Posted on 11/20/2002 3:30:45 PM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection
WASHINGTON (AP)--Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle says threats have increased against him and his family and blames talk show host ``Rush Limbaugh and all of the Rush Limbaugh wannabes'' for an increasingly negative tone in politics.
``What happens when Rush Limbaugh attacks those of us in public life is that people aren't satisfied just to listen,'' Daschle, D-S.D., told reporters Wednesday. ``They want to act because they get emotionally invested. And so, you know, the threats to those of us in public life go up dramatically, on our families and on us, in a way that's very disconcerting.''
Daschle was the target of an anthrax-contaminated letter sent to Capitol Hill last year, although he did not mention that incident Wednesday.
He did cite an incident last year when Republicans labeled him an obstructionist. ``There was a corresponding, a very significant increase in the number of issues that my family and I had to deal with. And I worry about that,'' Daschle said.
Daschle, who will be stepping down as majority leader now that Republicans have won back control of the Senate, blamed the problem on the disappearing divide between politics and entertainment.
``If entertainment becomes so much a part of politics and if that entertainment drives an emotional movement in this country among some people who don't know the difference between entertainment and politics, and who are then so energized to go out and hurt somebody, that troubles me about where politics in America is going,'' Daschle said.
Limbaugh, during his radio show Wednesday, called Daschle's comments ``a well-thought-out strategy by the Democrats to counter the influence of this program.''
``It's not just against me but it's against you folks, the entire audience,'' Limbaugh said. ``You all now are being characterized as unsophisticated barbarians. You don't know the difference between politics and entertainment.
``This is the continuation of a pattern. Every time the Democrats lose, either elections or a major issue, they blame me, they blame talk radio and they blame you,'' Limbaugh said.
That's outrageous! OUTRAGEOUS!
In today's press conference, as he whined about things, you could see him mentally erarsing the names of long time customers. The erased class action suits must have cost him millions in pay offs from the trial lawyers. Imagine how his labor union buddies must feel. No, Tommie has suffered a major financial blow and we should feel his pain. Paying off all those Indian voters on his SD empire/ranch takes BIG bucks.
September 30, 2002, 9:00 a.m.
Much Ado About Nothing
The Bush speech that wasnt.
By John R. Lott Jr.
Calling for President Bush to apologize, Senator Tom Daschle angrily attacked Bush on the Senate floor last Wednesday for politicizing the war. Daschle said: "This is outrageous! Outrageous!" Claiming that Bush questioned Democrats patriotism, Daschle referred to Hawaii's Senator Inouye, who lost an arm in World War II. That same day Senator Robert Byrd called President Bush's conduct "despicable."
Pretty heated rhetoric. Yet, this entire ruckus was based on something that never occurred. Only through the filter of the press with incomplete, out-of-context quotes was it possible for Democrats' claims about Bush to be taken seriously.
Daschle's evidence that Bush was questioning Democrats' patriotism and politicizing the war came from a Washington Post quote of a speech that Bush had just made in New Jersey. The Post reported: "Bush has suggested that Democrats do not care about national security, saying on Monday that the Democratic-controlled Senate is 'not interested in the security of the American people.'"
But was Bush criticizing Democrats? Consider a more complete quote of the president's speech:
"the Senate is more interested in special interests in Washington and not interested in the security of the American people. I will not accept a Department of Homeland Security that does not allow this president and future presidents to better keep the American people secure. People are working hard to get it right in Washington, both Republicans and Democrats. See, this isn't a partisan issue."
The president criticized "the Senate" specifically not Democrats over the Homeland Security Bill. Bush never even mentioned that Democrats control the Senate. The criticism was really one of union-job regulations and union influence, something with which Democratic senators such as Zell Miller agree. Some of the press coverage corrected the misimpression that Bush was referring to the war with Iraq.
Accepting Senator Daschle's claim that he knew nothing about Bush's speech beyond the Washington Post article, he should have checked the quote before lashing out against the president on the Senate floor. But that was not the only problem. The original Washington Post article error was compounded many times over. On the broader issue of attacking Democrats virtually no one in the media got the story correct.
In the news coverage from Wednesday afternoon through Friday afternoon, a Nexis computer search of national television news broadcasts and major newspapers reveals that 178 separate stories carried the quote that raised Daschle's hackles. Whether it was ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, or a myriad of other news outlets (even some foreign publications) only the partial quote was reported. Yet, just three of these news stories mentioned the subsequent sentences (Brit Hume's Special Report on Fox News, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). The Associated Press sent out a file with this additional text from Bush's speech, but with little effect.
It might be one thing to chalk up this blunder to sloppiness (possibly just reprinting Democrat press releases and not reading the speech themselves) or the Bush administration failing to inform the press what really happened. But neither explanation really applies here. One piece in the Los Angeles Times at least acknowledged that the Bush administration argued that the quote was taken "out of context," but it provided no details about what context was missing and left readers believing it was merely a Republican debating point.
At least some of the press did read Bush's speech even if they selectively relayed it to readers. Take the New York Times, the so-called newspaper of record. The Times reprinted Daschle's entire Senate floor remarks and excerpted some of Bush's speech, but somehow managed to cut off reprinting Bush's speech right before Bush praised hardworking "Republicans and Democrats."
The impact of these selective quotes is obvious. Ideally, Daschle's or Byrd's angry floor speeches would never have taken place. But if just the next few sentences in Bush's speech had been mentioned, no one would have taken them seriously. Amazingly the distortion was so effective that by the end of the week even some Republicans were breaking ranks with the president.
President Bush has tried hard to change the culture of Washington, to take out the political attacks and downplay the rhetoric. Clearly he can't win for trying.
Laziness by the press can't explain why this debate took place. Possibly the press merely wants to create controversy or maybe some deeper bias is at work. In neither case is public discourse well served.
John R. Lott Jr. is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.
Who's in & who's out after the 2002 elections
By ANN McFEATTERS
BLADE WASHINGTON BUREAU
OUT:
Sen. Thomas Daschle (D, S.D.)
Still the major voice of Democrats in Washington, Mr. Daschle lost control of the Senate to the Republicans and thus his coveted post as majority leader. That means he has lost control of the agenda and the ability to set floor votes. His decision to block a vote on the creation of a department of homeland security, on grounds its employees would not get civil service protection, hurt Democrats badly in the election. His colleague, Sen. Tim Johnson, (D, S.D.) narrowly squeaked in to be reelected, preventing complete humiliation for Mr. Daschle. But his craving to be president has received a setback and possibly a mortal blow.
The people who vote democrat are too busy listening to Howard Stern to listen to liberal talk radio.
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