Media blames Republicans once more — this time on national-debt restrict

Read more
Read more

Biased broadcast information protection of the Republican Party persists. A brand new research from the Media Research Center has the main points. The longstanding liberal leanings of main broadcasters — ABC, CBS and NBC — emerged this week in protection of the nation’s economic system.

Read more

“While warning of the real dangers of default, the networks pretty much ignored the dangers of the rising national debt, and painted Republican proposals to trim spending as extreme attempts to ‘gut’ or ‘slash’ liberal programs,” wrote Rich Noyes, a senior editor on the conservative press watchdog that performed the research.

Read more

“The Media Research Center analyzed all 74 ABC, CBS and NBC evening news stories that discussed the debt ceiling from January 1 through May 27, the night that the deal was struck,” he mentioned within the evaluation, which was launched Tuesday.

Read more

That protection was an train in “blaming Republicans,” Mr. Noyes wrote.

Read more

He discovered ample proof of finger-pointing within the information broadcasts — revealing that the GOP caught some noteworthy blame for the doubtless catastrophic and alarming scenario.

Read more

“Out of 44 soundbites from anchors, reporters and a handful of nonpartisan sources, 21 of them blamed Republicans, 23 blamed both sides, and zero blamed Democrats,” Mr. Noyes wrote.

Read more

He additionally parsed the type of suggestive language used to explain the Republican proposal to trim the finances.

Read more

“In nearly one-fourth of stories (17 out of 74), reporters cast this proposal as extreme, using terms such as ‘deep,’ ‘steep,’ ‘slash’ and ‘gut’ to characterize the Republican cuts,” Mr. Noyes mentioned.

Read more

And the takeaway message right here? Tim Graham — an government editor and podcaster on the Media Research Center — factors the finger at “Democrat-messaging” broadcasters.

Read more

“They can’t be bothered to offer the most basic facts in budget coverage. What is the budget for the current fiscal year? What was the last budget deficit? How large is the national debt? These are questions that are rarely answered by news anchors. What we get is a lot of horse-race jockeying and finger-pointing instead of facts. They must think the viewers are too stupid to juggle numbers,” Mr. Graham noticed in his overview of the research.

Read more

TRUMP APPEAL PERSISTS

Read more

Former President Donald Trump stays a think about 2024, suggests a brand new Monmouth University ballot.

Read more

“Among voters who name Trump as their top-of-mind preference for the GOP presidential nomination, 74% say he is definitely the strongest candidate the party can put up against [President] Biden and 21% say he probably is. Among those who express support for another candidate or have no choice at this stage, nearly 4 in 10 still feel Trump is either definitely (23%) or probably (16%) the strongest nominee the GOP can field. Only 22% of this group says the strongest Republican contender would definitely be someone other than Trump and 33% say it would probably be another candidate,” an evaluation of the findings mentioned.

Read more

“If your main argument to Republican voters is that Trump wouldn’t be the party’s strongest nominee, you’ve got a heck of a challenge ahead of you,” Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute, mentioned in a written assertion.

Read more

“There’s a bit of a chicken and egg problem with assessing electability. As we found in our polling during the 2020 Democratic primaries, if voters back a candidate based on issues or character they also tend to feel that candidate is the most electable,” he continued.

Read more

“However, this still underscores the larger point in this poll. If your message to voters who support Trump is that he cannot win, you are going to hit a brick wall. Even if you eat into the group who thinks he is only ‘probably’ the strongest candidate, you may still not capture enough of the Republican electorate to overcome Trump’s hardcore base support,” Mr. Murray mentioned.

Read more

See survey particulars within the Poll du Jour at column’s finish.

Read more

TRUMP TV

Read more

Like to trace the political trajectory of the aforementioned Donald Trump?

Read more

Fox News primetime host Sean Hannity will current a one-hour city corridor assembly with the previous president beginning at 9 p.m. EDT on Thursday.

Read more

The occasion in Clive, Iowa — a city of 19,000 simply west of Des Moines — is centered on the 2024 presidential race and the general state of the nation and sure, there will probably be questions from the viewers.

Read more

BUSY, BUSY, BUSY

Read more

Political outsider and presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy returns to New Hampshire on Thursday, And he's busy — very busy.

Read more

At 6 p.m. EDT he’ll be attending a “Lobster Bake Dinner” with the New Hampshire Federation of Republican Women within the city of New Castle.

Read more

Come Friday, the candidate has 5 back-to-back occasions — an early morning voter meet-and-greet within the state capital of Concord, adopted by a pair of “legislator’s roundtable” occasions two hours later, adopted by a luncheon with native residence builders.

Read more

The candidate then journeys 23 miles north to Laconia, the place he'll board the grand Mount Washington tour boat with 300 fellow Republicans for a “First in the Nation Dinner Cruise” on a neighborhood lake.

Read more

“Vivek will address the audience and then will spend the remainder of the cruise meeting and talking with attendees to learn about their concerns and to answer questions about why he is fighting to revive our shared national identity and spark a new American dream,” his marketing campaign notes in an advisory.

Read more

It’s crowded up that method, although. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis can be within the Granite State this week with spouse Casey DeSantis — and he has 4 occasions in 4 New Hampshire cities on Thursday alone. The begin time right here is 8 a,m., and the occasions final till 4 p.m.

Read more

All in a day’s  work.

Read more

POLL DU JOUR

Read more

• 45% of Republican voters — no matter whether or not they help former President Donald Trump — say Mr. Trump is “definitely the strongest candidate to beat President Biden” within the 2024 presidential election.

Read more

• 18% say Mr. Trump is “probably the strongest candidate” to beat Mr. Biden within the basic election.

Read more

• 19% say one other Republican candidate “would probably be a stronger candidate than Mr. Trump” towards Mr. Biden.

Read more

• 13% say one other Republican candidate  is “definitely a stronger candidate than Mr. Trump” towards Mr. Biden.

Read more

• 4% “don’t know” in regards to the situation.

Read more

SOURCE: A Monmouth University ballot of 655 registered Republican voters performed May 18-24.

Read more

• Contact Jennifer Harper on jharper@washingtontimes.com.

Read more

Content Source: www.washingtontimes.com

Read more

Did you like this story?

Please share by clicking this button!

Visit our site and see all other available articles!

US 99 News