Daily Kos

Tag: AP

HILARIOUS - AP calls out Joe Lieberman

Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 08:18:07 PM PDT

Thank you AP for giving us a good heartfelt chuckle this evening!  Fantastic.


His top contenders are said to include Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. Less traditional choices mentioned include former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge, an abortion-rights supporter, and Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, the Democratic vice presidential prick in 2000 who now is an independent.

The Gloves Are Coming Off-- Update: Obama camp hits McCain over Women

Mon Aug 18, 2008 at 06:07:24 AM PDT

PhotobucketSo yesterday in Reno, Nevada in the midst of the all the Faith Forum controversy, Obama was still on the trail. I caught part of his town hall and remember noting to myself that he was going after McCain more forcefully, well the AP picked up on that also:  

So much for hugging in church. A day after Barack Obama and John McCain exchanged an embrace during a faith forum at a California megachurch, Obama called the U.S. economy a disaster thanks to "John McCain's president, George W. Bush," and chided his Republican rival's campaign team for trying to make him look unpatriotic and weak.

You wanted him to be more forceful, indeed yesterday there were lots of people complaining about his lack of "being tough" and "going on offense" well, he's been on offense for a while now, and since he got to spend a week with his family, I fully expect him to be on fire all week.

jump

AP Watch: Yet another reason not to vote for Obama

Fri Aug 08, 2008 at 11:10:54 AM PDT

I spend about eight hours or more a day working on my web site, so I am usually surfing the web for hours a day. The AP, which I still foolishly read on Yahoo, has more bullshit memes running about Obama than can imaginably or arguably be be coincidental. This happens to be one of the most egregious headlines I have seen in a while.

Morduch-AP at it again: equally negative campaigns

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 09:59:42 AM PDT

In their most recent joke of an article, they try to equate the negativity from both sides:

joke of article
Negativity the norm in presidential campaign
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer
27 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - For all the talk about John McCain's hard-hitting politics, Barack Obama is hardly innocent.

Note that many of their articles always begin with a negative comment on Obama while McCain is seen as "hard-hitting"

Wow, they're really stretching on this Anthrax case: UPDATED

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 12:16:16 AM PDT

I know there's a thread going, but it's got over 500 comments and my computer can't even handle that many, and I'm sure others' can't as well.

I just have to share this:  This bizarre case is getting even MORE bizarre as the government displays more and more desperation in trying to make their case.  

Get a load of this headline from the AP:

Sorority may link anthrax suspect to NJ letters

Sounds promising, no?  A lonely scientist obsessed with sorority girls?  Right?  

Wrong.  This is such a desperately smelly red herring tossed our way once again all I can think of is "they must think we're really stupid".  

McCain, Obama, AP, Media Ethics & NPR's race-based bias...

Mon Aug 04, 2008 at 12:40:30 AM PDT

Sometimes, one must rant about the current state of media, journalism and news coverage in America. Now is one of those moments.

I will get back to my research and Diaries about the Jack Abramoff and his fellow Conservative Corruptionist Creeps destroying our Nation on another day.

I have been on a slow burn since Wednesday and I’ve got to spend a Diary on race-based bias, racism, media bias, the AP and NPR.

Last Sunday was the final day of the UNITY Conference—a gathering of Journalists of Color—in Chicago. McCain and Obama were both invited to speak. McCain blew off the journalists and Barack Obama did not. When he was introduced, Obama was greeted by loud applause and a few cheers. Then he settled in for almost forty minutes of tough questioning from the group.

Naturally, NPR had to use the event to highlight the dangers of a media bias and steam came out of my ears as I listened to Talk of the Nation last week.

To the jump...

AP adopts right-wing's "liberal media" meme

Sat Aug 02, 2008 at 07:55:54 PM PDT

So, I opened up Firefox and my AOL home page loaded up, and the headline was "McCain at War with the New York Times."  I start reading the story, and quickly noticed something stand out like a strobe light. Written by Devlin Barrett, a AP political writer who followed the Clinton campaign earlier this year, this is clearly another example of the Ron Fournier camp taking control of one of our venerated news institutions.

The relationship between McCain -- a frequent reader of the newspaper -- and the Times has been rocky. Yet such a grudge could pay political dividends for the presidential candidate, as criticizing the liberal media often improves a candidate's standing with Republican Party conservatives. That's critical for McCain, who has never been their favorite.

Since when does anyone besides toolbag Republicans consider the media to be liberal?  This is especially funny, considering liberals think the media is completely in the bag for Republicans anymore.  It's also sad, though, because it shows how quick Fournier is to destroy any pretense of objectivity.

More...

AP in the Tank for McCain - confirmed

Sat Aug 02, 2008 at 01:17:42 PM PDT

If there was ever any doubt about AP's slide to the right, today's headline re Obama agreeing to four debates should end it.

Updated: Corporate media (AP) omissions. A deliberate decision?

Sat Aug 02, 2008 at 10:43:56 AM PDT

In the recent statement by Obama about offshore drilling, there has apparently been selective editing taking place at the AP to delete this paragraph.

Here's an earlier release which contains the whole Obama quote.

http://ap.google.com/...

Later versions of this AP piece leave out this paragraph, and 'news outlets' like the NYT are not quoting this paragraph.  

"Like all compromises, it also includes steps that I haven't always supported," Obama conceded. "I remain skeptical that new offshore drilling will bring down gas prices in the short-term or significantly reduce our oil dependence in the long-term, though I do welcome the establishment of a process that will allow us to make future drilling decisions based on science and fact."

AP's Ron Fournier exposed as a McCain shill

Wed Jul 30, 2008 at 03:35:03 PM PDT

On Tuesday Michael Calderone at Politico produced definitive evidence of Ron Fournier's bias in favor of John McCain. He did it by linking the Associated Press Washington Bureau chief directly to the McCain presidential campaign. Over a period of several months during 2006, Fournier discussed taking a high-level communications job with the McCain campaign. Apparently Fournier turned down the job offer in the end.

I say 'apparently' because often it is difficult to tell from the reporting produced by Fournier and his Bureau whether or not he views himself as a campaign operative.

The most striking thing about this story is what is absent. Although he oversees reporting on the presidential race for the purportedly unbiased and nonpartisan AP, Fournier has never disclosed to the public his close contacts with the McCain campaign. And though he doesn't deny the contacts, when asked about them Fournier declined to discuss the matter and referred Politico to an AP spokesman (who issued a bland statement). If Fournier has had nothing to hide, then why the secrecy and evasiveness? Who would argue that the public does not have a right to know that the AP Washington Bureau chief considered working for a presidential candidate?

Here are details from Politico:

In October 2006, the McCain team approached Fournier about joining the fledgling operation, according to a source with knowledge of the talks. In the months that followed, said a source, Fournier spoke about the job possibility with members of McCain’s inner circle, including political aides Mark Salter, John Weaver and Rick Davis.

Salter, who remains a top McCain adviser, said in an e-mail to Politico that Fournier was considered for "a senior advisory role" in communications.

"He did us the courtesy of considering the offer before politely declining it," Salter said.

Discussions with McCain's top aides lasting months don't constitute a mere 'courtesy' no matter how Salter tries to spin it. If Fournier had not been interested, he would have rejected McCain's advances at the outset.

After entertaining this job offer, Fournier should not have been covering the presidential campaign, certainly not while keeping his contacts with McCain secret. That's not a hard call, ethically.

This is just the latest in a series of controversies surrounding Fournier, from his unseemly attention to John McCain's donut-gustation at an interview, to his eager embrace of Republican talking points, to the extraordinary changes he introduced at AP encouraging the freer expression of opinion in news stories. His predecessor at the AP Washington Bureau, Sandy Johnson, sees Fournier's policies as a threat to it.

"I just hope he doesn’t destroy it."

Fournier's ties to the Republican establishment were exposed garishly earlier this month by a House Oversight and Government Reform report. Discussing the Bush administration's political response to Pat Tillman's death in 2004, it cited emails sent to the WH offering political advice. This exchange stood out.

Karl Rove exchanged e-mails about Pat Tillman with Associated Press reporter Ron Fournier, under the subject line "H-E-R-O." In response to Mr. Fournier's e-mail, Mr. Rove asked, "How does our country continue to produce men and women like this," to which Mr. Fournier replied, "The Lord creates men and women like this all over the world. But only the great and free countries allow them to flourish. Keep up the fight."

Fournier tried to explain away his seemingly cozy relationship with Karl Rove.

"I was an AP political reporter at the time of the 2004 e-mail exchange, and was interacting with a source, a top aide to the president, in the course of following an important and compelling story. I regret the breezy nature of the correspondence."

However he convinced almost none of his critics that his Rovian correspondence was appropriate. For one thing, Fournier has never written about Tillman. So what was the need to contact Rove in the first place? The episode gives the impression that Fournier was just worshipping at Rove's altar.

Even before that email correspondence came to light (almost accidentally), Fournier had long been notorious both for carrying water for John McCain in particular, and for savaging McCain's rivals. Among other things, under Fournier's leadership AP reporting this year has consistently downplayed or suppressed information about McCain's many contradictory, false, and otherwise embarrassing statements. Last week at Media Matters Eric Boehlert surveyed Fournier's long and tawdry record of partisanship:

In two "Analysis" pieces and a column, Fournier questioned whether John Edwards was a "phony," announced the Clintons suffered from "utter self-absorption," and claimed that Barack Obama was "bordering on arrogance." That's the right of a pundit. But at the same time, Fournier avoided raising any doubts about Sen. John McCain, and in fact rushed to his aid in print during the senator's time of campaign need.

That ethos seems to have been adopted by the larger AP political team, which, honestly, writes as if it's completely in the tank for McCain...

Fournier wrote those pieces in which he routinely unloaded on the leading Democratic candidates -- Edwards, Clinton, and Obama -- while thoroughly questioning their motives and their character.

Yet I have searched in vain for a single example from the primary season in which Fournier raised a column's worth of uncomfortable questions about McCain's motives and his character...

In fact, one of the few times that Fournier dedicated a column to the Republican primary battle was following the Michigan contest, which McCain lost to Mitt Romney. The win presented Romney with his one brief window of opportunity to knock McCain from his front-runner perch. Fournier unleashed a wild column targeting Romney and practically threw his body in front of McCain to protect his beloved candidate.

Boehlert highlighted a series of reports and columns in which Fournier has advanced unfounded assertions and used flagrantly biased language to promote McCain or belittle his rivals. He concluded, as many others had already, that Fournier has a man-crush on McCain.

The fact is, Fournier's McCain love runs deep and goes back years.

The Associated Press desperately needs to find a new Washington Bureau chief.

++++

See also the diary by trifecta, with extensive discussion.

Ron Fournier (AP Hack) Was Negotiating McCain Campaign Position

Tue Jul 29, 2008 at 05:53:00 PM PDT

The politico has a story tonight out that reveals that Ron Fournier, the DC bureau chief of the associated press almost became a communications staffer for John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.

In October 2006, the McCain team approached Fournier about joining the fledgling operation, according to a source with knowledge of the talks. In the months that followed, said a source, Fournier spoke about the job possibility with members of McCain’s inner circle, including political aides Mark Salter, John Weaver and Rick Davis.

Salter, who remains a top McCain adviser, said in an e-mail to Politico that Fournier was considered for "a senior advisory role" in communications.

AP report on cop assault on bicylist - no youtube link

Mon Jul 28, 2008 at 07:11:10 PM PDT

Why do the AP and other major news sources refuse to give web links on their stories when youtube videos are mentioned in the stories?  Do they not want people to see the actual evidence of what happened when it is recorded on video?

Associated Press

July 28, 2008 at 9:41 PM EDT

NEW YORK — Police stripped a New York City officer of his badge and gun Monday after a video posted on YouTube showed him bodychecking a bicyclist who was part of a Times Square demonstration.

The video was recorded Friday at the Critical Mass ride, a monthly protest of urban reliance on motor vehicles.

The video, posted anonymously, shows the officer standing in the street as bikes whiz past. He moves toward a cyclist and violently knocks him to the ground in front of crowds of people.

Ron Fournier strikes again

Sat Jul 26, 2008 at 07:56:15 PM PDT

AP story on the front page of the WSJ: "McCain Blasts Obama on Troop Visit"

Obama's campaign called the accusation "wildly inappropriate." His spokesman has claimed that the visit to a military hospital in Germany was scrapped after the Pentagon raised concerns about political activity on a military base. Earlier, though, the campaign had said Mr. Obama decided the visit might be seen as inappropriate politicking. However, the Pentagon said the senator was never told not to visit.

AP Misrepresents Michelle Obama-please read

Thu Jul 17, 2008 at 03:11:29 PM PDT

Remember the "first time [really] proud of country" flap?

Remember how MSNBC deliberately clipped out the word "really," giving the quote a very different meaning?  Well now the AP is doing the same thing, intentionally or not:

The AP must fire Ron Fournier

Tue Jul 15, 2008 at 06:10:25 PM PDT

It's becoming patently clear that the Associated Press has a chronic problem with employing reporters with a blatant anti-Democrat bias.  Just a quick search at Media Matters' website shows the depth of the problem, but we know many of the best (worst) examples from Pickler and others.

But, the worst was yet to come.  Most of us know by now this clear indication of underlying bias shown by the AP's Washington Bureau head Ron Fournier.  

Karl Rove exchanged e-mails about Pat Tillman with Associated Press reporter Ron Fournier, under the subject line "H-E-R-O." In response to Mr. Fournier's e-mail, Mr. Rove asked, "How does our country continue to produce men and women like this," to which Mr. Fournier replied, "The Lord creates men and women like this all over the world. But only the great and free countries allow them to flourish. Keep up the fight."

Take a moment to breath in the depravity here.

Doug Feith House Judiciary Hearing

Tue Jul 15, 2008 at 09:21:48 AM PDT

Naomi Klein is on Democracy Now.  Yep, I'm still a guy.  She's a beautiful, incredibly intelligent and highly educated woman.  I could hope to come across as well as she does, but I don't think my mug would measure up.  I better stick to writing and keep my face off the television.

Funny story (okay, not really).  I wrote about the Feith Hearing yesterday.  Then I found an old DK diary written in June that made me think I had my facts wrong.  In what can only be described as a fit of hysterical self doubt I deleted a diary which was absolutely factual and correct, and important.  [sigh]

In case you do not know, Doug Feith is one of the dirty, slimy snakes who helped justify the administration's torture policies.  He boasted to author Philippe Sands that he was a "real player" in Cheney's torture program.  I look to history for the only justice I still have faith in.  I hope I can find a way to view or listen to the hearing.

Bitter humor after the flip.  

Poll

Bush press conferences are

60%41 votes
4%3 votes
1%1 votes
2%2 votes
30%21 votes

| 68 votes | Vote | Results

Iran condemns McCain for cigarette joke

Sun Jul 13, 2008 at 07:25:34 AM PDT

From the AP

McCain, who once sang in jest about bombing Iran, on Tuesday reacted to a report of rising U.S. cigarette exports to the Islamic Republic by saying it may be "a way of killing 'em."

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said: "McCain's crude remark on the indiscriminate killing of the Iranian nation not only testifies to his disturbed state of mind, but also to his warmongering approach to foreign policy."

In a statement quoted by the website of Iran's state Press TV satellite station, Hosseini added:

"We condemn such jokes and believe them to be inappropriate for a U.S. presidential candidate. It is most evident that jokes about genocide will not be tolerated by Iranians or Americans."

Attack of the Giant Flip-Flops

Sat Jul 05, 2008 at 03:01:04 PM PDT

Note: I'm the author of a new book, Barack Obama: This Improbable Quest, but I'm not part of the Obama campaign.

An Associated Press news "analysis"this weekend reveals a great deal about the right-wing attacks on the Obama campaign and media’s complicity in spreading their falsehoods.

The articleby Jennifer Loven begins, "Is Barack Obama close to being shadowed by giant flip-flops and, worse, having the image stick with people all the way to the voting booth?" If the press keeps falsely reporting Obama’s policies as flip-flops when they’re not, he certainly does.

This image suggests some of kind of bad monster movie, where an enormous pair of casual footwear haunts Obama everywhere. But the reality is much worse than cheap sandals: Media coverage in the past few weeks indicates that the press in 2008 may be even worse than in 2000 and 2004, when we "learned" that Al Gore invented the internet, and John Kerry invented his military service in Vietnam.


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