Tuesday, January 22, 2008

NBC & Co. decide who can run for president

By blocking candidates from major debates and otherwise skewing coverage, the media is trying to decide who we the people will have a choice to elect.  There is still a choice, limirted as it is, between two parties, but the media is unfairly blocking candidates and parties on the left and right, and then when these candidates do poorly pundits have the gall to ridicule and condemn these candidates.  Dennis Kucinich, Mike Gravel, Ron Paul, and others are long shots now, but they would surely do better if the media let people know who these candidates are and what they believe in, and they aren't so slick and fake as the favorites of the media.  We the voters should have a range of choices so the election is meaningful (for the moment ignoring the other ways the election process is biased and corrupted) and because running for office is a right, and should not be influenced to this extent by the media. 
 
I am a supporter of Dennis Kucinich, but I want all of the candidates to be treated fairly.  Kucinch has been snubbed by the big media several times so far.  CNN debate gave Kucinich less than 7 minutes of time in a two hour debate.  The Des Moines Register, Iowa Public Television, the Iowa Democratic Party (which rigged other events against him), and others blocked Kucinich from an important debate in Iowa, despite his national lead among grassroots Democrats (such as in polls of the Democrats for America, Progressive Democrats of America, and The Nation magazine) and being ahead in of some included candidates in national polls.  Despite poll results, Kucinich was left out of an ABC and Facebook debate before the New Hampshire primary.  He was invited to  NBC's debate in Las Vegas, but then they univited him, apparently because they raised the cut off criterion by 1%.  
 
Below is more from Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR, the alert is online at www.fair.org/index.php?page=3246) on the exclusion of Dennis Kucinich, followed by a press release from the campaign.  
 
 
Action Alert

NBC Uninvites Kucinich
Rules changes kept progressive out of GE's debate

1/17/08

NBC Debate Jan 15

In a bizarre move the network has yet to explain, NBC rescinded an invitation to Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich to appear in its January 15 debate in Las Vegas. The GE-owned media company went all the way to the Nevada Supreme Court to defend its decision--all the while failing to explain its logic to the public.

The network originally declared a straightforward test for candidates wishing to participate in the debate: A candidate had to finish in at least fourth place in either the New Hampshire primary or Iowa caucuses, or finish among the top four in one of six major national polls. Kucinich met the latter standard, and was sent a letter on January 9 acknowledging that he would be participating in the debate, designed to air candidates' views before the January 19 Nevada caucuses.

But two days later, NBC political director Chuck Todd notified the Kucinich campaign that there were new rules: Candidates would have to have finished at least third in either Iowa or New Hampshire. The new standard eliminated Kucinich.

Of course, organizers of presidential debates have a right to establish neutral criteria for participation--criteria that should ideally be as inclusive as possible. But NBC has done little to explain why its original criteria suddenly needed to be fixed.

Indeed, Nevada district court Judge Charles Thompson ruled that Kucinich could not be legally barred from the debate, saying that he was a legitimate candidate who was "uninvited under circumstances that appear to be that they just decided to exclude him" (The Nation.com,
1/15/08 ).

But NBC successfully appealed its case to the state Supreme Court, saying that the revised standards were "in no way designed to exclude any particular candidate based on his or her views," and were a "good faith editorial choice of a privately owned cable network to limit debate participants based on the status of their campaigns." (Given that the legal argument involved FCC equal time rules, the network aired the debate only on its MSNBC cable channel, and not on its NBC affiliates in Nevada--thus limiting the actual audience for the debate).

While their argument worked in court, the fact that NBC journalists offered little in the way of a public explanation for their decision is troubling. Why were the original standards for the debate suddenly not good enough? NBC declared that it was merely exercising "journalistic discretion," but why did that discretion change so quickly?

The obvious answer is that when the previous criteria were set, there were four candidates polling better than Kucinich in the Democratic race. When one of them, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, dropped out of the race, NBC suddenly switched to a standard that only allowed the top three candidates to debate.

Does Kucinich's campaign represent ideas that offend either NBC managers or their bosses at General Electric? It's a fair question, given that MSNBC canceled Phil Donahue's nightly show in early 2003 due to the host's opposition to the Iraq War; the company worried that the host would be a "difficult public face for NBC in a time of war" (FAIR Press Release,
4/3/03).

Kucinich's peace platform might be something that a major defense contractor like General Electric would rather not expose to voters on its cable network. Likewise, Kucinich's strong opposition to nuclear power likely doesn't sit well with GE, a major player in the industry; the issue was sure to come up in any debate in Nevada, where the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump is intensely controversial.

Indeed, one of the rare challenges from the NBC moderators at the Las Vegas debate came in response to John Edwards' critical comments about nuclear power. Meet the Press host Tim Russert responded:

Senator Edwards, you say you're against nuclear power. But a reality check: I talked to the folks at the MIT Energy Initiative, and they put it this way, that in 2050, the world's population is going to go from 6 billion to 9 billion, that CO2 is going to double, that you could build a nuclear power plant one per week and it wouldn't meet the world's needs. Something must be done, and it cannot be done just with wind or solar.


It's also worth noting that NBC--like most other corporate media outlets--has had little time for Kucinich's campaign from the start, deciding long ago that the candidate was simply not viable (FAIR Media Advisory, 5/8/07). Kucinich's name has been mentioned only a few times in passing on NBC Nightly News, and Kucinich--unlike six other Democratic candidates--has yet to appear as part of Meet the Press's "Meet the Candidates" series.

In a rare case of self-examination from network journalists, Meet the Press host Tim Russert spoke to NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams about the media's role in marginalizing certain candidates (1/3/08):

The second-tier candidates, they get angry.
They think that the press doesn't focus on them, spends too much time talking about the front-runners in the debates, in the coverage day by day. But we say to them: "Well, make your mark. Start showing some growth. Start showing some resonance with the populace and you'll get the same kind of coverage." They'll say, "Wait a minute. How do we get resonance if we're not covered?" It's an important issue that we have to keep examining, our own behavior.

Perhaps Russert could examine that behavior now, and explain to NBC viewers and voters why the network has exerted so much effort to marginalize Kucinich's candidacy.

ACTION:

Please ask NBC to explain why it changed its original debate criteria to exclude Rep. Dennis Kucinich from their January 15 debate. Also, encourage Meet the Press host Tim Russert to be fair to Kucinich and invite him to participate in the "Meet the Candidates" series.

CONTACT:

NBC/MSNBC

Phone:
212 664-4444
Ask for the Comment Line

Email: letters at msnbc.com

NBC host Tim Russert via Meet the Press web contact form:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6872152/


See FAIR's Archives for more on:
GE/NBC
Elections/2008

  
NBC un-plugs Kucinich from Presidential debate Print
http://www2.kucinich.us/files/images/pics%20fior%20website/nbc.jpg NBC un-plugs Kucinich from Presidential debate

DETROIT, MI - Less than 44 hours after NBC sent a congratulatory note and an invitation to Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich to participate in the Jan. 15 Democratic Presidential debate in Las Vegas, the network notified the campaign this morning it was changing its announced criteria, rescinding its invitation, and excluding Kucinich from the debate.

NBC Political Director Chuck Todd notified the Kucinich campaign this morning that, although Kucinich had met the qualification criteria publicly announced on December 28, the network was "re-doing" the criteria, excluding Kucinich, and planning to invite only Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama and former senator John Edwards.

The criteria announced last month included a fourth-place or better showing in a national poll. The USA/Gallup poll earlier this month showed Kucinich in fourth place among the Democratic contenders.

In an email to the Kucinich campaign at 2:35 p.m. on Wednesday, January 9, Democratic Party debates consultant Jenny Backus wrote:

"Congratulations on another hard-fought contest. Now that New Hampshire is over, we are on to Nevada and our Presidential Debate on Tuesday January 15. This letter serves as an official invitation for your candidate to participate in the Nevada Presidential Debate at Cashman Theatre in downtown Las Vegas. You have met the criteria set by NBC and the Debate."

Todd notified the Kucinich campaign this morning that the network had decided to change the criteria and limit participation in the debate to only three candidates.

Kucinich is the only remaining Democratic Presidential candidate who: voted against the original Iraq War authorization in 2002 and every war-funding measure since; voted against the so-called Patriot Act; advocates a national, not-for-profit health system that covers all Americans; has called for the repeal of NAFTA and withdrawal from the WTO; and proposes a national back-to-work program (Works Green Administration) patterned after the Depression-era Works Progress Administration (WPA).

The Kucinich campaign, which filed an emergency complaint with the Federal Communications Commission last week because of ABC's decision to exclude the candidate from a nationally televised debate, is considering legal action to address "the blatant disregard of the public interest in silencing public debate that dissents with the views of NBC, its parent company, GE, and all of the military contractors and their candidate-funding corporate interests. Corporate control of the media is one issue. Corporate media control of the information that is allowed to reach American citizens is much more dangerous, much more sinister, and much more un-American."

"When 'big media' exert their unbridled control over what Americans can see, hear, and read, then the Constitutional power and right of the citizens to vote is being vetoed by multi-billion corporations that want the votes to go their way," the Kucinich campaign said.

 

No comments: