Tag Archives: 2010 congressional

Two NYT Reporters Tar Nevada GOP Candidate Sharron Angle: "Far-Right," "Extreme"

Meet the “so extreme,” “far-right conservative” Sharron Angle, who won the Nevada Senate primary on Tuesday and will face Democrat Harry Reid in the fall. Those quotes aren’t from Daily Kos or even a New York Times columnist, but from two of the Times’s political reporters, Jennifer Steinhauer and Jackie Calmes. (This post is based on two items previously posted on Times Watch .) Reporter Jennifer Steinhauer first took aim at Sharron Angle in Thursday’s ” Results of Nevada Primary Set Up Senate Race of Sharp Contrasts .” Notice a pattern in Steinhauer’s labeling? Further, Ms. Angle — the Tea Party-blessed candidate who bested her two better-financed competitors in Tuesday’s primary — is an untested statewide candidate whose positions as a lawmaker put her firmly to the right of most mainstream Nevada voters . The hot lights of national exposure can be a liability for new — and overly loquacious — candidates, as Rand Paul, the Republican Senate nominee from Kentucky, quickly found. …. Among her detractors and her supporters she is known as a far-right conservative and a thorn in the side of both parties, routinely voting no on almost everything that came before the Legislature. She is also a tireless campaigner. When a 2002 redistricting forced her to face off with a wildly popular Republican incumbent, Greg Brower, she went door to door nightly, won and ended his political career. The Times rarely if ever identifies Democratic candidates as far-left. Also on Thursday, Washington-based reporter Jackie Calmes twice called Angle “extreme” in a Times ” Political Points ” podcast, available at nytimes.com. Here’s Calmes telling host Sam Roberts about the primary elections, about 16 minutes from the end: The interesting thing about the number of women we had in here is that so many of them were Republican. But I guess that’s not so surprising when you think that of all the candidates out there in some very crowded fields, most of it’s on the Republican side because they see a chance here where they didn’t in the last two election cycles to really get elected. It’s a Republican year, it stands to be. But on the other hand some of these women are, like in Nevada, against Harry Reid, Sharron Angle has, she’s a Tea Party candidate who’s given Democrats renewed hope of saving Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, from what was looking to be near certain defeat, because she is so extreme . So much so that some of the Republicans in the immediate aftermath have started distancing themselves from her. Calmes again, 12 minutes 40 seconds from the end: The Democrats generally at first blush on Wednesday morning when the results were in were happy that both Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, looks newly secure because the Nevada Republicans had nominated such an extreme, Tea Party-type member ; and that Blanche Lincoln had survived against an insurgent rival backed by the party’s left.

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Two NYT Reporters Tar Nevada GOP Candidate Sharron Angle: "Far-Right," "Extreme"

Conservative Pundits Strike a Chord as Nation Grows Wary of Liberalism

On February 19, 2009, Rick Santelli helped create a movement whose political impact has not yet been fully realized. The ” Rant Heard ‘Round the World ,” as it has become known, was a profound, if hardly isolated example of the power of conservative pundits to enact political change. That power has grown as Americans have become more sympathetic to the economic conservative argument–both the moral/spiritual element of it, and the strictly economic one. The American people have by and large come full circle in a short time, and the pundits that retain the most influence in our society have changed accordingly. Santelli is the perfect example, as he was certainly not the prominent name he is now before he let loose on the floor of the Chicago exchange. Michael Barone explains the essential appeal of the rant. He wrote Wednesday that it “was both an economic and a moral argument.” Economic, because subsidies to the improvident are an unproductive investment. We know now that very many of the beneficiaries of the administration’s mortgage modification programs ended up in foreclosure anyway. Subsidies just prolonged the agony. But it’s also a moral argument. Taking money away from those who made prudent decisions and giving it to people who made imprudent decisions is casting society’s vote for imprudence and self-indulgence. It mocks thrift and makes chumps out of those who pay their own way. We should, Santelli argued, “reward people that can carry the water rather than just drink the water.” Barone also notes the amazing speed at which tea party rallies were set up all over the nation. The country seemed predisposed to the sort of objections Santelli had raised. “We’re thinking of having a Chicago tea party in July,” Santelli said. As it turned out, thousands of previously uninvolved citizens flocked to tea parties all over America even sooner, and now they’re making their mark in primaries and special elections. New Deal historians can’t explain that. Rick Santelli’s rant does. A year and a half later, the tea party continues unabated. It has played large roles in electoral contests throughout the year–most notably in the election of Sen. Scott Brown–and will assuredly continue to do so through November. But more importantly, the spirit that made Santelli’s rant is still alive and well, as evinced by the continued influence of the same message of fiscal and personal restraint–a mishmash of conservatism, libertarianism, and populism. Earlier this week, Glenn Beck harnessed this same spirit when he promoted Friedrich Hayek’s monumental work “The Road to Serfdom,” on air. In about a day the book was number 1 on the Amazon and Barnes and Noble bestsellers lists. That’s a far cry from starting a political movement, but it is a power unrivaled except perhaps by Oprah. Beck’s wildly successful promotion of Hayek’s work demonstrates this point. Mediaite’s Frances Martel reported today on the tremendous success of “The Road to Serfdom” since Beck promoted it on air. Before Beck dedicated an entire program to it, The Road to Serfdom  was doing slightly better in the bestseller rankings than the average mid-20th century political science book, coming in at #295 on the Amazon list and #3,254 rank on Barnes and Noble’s site. The “slightly better” is partly due to the fact that Tuesday’s appearance wasn’t the first on a Fox network for the book: libertarian Fox Business host John Stossel started wearing a ball and chain to work to advertise the book (or at least the catchphrase) long before it landed on Beck’s radar. Now it’s topping both lists, and shortly after the program was over, the book title soared to the top of Google’s top search list. Beck and Santelli together demonstrated one fact: when conservative pundits speak, people listen. Why is that? Perhaps it has something to do with the message both Beck and Santelli offered: they both resonate with Americans in profound ways. The influence enjoyed by the likes of Santelli and Beck serve to counter the consistent pro-Obama reporting from the legacy media. But that influence is also born of a similar national mood to the one that made the media so influential in the run-up to the 2008 election. Voters unhappy with the Republican Party and President Bush were predisposed to the liberal messages being thrown at them daily by the liberal press. Now the nation’s mood has turned against liberalism–and hence against the mainstream media–and conservative commentators, though fewer in number, have the ability to enact political change.

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Conservative Pundits Strike a Chord as Nation Grows Wary of Liberalism

GOP Women Win Primaries, ABC News Thanks Hillary Clinton

All three network morning shows touted the good showing by a bevy of Republican women and Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln in yesterday’s primaries. NBC’s Today and CBS’s Early Show both headlined “Ladies Night,” while ABC’s Good Morning America’s take was “Women Rule.” But ABC fill-in anchor Elizabeth Vargas suggested credit should really go to Hillary Clinton, because she “helped by running for president,” paving the way for “all these other women about to possibly take office, high office, in those states.” Vargas’s co-host and former Clinton employee George Stephanpoulos offered no comment. Here’s how ABC’s Good Morning America opened their June 9 program: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS, teasing at the top of the show: This morning, voters voice their anger and choose new faces in primaries across 12 states. Women and Tea Party candidates the big winners, but can they ride voter frustration all the way to Washington?… STEPHANOPOULOS opening the show: The big headline out of last night’s primaries: “Women Rule.” How about this — women candidates in four states won primaries. In California, for the first time in history, Republicans have chosen women candidates for both governor and senator. In Arkansas, Senator Blanche Lincoln bucked the anti-incumbent trend to come back against a well-funded challenger. And we’re going to talk live to the woman [Nikki Haley] who survived one of the roughest races, and now the favorite to become the first ever female governor in South Carolina. Then, after a wrap-up report by Jon Karl and Stephanopoulos’s interview with Haley: VARGAS: So many women saying – doing so well, and many saying perhaps Hillary Clinton helped by running for president. All these other women about to possibly take office, high office, in those states.

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GOP Women Win Primaries, ABC News Thanks Hillary Clinton