Under Deb Riechmann's byline, an Associated Press story, Bush Expected to Name New Nominee Monday, contains this sentence:
Conservatives revile O'Connor for staking out moderate and practical positions on controversial issues.Reichmann doesn't name a single conservative who reviles Justice O'Connor, nor does she or her AP editors provide one example of O'Connor's "moderate and practical positions on controversial issues."
But providing such information would get in the way of the AP's reason for running that sentence: To tell readers conservatives are people who revile a public figure who is moderate and practical concerning controversial issues.
If you doubt that, read the sentence again:
Conservatives revile O'Connor for staking out moderate and practical positions on controversial issues.It reads like a cut-and-paste from a Moveon.org attack ad. It does nothing but tell people what the AP wants them to believe about conservatives.
The AP could have told readers of conservatives' recent praise for O'Connor's dissent in Kelo and for much else. But that, as the pols say, "gets off message."
So the liberal journalists at the AP campaigned their way.
1 comments:
Well, just by referring to O'C as "practical" and "moderate" they demonstrate their bias.
By definition a Conservative will find a Liberal judge "out of the mainstream" and vice-versa. But this AP statement, typically, does not recognize that they start with the liberal viewpoint and go from there.
-AC
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