Serial exaggerator to be held accountable — someday

Earlier this week, at the latest debate for Republican presidential candidates, Rudy Giuliani attacked Hillary Clinton with a line from his stump speech: “The free market is our … greatest assets. The leading Democratic candidate once said that the unfettered free market is the most destructive force in modern America. I mean, just get an idea of where that philosophy comes from.”

Now, Clinton didn’t say that. He probably knows she didn’t say that. But for the candidate who tends to exaggerate almost every claim he makes, Giuliani can’t seem to help himself. Exaggeration just comes too naturally to him.

Of course, he might make more of an effort, if these constant embellishments became politically problematic, but so far, the media hasn’t called him on it. Indeed, his quote about Clinton was widely reported after the debate, though few outlets bothered to tell the public his claim wasn’t true.

Greg Sargent noticed that Washington Post political reporter Lois Romano was asked about this during an online chat with readers yesterday.

New York: Hi, Lois. In the GOP debate earlier this week, Rudy Giuliani said: “The leading Democratic candidate once said that the unfettered free market is the most destructive force in modern America. I mean, just get an idea of where that philosophy comes from.” Rudy uses this line on Hillary frequently. But as has been conclusively proven, it’s an almost comically dishonest distortion of what Hillary actually said in a 1996 interview with Brian Lamb. In that interview, Hillary quoted another author saying that the unfettered free market had been radically disruptive, not destructive, and actually went on to praise free markets.

My question, though, is this. If Al Gore can be painted as a serial liar and exaggerator by the media for things he didn’t actually say, why has Giuliani so far gotten a pass on the lies he’s actually spouting publicly?

Lois Romano: He hasn’t been really challenged on every word yet. That will come. Right now, there are so many people in the race trying to get footing, and the media is trying to illuminate facts about all of them. As the field starts to winnow, you will see more and more scrutiny of what candidates say and do, and what they have done or said in the past…. (emphasis added)

It was a good question, but the answer leaves much to be desired.

A leading GOP candidate — arguably, the frontrunner — can’t go a day without making some kind of serious exaggeration about his record or that of his rivals, but the media is content to let scrutiny come later? At what point will political reporters deem it worthwhile to start fact-checking? Why is it that voters (i.e., news consumers) should hear Giuliani’s claims now, but hear about the truth about those claims at some later, undetermined point?

Put it this way: what are reporters waiting for, exactly?

Regular readers may know, but I’ve been keeping track of some (not all) of Giuliani’s more obvious exaggerations, at least as they regard his own record. I haven’t had to look too hard for content.

He can’t just say he spent time at Ground Zero; he has to exaggerate to say he spent as much time (if not more) than the rescue, recovery, and cleanup workers who spent a year sifting through human remains and rubble. He can’t just say he’s interested in counter-terrorism; he has to exaggerate to say he’s been “studying Islamic terrorism for 30 years.” He can’t just say he’s committed to promoting adoption over abortion; he has to exaggerate his record as mayor. He can’t just say he cut taxes in NYC; he has to exaggerate his record to include tax cuts he opposed (he even counted one cut twice). When it comes to Giuliani’s record on budget surpluses, it’s more of the same. The guy can’t even release a list of congressional endorsements without exaggerating the numbers.

Romano’s passivity notwithstanding, this is the point at which campaign narratives are established. Now is when voters are starting to evaluate candidates. If a leading presidential hopeful has a problem telling the truth without embellishments, it seems like the kind of thing that deserves attention before primary voters head to the polls.

Apparently, though, we’re supposed to wait for scrutiny, as if reporters will write stories in February about candidate exaggerations from October. Why am I not optimistic?

romano’s a liar. they wouldn’t dare to challenge rudy on any of his statements. hell, even now, tweety rudely shuts down any guest who attempts to bring up rudy’s adulterous behavior beyond mention of his three marriages. no comparable unending obsession like tweety displays with the clenis.

  • As the field starts to winnow, you will see more and more scrutiny of what candidates say and do, and what they have done or said in the past….

    Typical. An intellectually lazy, bullshit dodge from Romano.

    Scrutiny should be a pillar of the winnowing process!

  • Plus, it’s not fair to Hillary–how many people will form preconceptions of her based on Rudy’s outright lie? An exaggeration is embelishing an underlying kernel of truth; this is a completely falsehood.

    It’s like taking a line from Guiliani that includes “Islamists” and editing to mean “[I hate America and I hope the] Isamists [win].”

  • Ah, yes, Lois Romano, whose relentless investigative reporting contributed to John Solomon’s piece on Edwards’ scandelous house sale.

    She must be holding off on the Guilliani story until she gets the e-mail from McConnel’s office.

  • I’m confused. Shouldn’t these things be among the “facts” that the media illuminate so that people can make informed decisions as part of the winnowing process? Seems to me that if they cut out the stories and questions about things that don’t mean anything – the “beauty pageant” stories – wouldn’t there be time to cover and look into and report on the substantive things?

    If the Rudy-isms go unchallenged, isn’t that sending the message to the voters that what he says is credible and truthful?

    Jesus, I hate this process more and more.

  • As the field starts to winnow, you will see more and more scrutiny of what candidates say and do,

    I second (third?) what Blue Girl and Anne said. That is bass ackward.

  • Of course, he might make more of an effort, if these constant embellishments became politically problematic, but so far, the media hasn’t called him on it.

    The Guiliani stories have already been written. To rewrite them now would require too much work, and to re-write them accurately would put next summer’s Cape May rental in jeopardy.

    On the tombstone of the Republic will be the epitaph “Killed by a story arc”.

  • Too bad we didn’t pose this question to the moderators during one of the CNN/YouTube Presidential debates. It would have been interesting to hear them acknowledge their role in allowing clearly false impressions to stand unchallenged.

  • Lois Romano: He hasn’t been really challenged on every word yet. That will come.

    WTF, is she some sort of Rapturist?

    Yes-ah, on the Day of Judgement, aaaall the liahs and sinnahs shall be called to account for their sins, Hallelujiah!

    Or maybe she’s just another lazy twit.

  • i love this because it’s so (unintentionally) revealing: we see here the big narrative so clearly outlined and she doesn’t even seem to realize it.

    from her standpoint, there’s a period of openness until somehow (magically) the field winnows down; when there’s a period of openness, the storyline is still a little fluid (as the “media illuminates facts”). Once the storyline settles down, then (and only then) do we scrutinize – well, what normal folks might call “reality.”

    in short, the media “illuminates facts” without bothering to scrutinize what the candidates “say and do…or have done or said in the past!” so the “facts” that are being “illuminated” aren’t what normal people would call “facts” in this context: they are “facts” in the sense that rudy giuliani said “x” yesterday.

    now, is she oblivious to this problem? i think so – i think we see here a core problem that the profession fails to grapple with time and again.

    perhaps someone can ask someday how the field should be winnowed if our national journalists and pundits don’t bother to scrutinize what the candidates say or do or have done or said?

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  • I think this is pretty revealing in that it shows how much the media is willing to shortsell its public obligations to get the narrative it wants. Its been pumping the Rudy vs. Hillary angle for so long now that it doesn’t want to do anything to upset either candidate in their primaries. Presumably, once each have won their primaries, then it will be time to write the second chapter in the narrative.

    By doing this, they are attempting to create the outcome they desire, by making it more difficult for Rudy’s (and Hillary’s) primary challengers to make their attacks on them stick.

    I am also not convinced that there will be a revisiting of the previous lies (exaggerations) of Rudy’s campaign. Based on how interested the media was in the Downing Street memos, and other evidence that supported the view that there was an uncritical rush to war, the media won’t want to rehash Rudy’s previous lies because it will make them look bad for not having done their duty when it could have provided value to the public.

  • It’s the main reason he leads in the polls…the press keeps giving him a pass on the things he says. His candidacy would be washed up by now if the press were doing their job. The guy’s a joke, the press gives him validity by ignoring all his lies. Our National press core sucks…there’s no better word, they are irresponsible stenographers who have decided that journalism is too hard and time consuming. Years ago Guliani would have been called out on his exaggerations on a daily basis but present day reporters just act overwhelmed as if their jobs are too difficult to do if they actually had to fact check or investigate.

    There is a divisive element guiding the national press today. There are those seeking to report the truth, and then there are those who do everything possible to obscure it.

  • Why am I not optimistic?

    Because our press corpse is owned and operated by people who made millions from Republican tax cuts. And their lackeys know where their salaries come from

    next question?

  • Steve, Steve, Steve.

    Don’t you get it? Giuliani’s a Republican, so it’s all OK.

    By this time, the vultures had pinned Gore to the wall. But he’s a Democrat, so that’s OK, too.

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