The Right Opinion
Partisanship Reigns at CBS
Les Moonves, the president and CEO of CBS, took his wife, the former CBS news anchor Julie Chen, on a date on June 6 -- to a star-studded Beverly Hills Democratic Party fundraiser starring President Obama. He told a reporter for the Los Angeles Times of his respect for Obama, who he said "has shown great leadership" -- by bringing his support for gay marriage out of the closet.
Did I mention he runs CBS News?
Moonves tried to say, "I run a news division. I've given no money to any candidate." No, of course not. He merely donated between $2,500 and $25,000 to the Democratic National Committee's LGBT Leadership Council, which will helpfully pass it along to the candidates of their choosing. Then he acknowledged what many have worked decades to emphasize and which the likes of Moonves have steadfastly denied all along:
"Ultimately, journalism has changed ... partisanship is very much a part of journalism now."
Byron York of the Washington Examiner asked CBS spokesman Dana McClintock whether Moonves was referring to CBS News. McClintock sent back a four-word response: "No he was not." Of course not.
Moonves is living that leftist bias by his very appearance at a glitzy Hollywood DNC buck-raking event. It had all the political finesse of former CBS anchor Dan Rather showing up at a Travis County Democratic Party fundraiser in Austin, Texas, to please his eco-activist daughter Robin in 2001.
Democrat Dan had some curious things to say when exposed. Rather said he "wouldn't be surprised" if critics use the incident to call him a closet Democrat. "I'm going to get that criticism whether I deserve it or not." Rather claimed he hadn't realized beforehand that the event was a fundraiser.
Rather had the denial act down. As Bernie Goldberg said Monday on Fox, "If you hooked Dan Rather up to a lie detector machine and said, 'Was there a liberal bias when you were the anchorman of the "CBS Evening News,"' he would say no, and the needle wouldn't budge. I mean, he's not lying; he's delusional."
That was then. Today the denial of partisanship is ancient history at CBS.
Douglas Brinkley's new biography, "Cronkite," of CBS News legend Walter Cronkite exposes the degree to which this partisan approach to politics has been part of the CBS DNA -- forever.
In a shocking piece in Newsweek, Howard Kurtz announced that Cronkite pulled scams that could get an anchorman fired today.
Brinkley's book unveiled the so-called "most trusted man in America" had secretly bugged a committee room at the 1952 Republican convention in Chicago. This from the man who found the Watergate bugging to be horrific on the level of a constitutional crisis? Kurtz bluntly called it "a stunt of questionable legality that should have disqualified him from ever holding his subsequent powerful position of public trust."
Few Barry Goldwater backers forget 1964, when Cronkite repeatedly smeared the GOP nominee. When Goldwater accepted an invitation to visit a U.S. Army facility in Germany, CBS hack Daniel Schorr said he was launching his campaign in "the center of Germany's right wing." Kurtz recalled that on the day of JFK's assassination the year before, Cronkite nodded his head in thinly veiled contempt when handed a note on air that Goldwater said "no comment." Never mind that Goldwater was attending his mother-in-law's funeral that day.
In 1968, Cronkite met privately with Robert Kennedy in his Senate office. "You must announce your intention to run against Johnson, to show people there will be a way out of this terrible war," said The Most Trusted Man in America. Soon afterward, Cronkite was awarded an exclusive interview in which Kennedy left the door open for a possible run --the very candidacy "Uncle Walter" urged him to undertake.
Kurtz concluded: "I am shaking my head at the spectacle of a network anchor secretly urging a politician to mount a White House campaign-- and then interviewing him about that very question. This was duplicitous, a major breach of trust."
As Brinkley said to Kurtz on CNN's "Reliable Sources" on Sunday, "Everybody had made a decision in America. They liked Walter Cronkite. They didn't want to hear anything negative about him. And the journalists, the press world thought of him as like the king daddy of the fourth estate, Uncle Walter -- almost a patriarchal figure to young reporters, so he had immunity."
That immunity is dead. Cronkite's image is in need of correction, as ultimately Rather's was. So, too, must the idea of objectivity at CBS "News" be vaporized once and for all, given Moonves' public and unmistakably partisan words and activities.
And still, CBS denies it has a bias.
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9 Comments
wjm in Colorado
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 11:35 AM
Deflect, Deny, and counter accuse, the Democrat playbook. Of course See BS denies any partisanship, its all part of the plan. Destroy America, commit treason, vote Democrat.
Son of Liberty in Colorado
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 12:22 PM
You'd have to be blind to see that there isn't any "fair and balanced" main stream media. Ol Les Moonbeam just finally came out and acknowleged it is all. Look who they have as commentators, a bunch of whiny loudmouthed ignorant shills of Obamacon. I think we should start using Rule .303 pretty soon.
billy396 in ohio
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 1:06 PM
We should be using rule.303, .308., .223., etc., etc. We should have been using those rules as soon as "Pres" Oblunder made it clear that he wasn't going to even consider our Constitution when he made HIS decisions. The 'comrades' running the show and all of their puppets are not even worthy of the term 'human being'. Anyone who would be complicit in the destruction of the greatest form of government that this world has ever known deserve NO mercy, of any kind. The founders would have been shooting long, long ago. But, then again, they had honor, courage, and dignity in spades. The majority of 'Americans' today don't even deserve the name. Wake up your friends and neighbors before it's too late. This administration isn't going down without one hell of a fight. They are the masters of dirty tricks and outright treason. Anyone who believes that voter fraud won't be a problem in November is living in denial.
CAM in California
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 12:27 PM
What I find so unbelievable about organizations like CBS is their hypocrisy (if they know they are biased and don't admit it), or their unfathomable stupidity (if they actually believe that they are objective). The news departments are in business to make money - there is nothing the matter with that - but when attacked they clothe themselves in the First Amendment, and contend that they are just reporting the news. Sometimes I think that those who believe this nonsense are living in a parallel universe. Finally, the thing that really bothers me is the question of exactly how long have we, the public, been given what are essentially biased editorials under the guise of objective news reporting. I am afraid it is far longer than any of us realized.
Tex Horn in Texas
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 1:27 PM
@ Cam: the bias in reporting started with the first newspaper printed. Humans argue, humans write, humans believe.
CaseAce in CA
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 2:27 PM
Of the many disappointments our Founding Fathers would have for the present day deterioration of their beloved system of checks and balances, their biggest may well be the failure of the press to simply inform the public. "An informed citizenry is the only true repository of the public will." Thomas Jefferson And what would that say about a misinformed public...
GB in Greensboro, NC
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 4:41 PM
While the majority of today's media is plainly biased toward the left, such lack of objectivity would likely not surprise the Founding Fathers. Political reporting in Jefferson's time (and later, such as during Jackson's presidency and during the Civil War) were outrageously partisan and, coming in the years long before 20th century Supreme Court precedents, often defamatory. What may surprise the Founding Fathers about today's media stars is their refusal to acknowledge their partisanship.
Terry Webb in PEARLAND
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 6:52 PM
Gimme a break! Anyone with a brain could surmise that Cronkite was an open ultra liberal before, during , and after the Vietnam War (Dien Ben Phu {1956} and onward {1975}). His sign off, "and that's the way it is (blah, blah date)", was a bald faced lie then and, in retrospective, now. Evidently, if you have a mustache and speak in a sonorous tone, your emanations are beyond reproach. Kinda like Obuttface having big ears, arrogant manner, comedic public performance, and being able to lie with a straight face.
Tex Horn in Texas
Thursday, June 14, 2012 at 6:54 PM
There are real people who still watch CBS?