Weekend Watchdog Wrap-Up
By Bill Scher
August 11, 2008 - 9:06am ET
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The Sunday shows strike out again, going 0-for-3 for the Watchdog.
The biggest whiff goes to Face The Nation, which allowed Karl Rove to punditize at will, as if he was a mere observer of politics. Host Bob Schieffer failed to ask him about the week's biggest bombshell, evidence that the Bush Administration forged a letter to falsely link Saddam Hussein to Al Qaeda. (Come of think out, none of the Sunday shows bothered to mention the latest Bush scandal.)
Over at Meet The Press, Tom Brokaw spent considerable time talking about the economy with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, but the notion that increased public investment is needed to create jobs and strengthen America's competitiveness did not fall inside the accepted parameters of policy discussion.
(Though I should note that Tom Brokaw did dare utter the word "regulation" when asking about policy changes in response to the housing and credit crisis.)
Finally, on Fox News Sunday, host Chris Wallace did actually ask McCain campaign manager Rick Davis about his role lobbying to help the German-owned DHL buy Airborne Express and control 8,000 Ohio jobs which are now about to be lost. So, a point to Fox for not ignoring the issue.
However, Wallace only asked the superficial political question: "Are you and Senator McCain going to do anything to try to prevent that?" Wallace did not get into the deeper policy question:
Is consistently bending over backwards to help multinational corporations (and in Davis' case, getting paid hundreds of thousands in the process) serving the American economy?
Foreign investment, of course, is not a bad thing for America. But a system where the rules are constantly written for multinationals and never written for workers -- partly because multinational corporations can afford spend millions on lobbyists -- clearly is not building a healthy global economy.
Another idea rarely deemed acceptable in the parameters of Sunday show discourse.
Views expressed on this page are those of the authors and not necessarily those of Campaign
for America's Future or Institute for America's Future

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