Something’s been going on with the MSM lately.
First it was the Boston Globe, criticizing Biden’s “chains” remark.
Then it was Tina Brown’s Newsweek, publishing a Niall Ferguson cover story on why Obama needs to go.
Then we got Politico‘s expose of the narrow, petty nature of the Obama campaign and the infighting among his operatives.
And now I notice that CBS’s White House Chief Correspondent Norah O’Donnell has jumped on the bandwagon of critiquing Obama. I’m not ordinarily a watcher of network news—or even TV news, for that matter—so I’m not really familiar with O’Donnell’s prior reporting, or when she started being a bit more critical of the president. But when I looked her up, I saw that her credentials for the usual sort of pro-Obama reporting seemed impeccable: gigs on NBC and MSNBC and then CBS, as well as substitute hosting for Chris Matthews (he of the Obama-induced leg thrill).
But something has evidently been going on that led up to this:
Note, also, that although it’s O’Donnell who is toughest on Obama in the clip, her response was to a question that seemed to purposely set up the critique.
So why is CBS news suddenly starting to sound a bit like Fox every now and then? I submit that at least one of the reasons may be that Obama has been ignoring the press lately. That makes it personal for them, and these small and probably temporary defections are being fired as warning shots.
Another reason for it may be that the press is mad at Obama for what they see as committing unforced errors. They’re been carrying his water and they expect him to do his part.
Jake Tapper, one of the few MSM correspondents who’s been relatively fair about Obama from the start, has this to say:
“I have said before”¦ [that I] thought the media helped tip the scales. I didn’t think the coverage in 2008 was especially fair to either Hilary Clinton or John McCain,” Tapper said.
On the 2008 coverage, he noted, “Sometimes I saw with story selection, magazine covers, photos picked, [the] campaign narrative, that it wasn’t always the fairest coverage.”
It is emblematic of the whole problem with press bias that critiques as exceptionally mild as Tapper’s—that the 2008 coverage wasn’t [emphasis mine] “especially fair” or “always the fairest“—now qualify as newsworthy criticisms of the press.



