Looking at the three “major public-relations offensives” the Bush gang has launched over the last year on Iraq and national security, there are a few subtle differences, but one constant: every time the president speaks, he gets blanket media coverage.
No matter how similar Bush’s comments are to every other time he’s spoken on the subject, the White House asks the networks to air all of the speeches, in their entirety. Even though the networks know there’s unlikely to be anything new or newsworthy, they always oblige.
Dem leaders are sick of it, so they’re starting to work the refs.
Frustrated by President Bush’s receipt of near-constant media attention on national security, Democratic Congressional leaders on Tuesday accused the major television networks of unfair coverage and demanded equal time for their ideas.
In a letter to the networks, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) charged Bush with politicizing security matters for partisan gain and urged the nation’s five major network executives to give them time to present their competing viewpoints. They said that “until now, there been a complete absence of balance in the news coverage.”
Obviously, the bully pulpit is a perk of the presidency. But every time the networks offer the White House blanket coverage for yet another speech with the same ideas, arguments, and words as the last 50 similar speeches, the broadcasts effectively become hour-long commercials — which neither the RNC nor the administration pay for.
“The issue of national security has regularly been politicized and exploited for partisan gain by the Bush Administration and Republicans in Congress,” the Democrats wrote.
“The president’s recent speaking schedule and his nationally televised prime time speech last night strongly suggest that similar tactics will be employed in the coming weeks leading up to Election Day to heighten public anxiety and promote partisanship.”
Well, of course they will. It worked perfectly in 2004, the networks apparently didn’t learn anything from the experience, so the Bush gang naturally assumes the same scheme will work again. And they’re probably right.
“In order to provide the American people with complete information to make the best choices come Election Day, we ask that you commit your network to providing fair and equitable coverage to the viewpoints of both Republicans and Democrats on these crucial national security debates,” Reid and Pelosi wrote.
Any chance a letter like this will have an effect? Yeah, I doubt it too.