AP in the Tank for Obama?
By AC Writer, published Oct 08, 2008
Published Content: 579 Total Views: 117,819 Favorited By: 5 CPs
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Many conservatives believe the mainstream media is dominated by a liberal bias, and many liberals believe the mainstream media is either pretty balanced or slightly favors conservatives. Truth is, it depends on which media organization you pay attention to. The New York Times is clearly slanted left, while the Wall Street Journal tends to tilt right. The Associated Press, which has never been a big fan of conservatives or Republicans (the two are not the same), has long been accused of an openly liberal bias. But yesterday the AP went over the top.
An article by AP writer Beth Fouhy, titled "Palin Stretches Truth in Campaign Speeches," put the AP's bias toward the Obama - Biden ticket on clear display for all to see.
The article starts with an immediate attack on vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and then proceeds to lay out an argument against Palin while completely ignoring similarities with the Obama - Biden ticket.
Fouhy says, "At a rally Tuesday, Palin tried to link Obama to the failure of housing giant Fannie Mae by noting that two Obama supporters once led the troubled company." She went on to say that "...Palin exaggerated Obama's ties to Raines and Johnson while omitting any mention of a closer relationship between a top McCain aide and the failed housing giants."
What Fouhy fails to say is that Franklin Raines told the Washington Post he was an economic adviser to Barack Obama, and that assertion went unchallenged by the Obama campaign. That is, of course, until Fannie and Freddie collapsed and Raines was tied to "accounting irregularities" at Fannie Mae. Then, in a stroke of political expediency, Obama denied Raines' role, Raines backed him up, and the Post said the original story couldn't be relied upon. As for Jim Johnson, who also is supposedly not close to Obama, Fouhy glosses over the relationship. The reality is that Johnson was tapped to head Obama's vice presidential search committee, but had to step down over a questionable loan. Who selects someone they are not close to for leading their VP search committee? Something smells here.

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Julia Bodeeb White
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Posted on 10/08/2008 at 10:10:12 AM