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Tilting at Windmills

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December 31, 2009

THE SCANDAL LIST.... Marc Ambinder posted the latest in a series of end-of-the-decade polls yesterday, asking readers, "What's the best (or worst) Republican political scandal of the decade?" Respondents were given five choices:

* The Abramoff investigation

* Sen. Larry Craig's "wide stance"

* Gov. Mark Sanford's Argentinian affair

* Rep. Mark Foley's IMs to young male pages

* Other

The top-four choices rotated randomly. As of this morning, the Abramoff scandal was well ahead of the pack.

And while the Abramoff, Craig, Sanford, and Foley matters were clearly significant Republican scandals -- three of the four relate to sex, which is always an attention-grabber -- Ambinder's list doesn't include any of Tom DeLay's scandals, the still-shocking Duke Cunningham scandal, the corruption of nearly all of the Alaska Republican Party's establishment, the phone-jamming scandal that may have helped Republicans steal a Senate race in New Hampshire, other Republicans caught up in sex scandals (John Ensign, David Vitter, Tim Hutchinson), or any of the many, many Bush/Cheney scandals.

That's a shame, because if we're really going to consider the biggest "Republican political scandals of the decade," we shouldn't overlook the gang that couldn't shoot straight, which in fairness, probably deserves its own end-of-the-decade poll.

Jamison Foser noted, "Not mentioned [on Ambinder's list]? The Bush administration lying its way into a war of choice, listening in on the phone conversations of Americans, torture, Abu Ghraib, putting an unqualified crony in charge of FEMA, the US Attorneys firing, outing a CIA operative to get back at her husband, etc."

Those are all key Bush-era scandals, but as long as we're listing some of the highlights (or lowlights, as the case may be), I'd also mention the response to Hurricane Katrina, Scooter Libby and his get-out-of-jail-free card, the no-bid Halliburton contracts, the cost estimates of Medicare Part D deliberately hidden from Congress, the pundits paid to toe the administration's line in the media without disclosure, the fake-news segments the administration created to run on local news outlets without disclosure, the suppression of scientific data the White House found politically inconvenient, the misuse of "faith-based" grants to help Republican congressional candidates, Karl Rove's campaign "briefings" to federal offices in violation of the Hatch Act, the odd special access the White House gave to Gannon/Guckert, and plenty more that I'm probably forgetting.

All from the administration that vowed to return "honor and dignity" to the executive branch.

How can we look back at this godforsaken decade, ask about Republican scandals, and overlook these gems?

Steve Benen 12:50 PM Permalink | Trackbacks | Comments (30)

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Comments

How about putting two wars on the cuff and then cutting taxes?

Posted by: john sherman on December 31, 2009 at 12:56 PM | PERMALINK

IRAQ - hands down.

Posted by: buddy66 on December 31, 2009 at 1:00 PM | PERMALINK

Actually, the biggest, most grotesque scandal of all is that Bush and Cheney are still slithering around as free men and not standing in the Hague being charged with multiple war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Posted by: electrolite on December 31, 2009 at 1:03 PM | PERMALINK

w's good buddy "kenny boy" and enron.

Posted by: mellowjohn on December 31, 2009 at 1:05 PM | PERMALINK

Quite an impressive list Steve. Did you list the willful ignorance of all the warning signs before 9/11?

That said, I agree with buddy66: Iraq, especially the more amazingly hubristic aspects (no post-war planning, leaving Afghanistan a mess, firing the Iraqi army, firing all the Baathists, etc, etc, etc, ad nauseum.)

It's really, really sickening and cannot be emphasized enough.

Posted by: JD on December 31, 2009 at 1:06 PM | PERMALINK

I would have to say the entire Bush/Cheney time in office from the travesty of the 2000 election through 9/11, Iraq, Katrina, right through the financial meltdown they left as the poison cherry on top.

Oh, I did like Vitter and his diaper clad dalliances with hookers, too.

Posted by: SaintZak on December 31, 2009 at 1:07 PM | PERMALINK

You forgot to include the 'scandal' called the CORPORATE/REPIGLCIAN MEDIA ........the corruption of the 'media elite' that have no souls, only a rancid abyss in it's place .. behold the article behold by Media Matters

______________________________________________


Auld Lang Syne: Farewell to another decade of "liberal media bias"
December 22, 2009 9:11 am ET

It might seem futile to try to select just two quotes from the previous decade and single them out as bookends to illustrate how the political press so often malfunctioned over the last 10 years. But if pressed, I know which duo I'd nominate in hopes of highlighting the absurdity behind the never-ending right-wing claim about supposed "liberal media bias."

Y'know, the same "liberal media" that over the previous decade unleashed its venom on Al Gore, morphed into George Bush's lapdog cheerleaders, and created unfair double standards for covering the new Democratic president, Barack Obama.

The first quote I'd nominate actually comes from very late 1999, but the implication was pure 2000 and the decade that followed. The passage appeared in a Time report about the unfolding Democratic primary battle and came just as the Beltway press was unveiling its unapologetic War on Gore, as The Daily Howler might put it.

The orgy of resentment that erupted toward Gore during the 2000 campaign season was likely unprecedented in American politics, as media elites did very little to hide their disdain for Gore. For years, they mocked him, bad-mouthed him, and made up nasty stories about him. (Hint: Inventing the Internet.) Acting as a conduit for the RNC, the press actively tried to delegitimize the Democratic Party nominee for president. And the chronically caustic and unfair press coverage cost Gore the election in the historically close 2000 campaign.

Which brings me to Quote of the Decade No. 1, courtesy Time's Eric Pooley and his New Hampshire primary dispatch: [emphasis added]:

[T]he 300 media types watching in the press room at Dartmouth were, to use the appropriate technical term, totally grossed out by it. Whenever Gore came on too strong, the room erupted in a collective jeer, like a gang of 15-year-old Heathers cutting down some hapless nerd.

If readers needed confirmation regarding the open contempt for Gore, blogger Mickey Kaus soon traveled to New Hampshire and announced the consensus among journalists: "They hate Gore. They really do think he's a liar. And a phony."

My second Quote of the Decade nominee arrived 110 months later and via NBC's Chuck Todd. It was uncorked inside the new Obama White House press room, on January 23, 2009. The topic on the table was the administration's proposed economic stimulus package and whether the White House, which was hoping for a bipartisan effort on the legislation, would be disappointed if the bill passed with little or no Republican support. And that's when Todd asked Robert Gibbs the following:

Would [the President] veto a bill if it didn't have Republican support?

That's right. Just days into the new presidency, Todd wanted to know if Obama would go ahead and take the unprecedented action of vetoing his own legislation designed to immediately jump-start the faltering economy because not enough members of the opposition party supported the stimulus bill.

If nothing else, Todd's absurd query highlighted the unheard-of double standard the press constructed for the new Democratic president. Namely, when addressing the issue of bipartisanship (i.e. "involving cooperation, agreement, and compromise between two major political parties") the press decided to hold only one of the political parties accountable: the Democrats. Bipartisanship was now something Democrats had to bring to fruition.

My bookend quotes capture how the "liberal" Beltway press corps changed the rules to cover Gore at the beginning of the decade and Obama at the end of it. And how did the same press corps spend the years between Gore and Obama? Lying down for Bush, of course. Having developed rabbit ears for the right-wing taunt of "liberal media bias," reporters, editors, producers, and pundits seemed determined during the Bush years to prove how un-liberal they really were. In the process, the press abandoned its traditional watchdog role and morphed instead into lapdogs.

Specifics? Almost too many to count. But who can forget the defining prime-time press conference Bush held in the East Room of the White House just weeks before the 2003 Iraq invasion began and how that press conference came to symbolize the media's lapdog approach? (Not to mention the media's monumental failure during the run-up to the Iraq invasion.)

Laying out the reasons for war, Bush that night mentioned Al Qaeda and the September 11 terrorist attacks 13 times, yet not a single journalist challenged that implied (and false) connection. And during the Q&A session, nobody bothered to ask Bush about the elusive Osama bin Laden, the terrorist mastermind whom Bush had vowed to capture. Follow-up questions were nonexistent, which only encouraged Bush to give answers to questions he was not asked.

And then it got really bad.

At one point while making his way through the press questioners, Bush awkwardly referred to a list of reporters whom he was instructed to call on. "This is ... scripted," he joked. The press laughed. But Bush meant it literally. Bush had been given a cheat sheet that instructed him not to call on reporters from some prominent outlets such as Time, Newsweek, USA Today, or The Washington Post. Yet even after Bush announced the event was "scripted," reporters, either embarrassed for Bush or embarrassed for themselves, continued to play the part of eager participants at a spontaneous news conference, shooting their hands up in the air in hopes of getting Bush's attention. For TV viewers it certainly looked like an actual press event.

More? Prior to the start of the news conference, White House handlers, in a highly unusual move, marched veteran reporters to their seats in the East Room, two by two, like schoolchildren being led onto the stage for the annual holiday pageant.

Bonus: Following the White House performance, MSNBC host Chris Matthews, in order to get a wide array of opinion, invited on a pro-war Republican senator (Saxby Chambliss, from Georgia), a pro-war former secretary of state (Lawrence Eagleburger), a pro-war retired Army general (Montgomery Meigs), a pro-war retired Air Force general (Buster Glosson), a pro-war Republican pollster (Frank Luntz), as well as, for the sake of balance, somebody who, 25 years earlier, once worked in Jimmy Carter's White House and who today often sides with Republicans (Pat Caddell).

Meanwhile, how did that ferociously liberal newspaper from heart of Manhattan deal with the run-up to war? "[A]ccording to half a dozen sources within the Times, [editor Howell] Raines wanted to prove once and for all that he wasn't editing the paper in a way that betrayed his liberal beliefs," wrote Seth Mnookin in his 2004 book Hard News. Mnookin quoted Doug Frantz, the former investigative editor of the Times, who recalled how "Howell Raines was eager to have articles that supported the war-mongering out of Washington. He discouraged pieces that were at odds with the administration's position on Iraq's supposed weapons of mass destruction and alleged links of Al Qaeda."

And that other supposedly ferociously liberal daily, The Washington Post, how did it cover the crucial months prior to the Iraq war? Basically, the paper couldn't stop publishing pro-war editorials -- 26 in all between September 2002 and February 2003. As for its columnists and contributors, it was like a neoconservative open casting call as the Post flooded its readers with an avalanche of war cheerleaders.

The pro-war march at times seemed to fog the paper's news judgment. In September 2002, Sen. Ted Kennedy made a passionate, provocative, and newsworthy speech raising all sorts of doubts about the war. It was a speech in which the liberal senator warned against virtually every major shortfall that eventually plagued the post-invasion operation. Yet the prophetic speech garnered just one sentence -- 36 words total -- of coverage from the Post, which in 2002 printed more than a thousand articles and columns, totaling perhaps 1 million words about Iraq. But the daily only set aside 36 words for Kennedy's antiwar cry. The Post was not alone. NBC's Nightly News devoted just 32 words to Kennedy's speech, compared to 31 words on ABC's World News Tonight, and 40 words on the CBS Evening News. And on the Sunday talk shows on the weekend immediately following Kennedy's timely address, the senator's name never came up on NBC's Meet the Press, CBS' Face the Nation, or ABC's This Week.

Not surprising. A survey conducted by the liberal media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, which focused on the first two weeks of February 2003, found that of 393 people interviewed on-camera for network news reports about the war, just 17 percent of them expressed skepticism about the looming invasion. This at a time when polling showed that approximately 50 percent of Americans had doubts about the planned war. And according to figures from media analyst Andrew Tyndall, of the 414 Iraq stories broadcast on NBC, ABC, and CBS from September 2002 until February 2003, almost all the stories could be traced back to sources from the White House, the Pentagon, or the State Department. Just 8 percent of the television news reports were of independent origin.

Of course, GE-owned MSNBC was so spooked about employing an on-air liberal host who opposed Bush's ordered invasion that it reportedly fired the highly rated Phil Donahue in early 2003 after an internal memo pointed out the legendary talk show host presented "a difficult public face for NBC in a time of war."

Oh, and remember the Downing Street Memo, the secret top-level British government memorandum consisting of minutes from a July 23, 2002, meeting attended by Prime Minister Tony Blair and his closest advisers? The memo revealed their impression that the Bush administration, eight months before the start of the Iraq war in 2003, had already decided to invade and that Washington seemed more concerned with justifying a war than preventing one. The implications were obvious: that President Bush lied to the American people and Congress during the run-up to the war with Iraq when he insisted over and over again that war was his administration's last option. That Bush had decided to invade Iraq in July 2002. That Bush would justify the war with a WMD argument. That the intelligence to make that case was being "fixed around the policy." That the administration didn't much care what the United Nations thought. And that few war planners were concerned with the aftermath of the war.

But boy, the "liberal" media sure ran away from that messy story.

According to TVEyes, between early May 2005 and early June of that year, the story received approximately 20 mentions on CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS combined. By contrast, during the same five-week period, the same outlets found time to mention more than 250 times the oddball controversy that erupted when a photograph showing Saddam Hussein in his underwear was leaked to the British press.

In the weeks after the Times of London published the Downing Street memo on May 1, 2005, White House spokesman Scott McClellan held 19 daily briefings and fielded approximately 940 questions from reporters. Exactly two of those queries were about the Downing Street memo and the White House's reported effort to fix prewar intelligence.

But wouldn't you know that the White House press corps' collective somnambulant streak was magically cured with the arrival of Democrat Barack Obama, as reporters and pundits magically awoke from their Rip Van Winkle-like slumber? In fact, even before Obama was sworn in, portions of the press corps were busy spreading the lie that Obama's extravagant inauguration cost $100 million more than George Bush's swearing-in.

False. The costs were nearly identical.

That same inauguration week, the White House press corps greeted the new Democratic team with catcalls. "Game On! Obama's Clash With The White House Press Corps," reported The Daily Beast. And under the headline "Obama press aide gets bashed in debut," The Washington Times' Joseph Curl reported:

Although President Obama swept into office pledging transparency and a new air of openness, the press hammered spokesman Robert Gibbs for nearly an hour over a slate of perceived secretive slights that have piled up quickly for the new administration. It wasn't pretty.

Curl reported there was much yelling and shouting from journalists inside the briefing room that day. One even "spat" a question at Gibbs. And yes, this is the same White House press corps that treated the early Bush administration with kid gloves eight years earlier. Washington Post reporter John Harris observed in 2001, "The truth is, this new president [Bush] has done things with relative impunity that would have been huge uproars if they had occurred under Clinton."

Yet in the same Bush-era piece, Harris went on to cheer, "[G]ood for Washington in giving a new president a break at the start."

Behold your liberal media. And what a decade in left-wing bias it was.

P.S. If I've got to squeeze in two more decade-defining "liberal media" quotes, I'd pick a Mark Halperin beauty from June 2006. Just five months before the Democrats' historic congressional victories, Halperin issued this CW warning to Democrats: "If I were them, I'd be scared to death about November's elections."

I'd also nominate this one from CBS' Dan Rather, from September 17, 2001:

George Bush is the president. He makes the decisions. And, you know, it's just one American, wherever he wants me to line up, just tell me where. And he'll make the call.

Posted by: stormskies on December 31, 2009 at 1:10 PM | PERMALINK

All from the administration that vowed to return "honor and dignity" to the executive branch.

That was their one real accomplishment.

They acheived it by totatlly discrediting anyone associated with theri administration, ensuring the election of a Democrat.

Posted by: rea on December 31, 2009 at 1:10 PM | PERMALINK

"You forgot to include the 'scandal' called the CORPORATE/REPIGLCIAN MEDIA ........the corruption of the 'media elite' that have no souls, only a rancid abyss in it's place .. behold the article behold by Media Matters" from stormskies(I didn't read the whole post...too long.
Most of these others scandals could not have happened or would have quickly been brought under control, save the intentional refusal of the corp. media to report them. Ignorance is no excuse, but when the information is withheld, only the most diligent will find it; the rest will "trust" the popular TV and newspapers and magazines for their information.

DENIAL is the addiction of this society. And, it is enabled by the corporate media.

HAPPY NEW DECADE...May Peace Prevail On Earth
I am committed to Oneness through Justice and Transformation
st jonn

Posted by: st john on December 31, 2009 at 1:18 PM | PERMALINK

I agree with the sentiments of the previous posters that the Iraq war and the related war crimes committed by Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Yoo/Etc. are the biggest scandal, hands-down.

However, one way the GOP has been able to neutralize media criticism and voter rage over such issues as Iraq and torture has been to successfully portray itself as the party of "family values" struggling heroically against the godless librul perverts infesting the Democratic Party.

I urge all of you to visit http://www.armchairsubversive.org/.
This website lists a mind-boggling number of actual, real GOP perverts, weirdos, and sexual predators at all levels of politics—with links to actual news accounts. If the general public were aware of these stories, it would be hard for the national GOP to continue the charade.

Posted by: bluestatedon on December 31, 2009 at 1:21 PM | PERMALINK

How about the Supreme Court stealing the 2000 election?

Posted by: John Henry on December 31, 2009 at 1:22 PM | PERMALINK

Great list, Steve. I would add a blurb about the SCOTUS selecting the POTUS.

Oh, and Happy New Year to the blog!

Posted by: Marko on December 31, 2009 at 1:25 PM | PERMALINK

SB,
thanks for a great post to top off a great year.
This one is going into the hurt locker to toss at my mom and bro and other neo-libritarian ex-republicans when they start to have Ballz-himers about how bad Bush was to our country.

Posted by: joyzeeboy on December 31, 2009 at 1:30 PM | PERMALINK

Folks, you ain't thinking big enough!

Biggest scandal of the young century: The Republican Party. . .

Posted by: DAY on December 31, 2009 at 1:32 PM | PERMALINK

How can we look back at this godforsaken decade, ask about Republican scandals, and overlook these gems?

What's the problem? The poll asks for the *worst* Republican scandals, and those are some pretty bad choices on the list.

Posted by: Grumpy on December 31, 2009 at 1:41 PM | PERMALINK

If true, the greatest Rescandlican caper would be stealing the 2004 (sic! - 2000 was more of a wrangle) election. The case is arguable, but see:
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/10432334/was_the_2004_election_stolen
by RFK Jr. Kerry is reported to suspect it happened. BTW, Nixon in 1960 - even with IL, he would have lost anyway, right?

Posted by: neil b. on December 31, 2009 at 1:50 PM | PERMALINK

the most important -- the intervention by the Supreme Court to decide the 2000 for Bush. Their admission that what they were doing was for one time only and had no force of precedence was an adminission that it was a purely political decision. Each member of the majority on that court should have been impeached for that alone.

Posted by: tom in ma on December 31, 2009 at 1:52 PM | PERMALINK

What about 5 members of the supreme court ordering a halt to counting ballots in case the count showed that their anointed president didn't really win?

Scalia's concurring opinion of Dec 9 2000. halting the recount, said "[t]he counting of votes that are of questionable legality . . . threaten[s] irreparable harm to [Governor Bush], and to the country, by casting a cloud upon what he claims to be the legitimacy of his election. Seriously?

Posted by: Jim H on December 31, 2009 at 1:53 PM | PERMALINK


The politization of the Justice department has to rank in the top ten.

Posted by: tsquared on December 31, 2009 at 2:58 PM | PERMALINK

JD, I agree with you but you neglected to mention the looting of the Baghdad Archaeological Museum, the burning of the National Library, and the strip mining of archaeological sites throughout Iraq, none of which would have happened with adequate forces and a modicum of planning to protect vulnerable cultural monuments.

Posted by: T-Rex on December 31, 2009 at 3:00 PM | PERMALINK

Steve,
I think most of the thing you manage belong on a separate list of things that should have been scandals, but were either ignored or treated as business as usual. That in itself counts as one of the scandals of the decade.

Posted by: John McKay on December 31, 2009 at 3:52 PM | PERMALINK

Thanks stormskies for the article.

Posted by: ellie on December 31, 2009 at 3:59 PM | PERMALINK

Good one, T-Rex. Pretty much anything that had to do with Iraq was scandalous.

Speaking of our military engagements, I've just been reading "Where Men Win Glory", about the unconscionable lies told by the military about the Pat Tillman fratricide and the absolutely disgusting disrespect shown to Tillman's family.

Here's the sobering part: this scandal probably wouldn't make it on the 100 worst Republican scandal list. That's amazing, given what a tawdry and dishonorable matter the Tillman affair was.

Posted by: JD on December 31, 2009 at 3:59 PM | PERMALINK

following on from trex...not to mention that years after the invasion, iraq still doesn't have a reliable supply of either water or electricity

perhaps this isn't as big as a stolen election or invading a country by lying about stuff, but i've give an honorable mention to the republicans passing medicare part d and putting the entire tab on the credit card...

steve's list, plus the additions in the comments, is the reason why i'm calling "the decade that shall not be named" the "bushed decade."

we all got bushed and we're all bushed...

Posted by: dj spellchecka on December 31, 2009 at 4:01 PM | PERMALINK

OK, someone's gotta say it: the 2000 election scandal was part of the previous decade and the previous millenium. The decade that we're in right now ends on December 31, 2010.

Republicans still have time to top all the crap they've done in the last 9 years, although that will be difficult.

Posted by: josef on December 31, 2009 at 4:07 PM | PERMALINK

And how can I forget: John McCain not vetting Sarah Palin. Apparently maverick means not doing due dilligence.

Posted by: John Henry on December 31, 2009 at 4:23 PM | PERMALINK

Valerie Plame. The treasonous outing of a Middle East CIA intelligence operative in the midst of a war by the Executive Branch for political gain is a go-to-jail offense in civilized countries.

Posted by: Jim 7 on December 31, 2009 at 4:46 PM | PERMALINK

Great post and quite depressing. How is it that the Republicans are not lower in the polls?

Posted by: KJ on January 1, 2010 at 10:11 AM | PERMALINK

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Posted by: Pharme56 on March 31, 2010 at 4:59 AM | PERMALINK

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Posted by: Pharme608 on March 31, 2010 at 4:59 AM | PERMALINK




 

 

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