Posted on 01/22/2016 8:05:51 AM PST by SeekAndFind
The message from the RNC seems clear enough: media outlets that want to engage as debate hosts have to remain uncommitted in the race. "A debate moderator canât have a predisposition," RNC spokesperson Sean Spicer said as he confirmed that National Review had been disinvited from the February 25th debate in Houston after publishing its “Against Trump” issue yesterday:
The RNC announced it had disinvited the National Review from a GOP debate the magazine had been set to co-host on Feb. 25 after its latest issue -- called "Against Trump" -- featured essays slamming the real estate mogul from leading conservatives including Glenn Beck, Erick Erickson and Russell Moore. …
Trump has faced accusations both of being too extreme, risking moderate voters for a GOP ticket, and of being a fake conservative with a long history of liberal views.
The National Reviewâs attack issue is perhaps the most visible example of conservatives struggling to take down the billionaire, who holds a prohibitive lead in national polling, as well as in the first primary state of New Hampshire.
The Houston debate has had a rocky history already. The RNC stripped NBC from the debate earlier this week, an aftershock of the October 30th debacle on CNBC. The event will now be broadcast by CNN, with Salem (Hot Air’s parent company) as the broadcast partner.
Maybe the city of Houston should watch its step, eh?
National Review’s publisher Jack Fowler told BuzzFeed News that he had hoped to discuss this with the RNC first, and that the decision will be a “deprivation” to voters:
The publisher of the conservative National Review suggested on Thursday that the Republican National Committee is "depriving" its party by disinviting the magazine from hosting a debate because of an anti-Donald Trump symposium it published.
National Review publisher Jack Fowler told BuzzFeed News in an email Thursday night that he was not surprised that the RNC had rescinded its invitation to the magazine to co-host a GOP debate next month. "That said I would argue that the RNC should have waited for someone to complain, if someone was going to," Fowler said. "The presumption is that our moderator / participant would not have asked an intelligent / fair question."
"But maybe the RNC based the decision on something along the lines of -- you guys just crossed a line (for a debate participant). Iâd like to see their statement, if / when it comes out," Fowler said. "After all, itâs their party and they can deprive [it] if they want to."
Well, it didn’t take long for the complaints to come, at least on Twitter. Trump unleashed several broadsides against National Review before and after issuing this statement calling the publication “a dying paper”:
"A DYING PAPER" Trump dismisses National Review editorial https://t.co/IG7N7iViSG
— FOX & Friends (@foxandfriends) January 22, 2016
The symposium of writers published by National Review probably wouldn’t have triggered the RNC action. It’s well worth reading, too, as it includes a number of long-time conservative thinkers, including our own Katie Pavlich. Guy Benson summed up my thoughts on this yesterday, though:
I agree with them. Also, this won't work. https://t.co/aFi91HlT7b
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) January 21, 2016
The RNC probably felt it had to act because of the in-house editorial announcing NR’s opposition to Donald Trump rather than the collection of individual essays, and the NBC fight may have something to do with that, too. The CNBC debate showed an almost explicit contempt for the GOP candidates on the stage, especially Trump, which is why Reince Priebus cut them out of the remaining debates this cycle. He needed to show voters that he means to protect Republicans from media bias. Having done that, how could the RNC not follow through when one of the other debate partners explicitly and institutionally declares itself opposed to one of the party’s frontrunners?
Nevertheless, Fowler won’t regret the decision. The fight will raise NR’s profile, especially among conservatives who care about policy, and more importantly sets a marker for the future if and when it comes to a Trump presidency. Trump gets one more bête noire to target on the Right. The RNC gets to underscore itseven-handedness as a referee when it comes to dealing with debates and the media. In this case, everyone can claim a victory.
And … that has already begun:
Biggest traffic day ever on @NRO. Indeed we are finding new readers. Hundreds by the minute. https://t.co/hWfhPzUULk
— Jack Fowler (@jackfowler) January 22, 2016
Matt Welch’s response at the libertarian Reason is worth pondering, too:
There’s one thing this dispute symbolizes, aside from the ongoing (and long-running) battle for the soul of the modern Republican Party. And that is this: Many or even most of the people who make a living working in politics and political commentary--even those who think of themselves as outsiders, such as nonpartisan libertarians--inevitably begin to view their field as one dedicated primarily to ideas, ideology, philosophy, policy, and so forth, and NOT to the emotional, ideologically unmoored cultural passions of a given (and perhaps fleeting) moment. Donald Trump--and more importantly, his supporters, who go all but unmentioned here (Ben Domenech is an exception)--illustrate that that gap is, well, yuuge.
Yes, Trump is nobody’s conservative, but it’s not at all clear that many voters really care about such things. His rise is a rebuke to the stories that political commentators have long told themselves, and to the mores they have long shared even while otherwise disagreeing ideologically with one another. You can despise Donald Trump (and oh Lord I do), and appreciate National Review’s efforts here, while simultaneously wondering whether his forcible removal of a certain journalistic mask might also have some benefit.
To some extent, it’s the same blinders that some in the GOP wore in 2012 about Barack Obama’s enduring appeal, too. This time, they have a head start on figuring it out.
“Time was ANY mention of RNC elicited nothing but hoots of derision around here.”
Don’t you think any other decision would be a bit blatant?
During the TEA Party movement, Trump donated 50K to Rahm Emanuel, obomas chief of staff. If he were the conservative he claims to be - why didn't he donate that money to the TEA Party instead of their opponents?
Trump even supported nationalizing the banks! He praised oboma and referred to him as a strong leader doing a great job. He not only supported oboma care, but went further and thought nationalized health care would be even better!
And Trump adored Hillary - that is until he decided to run against her.
I’m not a Trump guy, but this only makes sense.
Frankly, I’d like see the media totally out of the debate hosting game. Republicans should be asking the questions, not the media. Its the media’s job to report them.
During the general election. The candidates should just be given 6 minutes at a time each, alternating for 2 hours. Let them form the discussion.
Exactly, order of attack: Trump then Cruz.
Bye to who? the RNC or the National Review?
The folks at Fox Business News did a great job at hosting a substantive debate without inserting themselves into the mix.
Give Cavuto a cough drop and let them run it...
Yeah. People love reality shows, and Trumps had a lot of viewers. If Trump loses, people are going to be throwing their remote controls through their big screen TVs.
People don't like it when celebrity is attacked. Remember how angry they got when they were saying bad things about Snookie?
The National Review = The Establishment Review
Exactly. I have defended Trump on here for a long time, but events in the last few days show that we’ve been fooled. RNC knows that Trump will make deals with people like Pelosi.
cute and sarcastic,but who is snookie?
I don’t watch reality TV.
TRUMP is still Leading in all the polls!
Deal with it! ;)
I agree. If Cruz becomes front runner, I suspect they will then go after him. Is it an amnesty guy they want?
yep. It's all about destroying the two front runners to clear a path for Marco.
Another star in a reality show like Trumps. People love those shows. A Trump/Snookie ticket would be a no brainer. Hillary wouldn't stand a chance.
"It's the TV show, stupid."
“During the TEA Party movement, Trump donated 50K to Rahm Emanuel”
Who knows - I do know that during that time Trump was right in the middle of building the 2nd or 3rd tallest building in downtown Chicago..
It’s a really nice building too - right on the river...
Hmm okay,you know reality TV more than me and you call me stupid. read much. thought not.
I wonder how many illegal aliens he had working for him.
Opps. I'm not suppose to ask that am I? My Bad!
Actually, I never watch them. I think they're dumbing people down. They're "Stupid TV." I just hear about them on talk radio.
That's why I'm not enamored with Trump. I'm not a big fan of TV celebrities. Just because they can act doesn't mean they'll make good presidents.
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