Despite Being Smeared With Democratic Fingerprints, Networks Hype Story of BushBs 1976 Arrest

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Despite Being Smeared With Democratic Fingerprints, Networks Hype Story of BushBs 1976 Arrest Media Promote Last-Minute Anti-Bush Hit Job

B) 2000

Erin Fehlau, a reporter at WPXT-TV Channel 51 in Portland, Maine, was last nightBs featured guest on ABCBs Nightline. Earlier that evening, she triggered a feeding frenzy by disclosing that George W. Bush was arrested and pleaded guilty to drunk driving in 1976. Ted Koppel asked her to declare that her story wasnBt what it obviously was: a late-campaign Democratic smear plot.

"The way you tell the story, it certainly sounds as though you just stumbled into something and were smart enough to follow up on it," Koppel assured Fehlau. "But you also heard Gov. Bush say several times, you know, heBs got his suspicions."

"IBm confident I wasnBt set up," Fehlau obtusely replied, though she acknowledged her source was a lawyer who also was "a delegate to the Democratic convention." She added that "I feel like if I was being set up, he would probably have just handed me the information right off the bat."

Fehlau refused to name her source, but he quickly stepped forward. Tom Connolly, the Democratic candidate for Governor in MaineBs last election, under-mined FehlauBs claim that she wasnBt set up. He told Fox News on Friday that he hoped to plant the story with the Associated Press, and told CNN that Fehlau got it only because GoreBs fax machine was busy.

Connolly grandly thrust himself into the center of the presidential election, pronouncing on CNN shortly before noon that "My role is to release information that I consider germane to the decision-making process," and spreading the story was "an act of democracy."

The courts had long ago expunged BushBs conviction from his criminal record, but releasing the legally irrelevant information "makes me a good citizen," Connolly crowed to CNNBs Daryn Kagan. (See box.)

Before they raised a finger to establish this storyBs partisan pedigree, reporters were using guilt-by-association tactics to smear Bush further, even as they feigned sympathy. "I never identify with George W. so much as I do tonight. ItBs like a cheater who gets caught, and then he blames the person who told his wife he was cheating," CNBCBs Geraldo Rivera told NewsweekBs Jonathan Alter last night on Rivera Live.

"The Clinton experience is a reminder that the past has a way of catching up with these people and biting them in the ankle," Alter replied. "And IBm not sure the American people want another blind date at this point." Geraldo fantasized about other possibilities: "What if he beat up his girlfriend and he said that was some youthful indiscretion? What if he snorted cocaine? What if he shot up heroin?"

On the same show, MSNBCBs Chip Reid related that reporters covering Bush were giddy at the prospect of additional embarrassments. "The reporters were all chattering about this and saying BWait a minute! If heBs got this skeleton in his closet, what else is there?B And some were saying BRemember, he never answered those questions about hard drugs?B"

ThereBs been zero evidence to support hard drug use, but the media nevertheless heavily promoted the tale last summer. Now, the gossip is being revived by reporters as they race to cover a last-minute story, peddled by a Democratic activist, that they couldnBt resist. -- Rich Noyes.

-- Uncle Bob (unclb0b@aol.com), November 04, 2000


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