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White, Christian Evangelicals are the Rodney Dangerfield of American politics: They don’t get no respect.
After being responsible for spearheading the re-election of their candidate,
instead of receiving congratulations, Christian Evangelicals got to hear
NBC stars denigrate their intelligence, turn their support for President
Bush into a negative, and even seek to nullify President Bush’s electoral
victory.
At noontime the day after, NBC “election anchor” and Hardball host
Chris Mathews, who during the campaign had not sought to hide his hardcore
Democrat partisanship, said of Evangelicals, “they’re believing, not analytical,”
a statement that would have applied perfectly to your typical socialist mainstream
media (SMSM) journalist or tenured professor.
Imagine if a network star said of blacks, “They’re believing, not analytical.”
His producer would cut his mike, before the next sentence came out of his
mouth. But at the networks, such disrespect for the intelligence of arguably
the most powerful voting bloc in America is not only permitted, but encouraged.
(Note that on some social issues, such as gay marriage, black Evangelicals
think the same way as their white counterparts.)
In emphasizing that 97% of Republicans voted for Bush, and that Evangelicals
are the GOP base, Mathews said that Evangelicals “love Bush,” as if that
were a negative, rather than observing the real negative of the election,
John Kerry’s failure to inspire Democrats to vote for him.
George W. Bush received 51.1% of the popular vote to John Kerry’s 48.0%.
(The ultimate size of Bush’s Electoral College majority awaits news from
some low-population states.) The Republicans increased their control of the
Senate from 51 seats to 55, and picked up four seats in the House, raising
their total to 228. No incumbent president had enjoyed such re-election success
since FDR in 1936.
On NBC with Mathews, Today host Katie Couric, who rose to fame playing
the sweet, all-American girl, before revealing her mean streak, refused to
concede the election. That was one hour after Kerry had called Bush to congratulate
the latter on his victory. When Mathews noted that Bush had won a majority
of the popular vote, Couric parroted the Democrat party talking point, that
Bush had won “A majority, not a mandate.”
Scorched-earth socialists like Couric will apparently never concede a presidential
election to a Republican. Not even Mathews would engage in Couric-style denial,
responding, “The rule is 50 percent,” a rule that does not, however, apply
to Democrats.
They keep moving the goalposts.
In 2000, Democrats refused to concede the election to Bush, supposedly due
to his failure to beat Al Gore in the popular vote, and then held the nation
hostage for five weeks. (Gore won the popular vote by 500,000 ballots.) At
the time, socialists and other Democrats demanded that if Bush were to be
president, he was obliged to run a bipartisan, caretaker government. In other
words, he could be president in name only.
In this election, not only did Bush win the electoral vote and beat Kerry
by 3.5 million votes in the popular vote, but with 51.1%, he was the first
candidate to get a majority of all votes cast since his father in 1988. And
yet, Katie Couric refused to recognize his victory. And Democrats like to
call other people angry and mean-spirited?!
Bill Clinton never won a majority of the popular vote. He received only 42.9%
in 1992, winning due to the inroads Reform party candidate Ross Perot (18.9)
made in the support of incumbent President George H.W. Bush (37.1%), and
received 49.2% in 1996 (with Republican Bob Dole getting 40.7% and Perot
getting 8.4%). And yet, there is no record of Katie Couric ever denying Bill
Clinton a mandate to govern.
During election night, CBS anchor Dan Rather was just as much a Democrat
dead-ender as Katie Couric would prove to be. Shortly after midnight, it
became clear that Bush would carry Ohio, and thus the election. As Brit Hume
& Co. pointed out on Fox News, Bush only needed 269 electoral
votes in order to win, since a tie would throw the election into the Republican-controlled
House of Representatives.
Admittedly playing things close to the vest, to avoid mistakenly calling
a state wrong, as Fox did with Florida in 2000, Hume waited until “12:41
and 20 seconds,” to call Ohio for Bush.” That gave the President 269 electoral
votes.
CBS’ stars, however, lived in an alternate universe. Rather’s heir-apparent,
John Roberts, claimed that Bush required 270 electoral votes, in order to
win. A CBS analyst insisted that a tie would “cause a Constitutional crisis.”
Since the Founding Fathers had in the Constitution foreseen just such a situation,
a Constitutional crisis could only have been provoked by Democrats, led by
the media, had they refused to abide by the Constitution’s electoral provisions.
Dan Rather refused to concede Ohio to Bush. Period. As the minutes and hours
passed, Rather kept the electoral vote count stuck on 242. Occasionally,
he would say, “For those of you who may have been watching somewhere with
not as good information as we have,” with a chuckle, that CBS was not yet
giving Ohio to Bush.
These guys are starting to imitate federal judges who think that if they
personally dislike a legally enacted statute, they can simply toss it.
In his folksy persona -- as opposed to his high-strung, hard-charging one
-- Rather mixed in some humorous, homespun sayings: The election was “hot
enough to make paint peel,” and “This situation could give an aspirin a headache.”
Rather understood the significance of Ohio. Throughout the night, he would say, “Ohio, Ohio, Ohio.”
At 2:06 a.m., CBS’ Jim Axelrod reported from Kerry headquarters with a straight
face, that Kerry’s people were saying, “We are winning Ohio.”
At 2:53 a.m., Rather said, “If George Bush carries Ohio, that’s it.”
After 3 a.m., Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) appeared on CBS, to provide Democrat
talking points: “It is not a mandate …. I hope he will govern from the center.
He only won through tearing down his opponent. And that is not a mandate.
It’s simply a return to office.
“Well, there’s no mandate to privatize social security. There’s no mandate …” to this, no mandate to that.
In other words, you may think you’ve won, but we’re still in charge. Another
version of Dem-logic is trotted out periodically by the New York Times,
whose editorial page lectures Republican elected leaders that the only truly
conservative position involves “conserving” all Democrat programs, laws,
and executive orders.
Speaking of the Devil, at 3:21 a.m., the Times, which had colluded with CBS’ 60 Minutes
on the phony Al Qaqaa “missing weapons” story, ran the following headlines
on its Web front page: “BUSH HOLDS LEAD; Kerry Refuses to Concede Tight Race;
GOP Keeps Grip on Senate House.”
At about 3:33 a.m., Rather’s lefty colleague, Ed Bradley, tried to explain
to him that Bush had taken Ohio. Bradley showed that Bush’s expanding lead
in Ohio, at that point 170,000 votes, was such that even if every provisional
vote went for Kerry, Bush would still win. “If you believe these numbers,
we estimate that Bush rather solidly has won Ohio.”
Rather reproved Bradley, “Now, Ed Bradley, who does not have a degree in math …”
Bradley: “But I used to teach math years ago.”
Rather: “Well, if all that holds, Bush will win…. There’s some ifs, ands, and buts there.
“While it appears that the advantage is George Bush’s, the appearances may not be so….”
“Until it’s official, it isn’t official. That’s it. Period.”
At 3:42 a.m., Rather said, “Playing it cautious and conservative, as we have all night.”
So, Rather will play fast and loose with forged documents, but cautious and
conservative with election results? Something doesn’t smell right here.
At 3:50 a.m., Rather did violence to Bradley’s words, saying, “Ed Bradley
has done some figuring, and concluded it’s shaded for Bush.”
At 3:52 a.m., Rather repeated the misleading notion, that even if Bush got
269 electoral votes, “He would still need one more vote.”
If Dan Rather were serious, and the networks could not call a race before
the total was “official,” then there would be no function for them on election
night. The people would merely need to wait until the next day to hear the
official election results. But of course, Rather didn’t mean that.
Was Dan Rather counting on some last-minute Democrat electoral black magic?
At 4 a.m., Rather went off the air without ever giving Ohio to George W. Bush.
Meanwhile, socialists and communists at the Web site democraticunderground.com
were claiming that Republicans were stealing the election. They claimed variously
that electronic touch screen voting machines in Florida were displaying Bush’s
name, when Democrats sought to vote for Kerry, and also insisted that because
early exit polls were heavily pro-Kerry, it proved that the Republicans were
guilty of election fraud in Ohio and Florida. It would never occur to the
good folks at DU to consider that the early exit polls might have been fraudulent,
due to pollsters seeking to help Kerry win, by causing a bandwagon effect
that would encourage Democrat voters to go to the polls, and discourage Republican
voters from going to the polls. (On Wednesday, Carl Cameron of Fox News
would point out that the exit polls were skewed. For one thing, pollsters
interviewed disproportionate numbers of female voters. But there’s no excuse
for that. A skewed exit poll is a fraudulent exit poll.)
The New York Times refused to concede that Bush had won the election
until after John Kerry did. (“BUSH WINS 2ND TERM; Kerry Concedes, but ‘Our
Fight Goes On [sic]’”) Does that mean that any candidate, no matter how soundly
thrashed, can hold an election hostage, by simply refusing to acknowledge
the obvious? According to the SMSM, if he’s a Democrat, it does.
As Clay Waters of Times Watch (of the Republican Media Research Center) reported, on November 3, some Times reporters wrote as if John Kerry, not George Bush, had won the election. As Waters noted, the Times’ Todd Purdum
claimed that President Bush “has made himself not only the most polarizing
president since Richard M. Nixon,” and approvingly quoted socialist historian
Robert Dallek’s casuistry to argue that Iraq is Vietnam all over again, even
if it isn’t. “It's not Vietnam, but it stands in the shadow of Vietnam, and
as a consequence, people see this as similar.” “People” meant folks like
Robert Dallek and Todd Purdum. (Purdum is the husband of Dee Dee Myers, who
served as President Clinton’s press secretary.)
Let’s see. Jimmy Carter managed to lose re-election to Ronald Reagan, which
would suggest that he was more polarizing (aka “divisive”) than George W.
Bush. And Bill Clinton got himself impeached, which suggests to me that he
was pretty darned polarizing. Nixon, after all, won re-election in one of
the great landslides of American electoral history. A “polarizing” landslide
victory? Aren’t they all? The only possible meaning I can determine for “polarizing,”
as used by Purdum would be, “is hated by the SMSM and other members of the
Democrat base.”
Paralleling the SMSM’s refusal to concede, vice-presidential candidate, Senator
John Edwards, reportedly (I can’t remember where) wanted Senator John Kerry
to dead-end it, and refuse to concede.
Network people and other Democrat politicians have been saying that Bush
must seek to heal the rift in the country -- by moving to the left, er, “center.”
Again, when Bill Clinton won his victories without getting 50% of the popular
vote, the media never called on Clinton to move to the right, in order to
heal the country.
Carl Cameron of Fox News offered the most honest appraisal of the
election: A president hadn’t won re-election and expanded his control of
Congress, “Since the earth cooled [1936]. Not a bad day, and a tough one
for Democrats to swallow.”
Blogger Ed Driscoll has come up with
the most thought-provoking explanation for Memogate/Rathergate: That Dan
Rather wasn’t merely inflicting his own bias on the public, but serving his
viewers’ bias, as well. Driscoll noted that with the greater diversity the
new media have given us, moderates and conservatives have deserted the ranks
of CBS News viewers for outlets like Fox News, leaving behind
a hard, leftwing core. Thus, do Rather and his CBS colleagues feel constrained
to play to their base. The same explanation may shed some light on Rather’s
refusal to grant that the President had won Ohio, and thus re-election.
The challenger and the champ were gracious in defeat and victory, respectively;
each called for national unity. Were the leaders of the SMSM and their base
listening?
New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix has written for Toogood Reports, Middle American News, the New York Post, Daily News, American Enterprise, Insight, Chronicles, Newsday and many other publications. His recent work is collected at The Critical Critic.
Email Nicholas Stix
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