Time’s Jay Carney has a message for the blogs who’ve been covering the prosecutor purge scandal from the beginning: We were right, he was wrong.
Twelve days ago, after David Iglesias went public, I said that if there turned out to be a broad conspiracy behind the firing of the U.S. Attorneys, “I will take my hat off to Marshall and others in the blogosphere and congratulate them for having been right in their suspicions about this story from the beginning.”
My hat is off. Josh Marshall at TalkingPointsMemo and everyone else out there whose instincts told them there was something deeply wrong and even sinister about the firings, and who dug around and kept writing about them while Iglesias decided whether to talk to the press or go quietly on to his next job, deserve tremendous credit.
When this story first surfaced, I thought the Bush White House and Justice Department were guilty of poorly executed acts of crass political patronage. I called some Democrats on the Hill; they were “concerned”, but this was not a priority. The blogosphere was the engine on this story, pulling the Hill and the MSM along. As the document dump proves, what happened was much worse than I’d first thought. I was wrong. Very nice work, and thanks for holding my feet to the fire.
That’s extremely encouraging, and Carney deserves credit for having the class to give Josh and the blogs credit here.
I can only hope Carney’s media colleagues are paying attention.
As recently as Thursday, “NBC’s and ABC’s nightly news programs [were] yet to cover the controversy over the Bush administration’s dismissal of eight U.S. attorneys, despite considerable congressional attention to the issue, including hearings begun on March 6.”
Last night, ABC World News Tonight, CBS Evening News, and NBC Nightly News devoted exactly zero seconds to the controversy, combined. Kevin Drum mentioned just two days ago that he had found that his family hadn’t heard a word about this story, and I’ve found a similar trend with people I know.
I don’t watch television news, so I don’t know what’s going on this afternoon on the cable networks, but I suspect today is the day in which the dam breaks and the scandal comes rushing onto TV screens everywhere. At least, it better.
This isn’t just some random flap — it’s a massive political scandal involving likely criminal activity. It’s likely to force the resignation of the Attorney General. The hearings, at which top White House officials will be called to testify, will probably be devastating.
Carney’s post on Time’s blog was reassuring. As was the case with the Plame scandal, the blogs have taken the lead on this story, but traditional news outlets seem to be waking up. Editors stumbled upon their WaPo and NYT this morning and probably said, “Hmm, maybe those blogs were right after all.”
It’s about time.