Tag Archives: democrats

Robert Scheer Interviews Susan McDougal – Part Three

Author: truthdig Added: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 19:43:57 -0800 Duration: 699 From Truthdig.com: When Susan McDougal refused to implicate the Clintons in the Whitewater fiasco, she was thrown in prison, left alone with murderers and her own stubborn dignity. Savaged by Republicans and abandoned by Democrats, she would emerge from that dark chapter of American history a hero. Here she joins Truthdig editor Robert Scheer to tell her amazing story.

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Robert Scheer Interviews Susan McDougal – Part Three

Robert Scheer Interviews Susan McDougal – Part Four

Author: truthdig Added: Wed, 17 Jan 2007 19:58:59 -0800 Duration: 597 From Truthdig.com: When Susan McDougal refused to implicate the Clintons in the Whitewater fiasco, she was thrown in prison, left alone with murderers and her own stubborn dignity. Savaged by Republicans and abandoned by Democrats, she would emerge from that dark chapter of American history a hero. Here she joins Truthdig editor Robert Scheer to tell her amazing story.

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Robert Scheer Interviews Susan McDougal – Part Four

Gore Vidal and Robert Scheer on Politics and Mortality

Author: truthdig Added: Fri, 27 Apr 2007 06:22:10 -0800 Duration: 493 Gore Vidal and Robert Scheer discuss the Democrats running for president and what the future holds for America. The iconic author explains why he thinks a depression is inevitable, and why that’s a good thing.

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Gore Vidal and Robert Scheer on Politics and Mortality

Spend Now, Save Later

By E.J. Dionne, Jr. Do Democrats honestly think that nickel-and-diming on stimulus now will either have a substantial impact on the long-term deficit or be of greater help to them in this fall’s elections than more robust growth? Related Entries June 13, 2010 They Just Found $1 Trillion in Afghanistan June 13, 2010 Stealth Superpower: How Turkey Is Chasing China in Bid to Become the Next Big Thing

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Spend Now, Save Later

Chris Matthews Accuses Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina of ‘Very Hard-right Talk’

With Americans heading to the polls in less than five months, the liberal media have once again adopted their typical strategy of depicting every Republican candidate as being a far-right extremist. Such was on display in this weekend’s syndicated “Chris Matthews Show” when the host began the second segment by saying, “This week’s primaries proved again that this anti-Washington year may usher in Republicans who owe a lot to the far-right.” Matthews then played a clip from his upcoming special “Rise of the New Right,” saying after its completion, “Well, Tea Parties have had some luck with conservatives who have beaten establishment Republicans this year. This past Tuesday night, for example, Nevada Republicans chose a Tea Party candidate to go against Harry Reid. And she’s not shy about her extreme views like killing Social Security and Medicare.” After a brief clip of Sharron Angle speaking at a Nevada debate, Matthews said, “And even mainstream Republicans like Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina who won nominations this week in California have bent to the right in reaction to pressure from the hard-right.” Matthews then showed a Whitman ad wherein she was talking tough about illegal immigration followed by a Fiorina commercial that had the nerve to use “that tried and true conservative line ‘The Democrats are soft on terrorism.'” The host then asked New York Magazine’s John Heilemann, “That’s very hard-right talk; is that the smart talk to win an election in California?” (video follows with more transcription of this discussion): JOHN HEILEMANN, NEW YORK MAGAZINE: Well, it’s not…It’s very clear in California in particular that this is a problem, and you see both sides of the problem. In the Fiorina race, Tom Campbell would have been the better candidate for the Republicans. MATTHEWS: To win. HEILEMANN: To win in, in, in November. Stop the tape. Whether or not Campbell has a better chance of beating Sen Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) than Fiorina does is quite speculative. After all, he got absolutely crushed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) in 2000 losing by over 2 million votes. He even lost his own district that year by 15 points! But even this is somewhat irrelevant, for the truly conservative candidate in last week’s Republican primary was the Tea Party’s favorite Chuck DeVore. Readers should recall former Alaska governor Sarah Palin taking A LOT of heat last month when she came out in support of Fiorina instead of DeVore. As such, Matthews and Heilemann trying to depict Fiorina as a far-right candidate here were way off base: MATTHEWS: Do they want to win or be right, I mean literally right? HEILEMANN: Well, the Republican primary, the Republican primary electorate seems to want to be right more than it wants to win. Nonsense. Republicans on Tuesday went with the person with the most money that they believe can beat Boxer. If they had wanted the most conservative candidate, they would have gone for DeVore. That is NOT even debatable: HEILEMANN: So you wind up then with Carly Fiorina saying stuff it’s not clear she really believes in order to win against a candidate who probably would have had a better chance. Based on what? Fiorina beat Campbell by 32 points! Unfortunately, Matthews didn’t challenge Heilemann’s ignorant display: HEILEMANN: Then you have Meg Whitman who an otherwise very attractive candidate with tons of money who’s on the fundamentally wrong side as history shows us in California of this immigration issue. These are two candidates who on the surface should be very attractive, very compelling, and they’re both so far off on the right they’re so stranded. Amazing. Like Fiorina, Whitman wasn’t the conservative candidate in her race. That was Steve Poizner, the Golden State’s Insurance Commissioner. Conservatives throughout California largely supported him including Rep. Tom McClintock who said in campaign ads: Steve Poizner is the only conservative candidate in this race and is serious about implementing real reform in Sacramento. I am convinced that Meg Whitman has nothing to offer other than Arnold Schwarzenegger’s third term. That is something California cannot afford. Taking this further, Whitman was John McCain’s national co-chair when he ran for president in 2008. As for her immigration position, Whitman was critical of Arizona’s SB 1070. For some reason neither Matthews nor Heilemann brought this up. In the end, now that the primary season is over, the goal of America’s media will be to make every Republican candidate around the country look far more conservative than they really are. Something they possibly haven’t considered is that in a year when liberal is likely a four-letter word, being branded as far-right might be a good thing. Hmmm. As a post facto aside, Matthews and Company did discuss Fiorina’s open mike hair comment about Boxer. For some reason, as they chatted about all this “very hard-right talk” from Republicans, the subject of Democrat gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown calling Whitman a Nazi never surfaced. Color me unsurprised.  

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Chris Matthews Accuses Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina of ‘Very Hard-right Talk’

Chris Matthews: Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina Guilty of ‘Very Hard-right Talk’

With Americans heading to the polls in less than five months, the liberal media have once again adopted their typical strategy of depicting every Republican candidate as being a far-right extremist. Such was on display in this weekend’s syndicated “Chris Matthews Show” when the host began the second segment by saying, “This week’s primaries proved again that this anti-Washington year may usher in Republicans who owe a lot to the far-right.” Matthews then played a clip from his upcoming special “Rise of the New Right,” saying after its completion, “Well, Tea Parties have had some luck with conservatives who have beaten establishment Republicans this year. This past Tuesday night, for example, Nevada Republicans chose a Tea Party candidate to go against Harry Reid. And she’s not shy about her extreme views like killing Social Security and Medicare. After a brief clip of Sharron Angle speaking at a Nevada debate, Matthews said, “And even mainstream Republicans like Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina who won nominations this week in California have bent to the right in reaction to pressure from the hard-right.” Matthews then showed a Whitman ad wherein she was talking tough about illegal immigration followed by a Fiorina commercial that had the nerve to use “that tried and true conservative line ‘The Democrats are soft on terrorism.'” The host then asked New York Magazine’s John Heilemann, “That’s very hard-right talk; is that the smart talk to win an election in California?” (video follows with more transcription of this discussion): JOHN HEILEMANN, NEW YORK MAGAZINE: Well, it’s not…It’s very clear in California in particular that this is a problem, and you see both sides of the problem. In the Fiorina race, Tom Campbell would have been the better candidate for the Republicans. MATTHEWS: To win. HEILEMANN: To win in, in, in November. Stop the tape. Whether or not Campbell has a better chance of beating Boxer than Fiorina does is quite speculative. After all, he got absolutely crushed by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) in 2000 losing by over 2 million votes. He even lost his own district that year by 15 points! But even this is somewhat irrelevant, for the truly conservative candidate in last week’s Republican primary was the Tea Party’s favorite Chuck DeVore. Readers should recall former Alaska governor Sarah Palin taking A LOT of heat last month when she came out in support of Fiorina instead of DeVore. As such, Matthews and Heilemann trying to depict Fiorina as a far-right candidate here were way off base: MATTHEWS: Do they want to win or be right, I mean literally right? HEILEMANN: Well, the Republican primary, the Republican primary electorate seems to want to be right more than it wants to win. Nonsense. Republicans on Tuesday went with the person with the most money that they believe can beat Boxer. If they had wanted the most conservative candidate, they would have gone for DeVore. That is NOT even debatable: HEILEMANN: So you wind up then with Carly Fiorina saying stuff it’s not clear she really believes in order to win against a candidate who probably would have had a better chance. Based on what? Fiorina beat Campbell by 32 points! Unfortunately, Matthews didn’t challenge Heilemann’s ignorant display: HEILEMANN: Then you have Meg Whitman who an otherwise very attractive candidate with tons of money who’s on the fundamentally wrong side as history shows us in California of this immigration issue. These are two candidates who on the surface should be very attractive, very compelling, and they’re both so far off on the right they’re so stranded. Amazing. Like Fiorina, Whitman wasn’t the conservative candidate in her race. That was Steve Poizner, the Golden State’s Insurance Commissioner. Conservatives throughout California largely supported him including Rep. Tom McClintock who said in campaign ads: Steve Poizner is the only conservative candidate in this race and is serious about implementing real reform in Sacramento. I am convinced that Meg Whitman has nothing to offer other than Arnold Schwarzenegger’s third term. That is something California cannot afford. Taking this further, Whitman was John McCain’s national co-chair when he ran for president in 2008. As for her immigration position, Whitman was critical of Arizona’s SB 1070. For some reason neither Matthews nor Heilemann brought this up. In the end, now that the primary season is over, the goal of America’s media will be to make every Republican candidate around the country look far more conservative than they really are. Something they possibly haven’t considered is that in a year when liberal is likely a four-letter word, being branded as far-right might be a good thing. Hmmm.

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Chris Matthews: Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina Guilty of ‘Very Hard-right Talk’

Kurtz: Helen Thomas Has Been Excused for Saying Questionable Things for Years

CNN’s Howard Kurtz on Sunday said an inconvenient truth that few in his industry would care to admit: “Helen Thomas has been saying all kinds of questionable things in [the White House] press room for the past decade, but her colleagues, for the most part, had given her a pass until now.” This indeed is the real lesson behind last week’s retirement of the nation’s longest living member of the White House press corps: she for years was allowed by her colleagues to regularly get away with what most of them knew was unacceptable behavior. Interesting that media members are learning this lesson only when one of their own falls from grace. The question is whether or not they’ll recognize that they should always be scrutinizing each other’s performance in order to maintain the integrity and professionalism key to an industry that is charged with policing government and the politicians that serve our very nation. This seems especially important given how the same people now admitting they let Thomas get away with media malpractice ignored all journalistic standards during the last presidential campaign and have continued to do so since Barack Obama was inaugurated. Consider that as you watch Kurtz and his panel discuss the Thomas affair on the opening segment of Sunday’s “Reliable Sources” (video follows with transcribed highlights and commentary, full transcript at end of post):   HOWARD KURTZ, HOST: Dana Milbank, has the White House Press Corps, where Helen Thomas’ views have been no secret, been protecting her for years?  KURTZ: Lynn Sweet, I know you like and admire Helen Thomas. Do you think she was cut some slack because she was in her ’80s…before this incident?    KURTZ: Well, because she had worked for UPI, but then she was a columnist, which ordinarily would not warrant you a front-row seat.    After playing some clips of absurd things Thomas has said in the press room in the past, Kurtz asked, “What correspondent or columnist gets to say things like that?” The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank answered, “Nobody else, I think, with the exception of her.”   KURTZ: But, see, if you look at some of the sound bites we just played, some of the questions that she’s asked over the years, I would agree, to some extent, she basically didn’t care what people thought of her. She was there to ask the kind of questions, particularly to President Bush, who she did not like, that she called one of the worst presidents ever. But is it the role of the journalists, even opinion journalists, to denounce the war in Iraq, to accuse the administration of killing civilians?   JEFFREY GOLDBERG, NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT, “THE ATLANTIC”: Well, there’s two sides to this. I mean, no. Obviously, you’re not supposed to be in the press room advocating for a Hezbollah opposition. KURTZ: But, Lynn, did it ever make you uncomfortable when Helen Thomas would talk about the brutal military occupation by Israel, or talk about the U.S. inflicting collective punishment against Lebanon and Palestine? Did that ever bother you?  LYNN SWEET, CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Yes, it bothered me, but the — whether or not it bothered me, yes. KURTZ: But I wonder — here you have this room full of journalists, and they write about everybody else, and yet they don’t write about colleagues who do this sort of thing. GOLDBERG: We all have or have had grandmothers who occasionally say wacky things. And when you reach the age of 89, you know, you do get some slack.  (CROSSTALK) GOLDBERG: Well, and there are always lines. KURTZ: And the wacky grandmothers don’t have a seat in the press room and here on television.  Exactly. Kurtz was hitting on an important point here: this is the White House press room. Why was the “wacky grandmother” given a seat in the country’s most prestigious press venue for so many years and allowed to make these statements with cameras rolling? And why did her colleagues — who supposedly feel pride in their profession and the journalism industry as a whole — allow it to happen for so long without writing about it to the point that she was forced out long before this final embarrassing moment? As the segment moved to a close, it was Goldberg that really hit the nail on the head:  KURTZ: Do you think, Lynn Sweet, that the media are allowing this unfortunate controversy — and it is unfortunate — to overshadow this storied career that Helen Thomas has had?  SWEET: Perhaps not. Stories unfold, Howie, in chapters. The first chapter had to be the news of what she said. And I think in time there will be a balance. You know, she had this seat because she was a trailblazer, not because of her views on Mideast relations.  KURTZ: Agreed? MILBANK: I think it will be — the Germany remark will become the second half paragraph now, but not the first.  GOLDBERG: But let’s be real for a second. Helen Thomas has excoriated generations of White House officials, congressional leaders. She cut them no slack when they made a gaffe. KURTZ: And therefore?  GOLDBERG: And therefore —  KURTZ: The same standard should apply to her?  GOLDBERG: The same standard should apply to all journalists.   Indeed, and therein lies the larger lesson. For years, so-called journalists allowed Thomas to play the part of the White House press room clown with total impunity. Now, the industry has been tarnished by their lack of diligence. With the way these same folks have behaved in recent years — from their abysmal coverage of the last administration to how they helped the Democrats take over Congress in 2006 and how they enabled an inexperienced, unqualified junior senator from Illinois to become President of the United States — they had better understand the broader scope of this issue. After all, as Kurtz and Company pointed out, Thomas wasn’t the only journalist behaving badly. In the end, when you dishonestly protect one of your own from scrutiny — whether it’s a fellow journalist you like or a politician you support — you’re doing your industry and the nation a grave disservice.  Full transcript for those interested: HOWARD KURTZ, HOST: It came as a shock to much of the country when Helen Thomas, a White House fixture and icon, a trailblazer for female journalists, self-destructed before the cameras — a single video camera wielded by a rabbi, to be precise. The reaction to her anti-Israel diatribe was so overwhelming, that Thomas resigned this week as a Hearst newspaper columnist. But why was it such a stunner to so many people? Helen Thomas has been saying all kinds of questionable things in that press room for the past decade, but her colleagues, for the most part, had given her a pass until now. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) KATIE COURIC, CBS NEWS: A legendary career in journalism ends over some angry words about Israel. DIANE SAWYER, ABC NEWS: What happened to the 89-year-old fixture in the front of the briefings? UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It’s a very creepy and slightly chilling statement. RICK SANCHEZ, CNN: Helen Thomas seems to side with Hamas when it comes to Israel. With Hamas. KAREN HANRETTY, REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST: This is a woman who thinks that Jews should go back to the place where they were eliminated, where they were liquefied, and it’s Germany. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: The words that abruptly ended Thomas’ career were recorded by Rabbi David Nesenoff during a White House celebration of Jewish Heritage Day. RABBI DAVID NESENOFF, RABBILIVE.COM: Any comments on Israel? We’re asking everybody today. Any comments on Israel? HELEN THOMAS, FMR. HEARST COLUMNIST: Tell them to get the hell out of Palestinian. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Any better comments than that? THOMAS: Remember, these people are occupied and it’s their land. It’s not Germany and it’s not Poland. NESENOFF: So where should they go? What should they do? THOMAS: They go home. NESENOFF: Where’s home? THOMAS: Poland, Germany. NESENOFF: So you think Jews should go back to Poland and Germany? THOMAS: And America and everywhere else. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: Joining us now to talk about this sad finale for Helen Thomas and what it says about Washington journalism, Dana Milbank, who writes “The Washington Sketch” column for “The Washington Post”; Lynn Sweet, Washington bureau chief of “The Chicago Sun-Times” and a columnist for PoliticsDaily.com; and Jeffrey Goldberg, national correspondent for “The Atlantic.” Dana Milbank, has the White House Press Corps, where Helen Thomas’ views have been no secret, been protecting her for years? DANA MILBANK, “THE WASHINGTON POST”: Well, protecting her in the sense that there was a great deal of fondness for her because of her history, because she was such an institution. I don’t think she’s ever said anything quite like this before. I think people will tolerate a stand against Israel as distinct from an anti-Semitic stance, basically, against Jews, which we heard her say there, so it was just shocking to hear that. Now, it wasn’t surprising that she held those views, it was shocking that she actually said it, I think. KURTZ: Lynn Sweet, I know you like and admire Helen Thomas. Do you think she was cut some slack because she was in her ’80s? LYNN SWEET, WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF, “CHICAGO SUN-TIMES”: Well, no, because she ended up losing her job over this — (CROSSTALK) KURTZ: But before this incident? SWEET: Well, before this incident, she was a singular person in the White House. People might not know it, but organizations are given seats in the press room, as you know, Howie, not individuals. And she had that seat as a recognition of her career as a trailblazer. So, yes, she was cut slack. KURTZ: Well, because she had worked for UPI — SWEET: She had this seat. KURTZ: — but then she was a columnist, which ordinarily would not warrant you a front-row seat. SWEET: Ordinarily, it wouldn’t warrant you a seat. You always would have entree (ph). You know, Dana could go to the press room anytime he wants, he just stands on the side. It was very special for Helen to have the seat that was part of her identity. MILBANK: ABC, NBC, CBS — SWEET: Right. MILBANK: — Helen Thomas. KURTZ: Dana stands on the side of a lot of events. (LAUGHTER) SWEET: Right, which is why the debate over who gets the seat is really not one that is parallel to Helen’s seat. KURTZ: The debate over the seat is of interest to about 10 people, and I wish the media would get off of it. Jeffrey Goldberg, were you surprised by the intensity of the reaction to those anti-Israel remarks to the point where she was basically pressured into retiring? JEFFREY GOLDBERG, NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT, “THE ATLANTIC”: Not really, because these remarks marked the first time that a philosophical concept advanced by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, had been voiced by a seemingly mainstream figure in America. This is not — as has been pointed out, this is not merely anti-Israel criticism of an Israel policy. This was — KURTZ: People criticize Israeli policies all the time. You have. GOLDBERG: Even I have. But this is something completely different. This is an idea that the most anti-Semitic figures on the world stage have advanced. It’s a kind of a — (CROSSTALK) KURTZ: The Jews have no right to be on that land? GOLDBERG: Not only the Jews have no right to be on that land, but they should “go back” to Germany and Poland, which is almost — not only absurd, but almost sort of comically cruel. It betrays either a profound ignorance of history or a lack of caring about history. KURTZ: But let’s take a look at some of the things that Helen Thomas has been saying and asking during the past 10 years in her role as a columnist in that White House press room. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) THOMAS: Does the president think that the Palestinians have a right to resist 35 years of brutal military occupation and suppression? It could have stopped the bombardment of Lebanon. We have that much control with the Israelis. TONY SNOW, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: I don’t think so, Helen. THOMAS: We have collective punishment against all of Lebanon and Palestine. SNOW: No, what’s interesting, Helen — THOMAS: And what’s happening — and that’s the perception of the United States. SNOW: Well, thank you for the Hezbollah view. THOMAS: Mr. President, you started this war, the war of your choosing. And you can end it alone today. Thousands and thousands are dead. Don’t you understand? (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: Now, she’s there representing Hearst. What correspondent or columnist gets to say things like that? MILBANK: Nobody else, I think, with the exception of her. In fact, often, you’d get the answers, “We’ll take a break for this moment for Helen to do an advocacy minute,” or, “Thank you, Secretary of State Helen Thomas.” KURTZ: So you’re saying that press secretaries used her as a kind of comic relief? MILBANK: Well, yes. Just this nice, old lady. She’s saying some wacky. People — the rest of us would sort of roll our eyes and say that’s Helen being Helen. But there were also times when she would hold the president’s feet to the fire on very serious issues that had nothing to do with the Palestinians. SWEET: Well, particularly in Iraq. She kind of had another chapter of her life when the U.S. went to war with Iraq, because she was very skeptical of it and she was holding the then Bush administration’s feet to the fire on that. KURTZ: More skeptical, many would say, than many of the mainstream journalists who a lot of people think rolled over during that period. SWEET: Right. No, she had a lot of questions that turned out that people weren’t asking at the time. That’s why this is, I think, a bit — I think you used the term in your column, “a tarnished icon,” and that is why this is complex. She ended a career with a few-second statement that had all this background to it. KURTZ: But, see, if you look at some of the sound bites we just played, some of the questions that she’s asked over the years, I would agree, to some extent, she basically didn’t care what people thought of her. She was there to ask the kind of questions, particularly to President Bush, who she did not like, that she called one of the worst presidents ever. But is it the role of the journalists, even opinion journalists, to denounce the war in Iraq, to accuse the administration of killing civilians? GOLDBERG: Well, there’s two sides to this. I mean, no. Obviously, you’re not supposed to be in the press room advocating for a Hezbollah opposition. On the other hand, her lack of awe, the lack of awe that she felt for the presidency, certainly for press secretaries, was useful and a good part of democracy, and people should adopt that general pose more frequently. SWEET: Well, I think you need to separate out, because this is a journalism show. Almost anyone could go to a White House briefing. You can’t always get to a White House press conference and get called on. I’m often surprised on why more columnists don’t show up and just ask their questions, whether or not they (INAUDIBLE) advocacy or not. MILBANK: And as it is, there are all kinds of opinionated people in that room, and I often find that it’s one of the far right or far left people who ask that question. They say, oh, wait a second, wee didn’t know about that, and it starts the debate in a different direction with the mainstream reporters. KURTZ: But, Lynn, did it ever make you uncomfortable when Helen Thomas would talk about the brutal military occupation by Israel, or talk about the U.S. inflicting collective punishment against Lebanon and Palestine? Did that ever bother you? SWEET: Yes, it bothered me, but the — whether or not it bothered me, yes. Any time anyone says or makes a reference to the Holocaust in Germany in the way she did, one of the most horrible, horrible things that ever have happened, yes, it should bother not only me, by the way, but everybody that the Holocaust happened. So let me clear on that — sure. But having a debate about the Mideast situation, even in terms that aren’t pleasant to hear, is something that you hear all the time when you cover the White House and when you cover Washington. MILBANK: People ask ridiculous questions all the time about Obama’s birth certificate, about pedophilia. I mean, it is a circus if you actually watch — GOLDBERG: But I think we did discover this week a true red line. I think we did discover a true red line — don’t bring up the Holocaust, OK, in that way. SWEET: And that’s why, frankly, people often just rip off comparisons — oh, he’s a Nazi. Even the food Nazi bothered me because how can you compare — the soup Nazi. All those things, I think, really, people should think a little bit about what they’re talking about. KURTZ: But I wonder — here you have this room full of journalists, and they write about everybody else, and yet they don’t write about colleagues who do this sort of thing. Let me throw this back to you, Jeffrey Goldberg. You know, some critics out there say — I’m sure you’ve heard this — that this shows the U.S. press is pro-Israel and you get in trouble when you criticize Israel. And if Helen Thomas had said the opposite thing about the Palestinians, she’d still have her job. GOLDBERG: A, I don’t think that last point is necessarily true. If you gave this long diatribe about the Palestinians don’t exist, which is sort of the equivalent argument, I don’t think you’re going to last that long in the mainstream press. No. You know, I always refer to this discussion as the taboo that won’t shut up. Everybody argues all the time that you can’t say anything you want about Israel. If you’ve looked at “The New York Times” op-ed page over the last month, I think there have been 15 different denunciations about Israeli policies and behaviors by a plethora of regular columnists and guest columnists, and that’s fine. That’s fine. We’re talking about a different subject. KURTZ: Let me play a few words in the aftermath of this controversy by Fox’s Sean Hannity, who had this to say about the aftermath of Helen Thomas’s ouster — (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) SEAN HANNITY, FOX NEWS: Yet, for decades, the left-leaning White House Press Corps embraced her, even rewarding her with a front row seat in the briefing room. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: So, it’s all the fault of you liberal reporters? MILBANK: Well, I think that’s just silly. Let’s point out that I think it was two or three years ago, Helen Thomas wrote a book excoriating the White House Press Corps for being a bunch of pansies and too soft on President Bush. So, I mean, we can’t have it both ways in this situation. So, the notion we’re protecting her, I mean, we’re protecting her in the sense that it was like the crazy uncle. It’s like, oh, that’s Helen being Helen. But nobody agreed with her. GOLDBERG: We all have or have had grandmothers who occasionally say wacky things. And when you reach the age of 89, you know, you do get some slack. (CROSSTALK) GOLDBERG: Well, and there are always lines. KURTZ: And the wacky grandmothers don’t have a seat in the press room and here on television. (CROSSTALK) KURTZ: Do you think, Lynn Sweet, that the media are allowing this unfortunate controversy — and it is unfortunate — to overshadow this storied career that Helen Thomas has had? SWEET: Perhaps not. Stories unfold, Howie, in chapters. The first chapter had to be the news of what she said. And I think in time there will be a balance. You know, she had this seat because she was a trailblazer, not because of her views on Mideast relations. KURTZ: Agreed? MILBANK: I think it will be — the Germany remark will become the second half paragraph now, but not the first. GOLDBERG: But let’s be real for a second. Helen Thomas has excoriated generations of White House officials, congressional leaders. She cut them no slack when they made a gaffe. KURTZ: And therefore? GOLDBERG: And therefore — KURTZ: The same standard should apply to her? GOLDBERG: The same standard should apply to all journalists. KURTZ: All right. Jeffrey Goldberg, Lynn Sweet, Dana Milbank, thanks very much for joining us this morning.

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Kurtz: Helen Thomas Has Been Excused for Saying Questionable Things for Years

NYT Rips Obama: It Shouldn’t Have Taken So Long To Get Involved In Oil Spill

The New York Times editorial board on Sunday absolutely tore Barack Obama apart for his handling of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.  “The president cannot plug the leak or magically clean up the fouled Gulf of Mexico. But he and his administration need to do a lot more to show they are on top of this mess, and not perpetually behind the curve,” wrote the Times.  “It certainly should not have taken days for Mr. Obama to get publicly involved in the oil spill, or even longer for his administration to start putting the heat on BP for its inadequate response and failure to inform the public about the size of the spill.”  Quite surprisingly, the Times was just getting warmed up:  If ever there was a test of President Obama’s vision of government – one that cannot solve all problems, but does what people cannot do for themselves – it is this nerve-racking early summer of 2010, with oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico and far too many Americans out of work for far too long. The country is frustrated and apprehensive and still waiting for Mr. Obama to put his vision into action. Americans need to know that Mr. Obama, whose coolness can seem like detachment, is engaged. This is not a mere question of presentation or stagecraft, although the White House could do better at both. (We cringed when he told the “Today” show that he had spent important time figuring out “whose ass to kick” about the spill. Everyone knew that answer on Day 2.) But a year and a half into this presidency, the contemplative nature that was so appealing in a candidate can seem indecisive in a president. His promise of bipartisanship seems naïve. His inclination to hold back, then ride to the rescue, has sometimes made problems worse. It took too long for Mr. Obama to say that the Coast Guard and not BP was in charge of operations in the gulf and it’s still not clear that is true. Readers should keep in mind this editorial was likely being produced at around the same time the paper’s Washington correspondent Helene Cooper was telling Chris Matthews Obama’s presidency “will go the way of Jimmy Carter’s” if he doesn’t get control of this spill. Adding insult to injury, Times columnist Maureen Dowd also went after Obama in her piece  published Sunday: The press traveling with Obama on the campaign never had a lovey-dovey relationship with him. He treated us with aloof correctness, and occasional spurts of irritation. Like many Democrats, he thinks the press is supposed to be on his side. The former constitutional lawyer now in the White House understands that the press has a role in the democracy. But he is an elitist, too, as well as thin-skinned and controlling. So he ends up regarding scribes as intrusive, conveying a distaste for what he sees as the fundamental unseriousness of a press driven by blog-around-the-clock deadlines. Sometimes on the campaign plane, I would watch Obama venture back to make small talk with the press, discussing food at an event or something light. Then I would see him literally back away a few moments later as a blast of questions and flipcams hit him. But that’s the world we live in. It hurts Obama to be a crybaby about it, and to blame the press and the “old Washington game” for his own communication failures. Now that Obama has been hit with negative press, he’s even more contemptuous. “He’s never needed to woo the press,” says the NBC White House reporter Chuck Todd. “He’s never really needed us.” So, as The Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz writes, the more press-friendly, emotionally accessible, if gaffe-prone Biden has become “the administration’s top on-air spokesman.” How ironic. Instead of The One, they’re sending out The Two. This means that in one weekend, the Times editorial board, its White House correspondent, and one of its top liberal columnists made harshly negative comments about the president they all helped get elected. This led Commentary magazine’s Jennifer Rubin to write Sunday: It’s one more sign that the bottom is dropping out on Obama’s support, and the unraveling of his presidency is picking up steam. Unless he gets a grip and finds some grown-ups from whom he is willing to take advice, this is not going to improve.  Indeed. 

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NYT Rips Obama: It Shouldn’t Have Taken So Long To Get Involved In Oil Spill

Still at It: David Frum Takes Shot at the Club for Growth

It’s called “Left, Right and Center,” which claims to be a “civilized yet provocative antidote to the screaming talking heads that dominate political debate.” But there’s not a whole lot of truth in advertising for KCRW Santa Monica’s radio program , which is also podcasted on the Internet. The show normally features Robert Scheer, editor of the left-wing investigative Web site Truthdig.com and a former Los Angeles Times columnist, representing the left. Matt Miller, a former Clintonista and senior fellow at the left-wing Center for American Progress represents the so-called center. And former Washington Times editorial page editor and visiting senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation usually represents the right. And for whatever reason, HuffPo editor Arianna Huffington is included to represent what they call the “independent progressive blogosphere,” as if that is somehow different from the “left.” For the June 11 edition of this show , both Blankley and Miller were away and replaced with David Frum, a recently terminated fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, representing the “right” and Lawrence O’Donnell, of MSNBC’s “Countdown with Keith Olbermann” fill-in fame, representing the “center.” And it was on the broadcast Frum used the platform to take a shot at the Club for Growth. “The Club for Growth is nicknamed amongst some Republicans, ‘The Club for Electing Democrats’ because what it does is it has all these primary challenges,” Frum said. “And either it bleeds existing incumbents or else it opens the way to the election, to the nomination of a less electable Republican and the loss of the district to the Democrats.” If that were indeed the case, should Club for Growth President and Pennsylvania Republican Senate candidate Pat Toomey be trailing his Democratic opponent Rep. Joe Sestek? That’s not the case according to three out of four polls posted on Real Clear Politics (the outlier poll being the Daily Kos’ poll). But Frum goes on to make another point – that the unions, by playing more of a role in particular campaigns, are straight out the Club for Growth playbook. “So it is fascinating to me for the unions to decide we’re going to be ‘The Club for Electing Republicans’ on the Democratic side,” he continued. “It is always worth remembering there is not symmetry here. The Republican base is actually bigger than the Democratic base. But a third of the country identifies as conservative, that’s not a majority.” And according to Frum, since the conservative base is larger, the $10 million big labor used in Arkansas in the Blanche Lincoln-Bill Halter race for the Democratic nomination was spent in vain. “But only a fifth of the country identifies as liberal,” Frum said. “That’s even farther from a majority. I think a lot of Democrats in a lot of places, who come October are going to be hungry for that $10 million that is not going to be there for them.”

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Still at It: David Frum Takes Shot at the Club for Growth

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"