews with Al Gore, Howard Dean, and George W. Bush.
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