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How the "Russert Test" Failed America

Posted by Linda Hirshman, The Nation at 11:00 AM on June 20, 2008.


Tim Russert was a powerful man who mostly did harm in every way we can think of.
timrussert

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The eulogists are right: Tim Russert was powerful. From calling Florida for Bush in 2000 to telling Al Gore to quit the contest after Election Day, to kneecapping Hillary Clinton in the debate in Philadelphia last October, Russert was a kingmaker. When he called the Democratic primary for Barack Obama last month, his fellow pundits compared it to the moment Walter Cronkite bailed on the war in Vietnam. I, for one, am looking forward to the rest of the electoral cycle without the domineering presence of NBC's electoral college of one.

It's not just that Russert abetted the Bush Administration in the Iraq War; much of the media shares that role. It's that he did damage in a wide range of contexts. There are two reasons for this: his tactics and his substance. Procedurally, there was what the Bushies actually called the "Russert Test." As they said after their candidate used an hour on Meet the Press to demonstrate his seriousness in 1999, and again in 2004, when as President he appeared on the show to stanch his fall in the polls, if you can survive an hour of Russert, you're vetted.

The biggest promoter of the Russert Test was Russert himself, as in this 2007 interview with John Elsasser of the Public Relations Society of America: "A political leader, particularly a president, can't make a tough decision unless theycan answer tough questions. So, you can always use that as an entree into the debate--a video question, but it's necessary to have follow-ups, too." And again on Sean Hannity's FOX program: "It's a TV show," Russert

explained. "If you can't handle TV questions, how you gonna stand up to Iran and North Korea and the rest of the world?"

In fact, the Russert Test was exactly backwards. The better our leaders performed on Meet the Press, the worse their foreign policy seemed to be. Tough: tough. It sounds the same, right? But it's not the same. The political leaders who did the best answering Tim Russert's questions in the last seven years--Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and Colin Powell--are the authors of the most disastrous American foreign policy since the Vietnam War, and maybe since 1776.

The Russert Test was a disaster because it rewarded people willing to lie unabashedly on TV. They lied because they could not truthfully defend their positions. But Russert's famed "gotcha" research couldn't catch them. Much has been said this eulogizing week about Russert's hard-working ways assembling the material in advance of the show. Old metal. When someone told a new lie on Meet the Press, such as when Dick Cheney flat-out denied he had ever said that intelligence confirmed the Al Qaeda/Iraq link, Meet the Press had no procedure for producing the contrary evidence. This would hardly have been

difficult, given Google, an earpiece and a producer to do instant research. As it happened, NBC had the rebuttal to Cheney's lies in its own archives, but it remained for The Daily Show to do the research.

Since MTP was always looking back, the Bush Administration had a big advantage. Their new lies to Meet The Press were halfway round the world

while The Daily Show was putting its boots on.

Russert's sunny manner also concealed that he was anything but a neutral journalist, advancing, somewhat covertly, the conservative trifecta: War

on terror, war on women's reproductive rights, and war on Social Security.

The locus classicus of Russert's complicit support for going into Iraq

is, of course, Dick Cheney's appearance on Meet the Press March 16, 2003, one week before the invasion:

RUSSERT: Many Americans and many people around the world are asking one

question: Why is it acceptable for the United States to lead a military attack against a nation that has not attacked the United States? What's your answer?

There then follows an astonishing, nearly 1,000-word filibuster from the Vice President, including the key litany of assertions for the Iraq War:

CHENEY: ...where might these terrorists acquire weapons of mass destruction, chemical weapons, biological weapons, nuclear weapons? And Saddam Hussein becomes a prime suspect in that regard because of his past track record and because we know he has, in fact, developed these kinds of capabilities, chemical and biological weapons. We know he's used chemical weapons. We know he's reconstituted these programs since the Gulf War. We know he's out trying once again to produce nuclear weapons and we know that he has a long-standing relationship with various terrorist groups, including the al-Qaeda organization.

Just rereading it is enough to raise the hair on your neck, even these disastrous many years later. And what did that paragon of "tough" questioning do in response to this dirty dozen of false assertions ("we know, we know, we know") about to drive the United States into one of the worst foreign policy decisions in the history of the Republic? He asked Cheney about the French:RUSSERT: French President Jacques Chirac said this morning, that

perhaps there could be a deadline of 30 days or 60 days and he may be able to buy into that. What would be wrong for the United States to say to the world, "OK. We're going to give Saddam 30 days or 60 days and put some pressure on the French to step up and have a united front against Saddam Hussein"

Russert's inability to stay on target usually vanished, however, when the respondent espoused a liberal position. Here is Russert questioning Al Gore on (the horror) his support for abortion rights:

RUSSERT: When do you think life begins?

GORE: I favor the Roe vs. Wade approach, but let me just say, Tim, I did--

RUSSERT: Which is what? When does life begin?

GORE: Let me just say, I did change my position on the issue of federal funding and I changed it because I came to understand more from

women--women think about this differently than men.

RUSSERT: But you were calling fetuses innocent human life, and now you don't believe life begins at conception. I'm just trying to find out, when do you believe life begins?

GORE: Well, look, the Roe vs. Wade decision proposes an answer to that question--

RUSSERT: Which is?

As the liberals sense a coming resurrection, they have begun to shine a light on the corrupt, decade-long conservative attack on Social Security, under the cloak of fiscal responsibility. Social Security, practically the last vestige of the New Deal left, is not going bankrupt any more than Saddam Hussein was about to go nuclear. But by far the loudest journalistic voice for this conservative attack on Social Security was Tim Russert. In this program from 2000, he manages to at once beat the drum for repealing Social Security and also use the sticks (again) on the Democratic candidate, Al Gore:

RUSSERT: If--the facts are simple: When Social Security began, Franklin Roosevelt, genius, he--the life expectancy at that point was 63. He made eligibility for Social Security 65...It was a--was a very popular program. There were 45 workers for every retiree and life expectancy was exactly that age. Now we're approaching two workers for every retiree. Life expectancy is 78 going to 85. You're going to have 80 million people on Social Security and Medicare for about a fourth of their life, for three to 20 years. Everyone knows that, and yet when you present it to Al Gore, he'll say, "No problem. I'll take the surplus and it'll pay for it." Even his own Secretary Treasury written volumes of reports--trustees reports, will say, "No, it doesn't work that way."

Everyone my age is checking their will (and their CAT scan insurance), and no one wishes a father and husband to drop dead at 58. But for many

of us ordinary citizens, Tim Russert was a powerful man who mostly did harm in every way we can think of. So if it's all right with you, I think I'll turn the TV off now.


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A bit Unfair
Posted by: CuriousOutsider on Jun 20, 2008 11:41 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ms. McCain was addicted to painkillers which she took because she had TWO spinal chord surgeries and she was in constant pain.
She made a mistake and what she did was terribly wrong. However, she has accomplished a LOT in her life of privilege in terms of charitable work than the seemingly racially insecure Michelle Obama.

I am not a citizen of the US and cannot vote. This is just a curious observation.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: A bit Unfair-not really Posted by: Drclaw
» RE: A bit Unfair-not really Posted by: desidid
» RE: A bit Unfair Posted by: mnascimento
» RE: A bit Unfair Posted by: indepentent
» RE: A bit Unfair Posted by: sui_generis
» RE: A bit Unfair Posted by: Bibsisis
Bravo!
Posted by: badkitty on Jun 20, 2008 12:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This perfectly describes the Russert I remember. I was astonished at last Friday night's NBC news, which was all Russert. Fortunately, their national news for the rest of the weekend was pre-empted for golf...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Bravo indeed! Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: Bravo! Posted by: Bibsisis
Go back to the '06 election
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Jun 20, 2008 1:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Washington press corps couldn't figure out how Bush got the price of gas to drop before the election. Neither did Tim Russert.

They did it through Goldman Sachs, who reduced their commodities index from a 9 percent weighting to 2 percent, causing the selloff of billions of dollars in oil futures. Real cute. Where was the "lion of the Washington press corps" when this scam was happening?

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Tim Russert was a hack of the first order-good riddance!
Posted by: rancespergl on Jun 20, 2008 4:16 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tim Russert was a prime exponent of the modern mindset of the press. Self-satisfied and smug, extremely rich and not required to do much work, he came up through a culture of corruption and insiderism, and institutions of venality.

He will not be missed. May Brian Williams choke on a chicken leg soon.

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you smell like a hack
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Jun 20, 2008 7:37 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how do you know her back pain info? what charity work? wah wah wah

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couldn't be happier that he is off the air
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Jun 20, 2008 7:40 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
not that he is dead. a hack at best,liar at worst. and a closet republican weenie. journalist? no. he and chris matthews both a couple of pledges in bush's fraternity. sickening

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
» RE: klanman Posted by: desidid
» RE: klanman Posted by: Longdream
» RE: klanman Posted by: desidid
» RE: klanman Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: klanman Posted by: desidid
Do 'Liberal's' need to be Spoon Fed Too?
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jun 21, 2008 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an outrage and an an insult to my intellegence. I never expected- nor wanted Russert or any other media person to think for me, Nor tell me what to think.
Granted I wished Tim would ask Other questions (because I already knew the BS answers they'd give and I wanted it documented).But never did I want Russert to have a screaming match like so many other BS 'interviewers'
Why do you think No One goes on these other shows? At least Russert was able to Book them and ask the questions and Allow US to decide.
do 'Liberals' Need a Hannity, O'Reilly or Limbaugh to direct them - or have they already figured it out and just want whatever 'confession's or 'Purjuries' to be recorded?
I Love Keith- not because of his Special comments (he's singing to the Choir) but because he gets the Facts on Record- but he is unable to book the Reigning Criminals so it is helpful - but not evidentary.
Sorry sweetie- Tim was not sent here to Save the world, he was just a Interviewer who could get the Crooks on tape. He was Not to be the Judge & Jury- WE ARE! I think he had enough Faith in US to understand his limitations and be able to read between the lines and develop our own intellegent opinions on the issue.
Being One Who Hated this WH Before they Stole Office and never Bought the 9/11 attacks as 'Attacks on our Freedoms' -it was an attack on the MIC and their international Crimes for the last several Decades-I never laid that much responisblity on a media personality- I lay that Responsilbity on US to be informed and be able to wade between the constraints and biases of mere Interviewers and Moderators. What else were you expecting from Him? To think and dictate to you like the Rightwingers?
If you are looking for a self anointed 'Savior' Go to Hagee's church, If you are looking for someone to tell you what to think go to FOX.Perhaps YOU held Tim in far too high of Regard, and that is why you are crying about it now. 'Thou Protest too Much', You sound like a willing Sheeple.

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» "We have yet to find out," Posted by: stoicnag
Before and after
Posted by: compu on Jun 21, 2008 9:15 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He was the shadow of himself,the minute after
nbc was purchased by general electric.
Who can blame him with all those perks ?
Besides,its a very bad education speak
with full mouth.

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What klanman did not like
Posted by: compu on Jun 21, 2008 9:27 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you are looking for a self anointed 'Savior' Go to Hagee's church, If you are looking for someone to tell you what to think go to FOX.Perhaps
Any similitud with reality is .....

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The Death of Amy Goodman
Posted by: LaFajita on Jun 22, 2008 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When Amy Goodman dies, there will be no state funeral ala Russert. Her funeral will be attended by her friends and well-wishers, but not by the rich and powerful of Washington, who will be elsewhere thanking the Lord for getting rid of that troublesome woman. That these same folks showed up in their sorrowful multitude to mourn Mr. Russert tells us all we really need to know about the state of the Free (Enterprise) Press in modern America.

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» "No-one mourns the women ... " Posted by: hansennancykay
» Right on Posted by: happyhermit
» RE: The Death of Amy Goodman Posted by: Bibsisis
Tim Russert was a Journalist
Posted by: billgee on Jun 23, 2008 8:19 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not in the image of murrow, cronkite, brinkley, huntley, ...

He came of Age in our wonderful world of supportive, acquiescent journalism.

He saw no need to criticize.

So what if a little needed war sneaks in under the radar

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» Maybe, but not a good one. Posted by: No.mad
stippolito
Posted by: stippolito on Jun 23, 2008 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to suggest that the so-called pundits such as Tim Russert, Chris Matthews, Charlie Gibson, Katie Curic. and all the others have now become "hawkers". They do nothing but hawk each other and the corporate networks they work for...not real journalists. Thankfully,
the truth about Russert is finally being exposed...I am so sick of NBC's blah, blah, blah about him, one would think he was aomeone important.

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My take on Russert is conjecturally different
Posted by: gregii on Jun 23, 2008 8:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I always thought he was a bright, exceptionally pleasant & nice man who, over time tried to harden his edges against his own grain in order to enable his success with a changing TV, ever more polarized audience - perhaps at the insistence of ambitious producers? Eventually, subduing his own instincts gave way to compromising his principles - still in the name of success - and when NBC brought corporate pressure, his already huge investment had to be protected. So he caved what little he had left to cave. And he pandered. I stopped watching before the Florida megalomaniac trick in 2000. Occasionally I stumbled on his program and would watch it for a few minutes until he demonstrated and confirmed my reasons for avoiding it. It never seemed to take long. Tim: It is a joy to see how much your son loves you, that your friends remain loyal - some of whom remain credible sources to me today; and I'm sorry that death was the only way to end your TV travisty. But I am grateful your brand of disingenous objectivity is gone from the cable and networks. Long live America.

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boilerman
Posted by: cogden on Jun 23, 2008 8:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tim Russert,never believed him,won't miss him. When tv news"personalities" started giving us their opinions and not the information I started looking for other sources of info.. That was some time ago.

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Julie M
Posted by: Julie M on Jun 23, 2008 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I shuddered in disbelief every time one of the 'eulogists' described Russet as "fair and unbiased." Gimme a break!

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If it walks like a hack.....
Posted by: reval on Jun 23, 2008 10:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.... and talks like a hack, it's a hack.

Russert walked and talked like a hack.

But I'd be a little cautious about expecting anything much better now that Russert's gone. The only thing we have left, excepting segments of Countdown, Moyers and Broncasio (sp) are simpleminded, cowardly hacks.

Here is - http://youtube.com/watch?v=IN0jpd9I5mI - an example of the kind of hackery we should expect to see day in and day out regardless of what channel one chooses to land on.
~Rev. El Mundo,
Pastor, WVCSR

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A MOMENT OF CLARITY
Posted by: sherman on Jun 23, 2008 11:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Finally, after all the media eulogizing, a moment of clarity!

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Always thought Tim Russert was just another talking head
Posted by: thekidde on Jun 23, 2008 12:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
tool. His performance in some of the presidential debates proved me correct. AMF.

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A great news Person
Posted by: mart on Jun 23, 2008 2:19 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish we had another news reporters like Tim we could believe him at least.

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» RE: A great news Person Posted by: Bibsisis
» RE: A great news Person. WHAT. Posted by: mindtrvlr
Let the Dead Rest In Peace...
Posted by: djnoll on Jun 23, 2008 2:55 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find it very interesting that as a very liberal progressive that I found the respect paid to a man not for his political leanings, but for his having lived a life he felt was worthwhile, that his colleagues on both sides of the aisle felt was worthwhile, that politicians on both sides of the aisle felt was worthwhile, and whose family is mourning the sudden loss of a loving father, son, and husband should be vilified by so many people who could not seem to find it acceptable that a man lived his life on his own terms. He practice free speech and gave others the chance to do the same of over 16 years on Meet the Press, and if you did not agree with him (and more often than not I disagreed with him and his approach) you at least got to hear the other guy's comments. If you felt he did some politician an injustice, I suspect that there were just as many who felt he had been fair.

What I find most disturbing about this article is not the issues raised, but that they should be raised as examples of the failings of a man who cannot defend himself or his actions. It seems to me that people who write articles like this are cowards who are afraid to voice these objections to a person's face, but rather wait until that person has passed beyond their own defense to make these comments. The author may not think Tim Russert was much of a journalist, but at least he was willing to face his detractors or those he disagreed with personally or politically in public, instead of ambushing their friends and families after they are gone.

Congratulations to all the journalists who cannot let someone be respected by those who personally knew Tim Russert, mourned by his family, and let the dead rest in peace, instead of post mortem hatchet jobs for some sense of personal justification. Personally, I would rather think that those who knew him well have the right to mourn in peace. His son showed more class than those who have chosen to attack Tim Russert after his death. Take a lesson.

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» RE: Let the Dead Rest In Peace... Posted by: TruthBeTold
Re:Russert
Posted by: tatateeta on Jun 24, 2008 1:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most progressives knew Mr. Russert was a corporate shill, God rest his soul.

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Russert had it right
Posted by: rafey on Jun 24, 2008 6:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"purple girl," above, is quite correct. Russert's entire philsophy was to allow the interviewees to make their statments and to essentially trap themselves, which they virtually always did once the public was able to compare the statement with the known facts. His was not a debate forum (as so many of these televised "news" events appear to be). Never the less, I miss the pure analysis programs like McNeil-Lehrer, etc. in which every political move was analysed and scrutinized objectively without regard to political bias.

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Thank You Linda Hirshman...
Posted by: fleurette on Jun 24, 2008 9:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for courageously taking on this sacred cow. As MSNBC went on and on and on that weekend with apparent non-stop coverage of Saint Russert's death, my mind went back to how he (along with most others in MSM) aided and abetted this unnecessary war by doing things like not handing Cheney his @$$ on Meet the Press. Basically, here is how I sort out good journalists - anyone covering politics in the MSM who actually held onto his job between 2002-2005 is NOT ONE; anyone who attempted to tell the truth and was either sacked (PHIL DONOHUE) or given the massive blues until they were demoted and/or goaded into resigning/retiring (BILL MOYERS) IS ONE. All others who are still there (hello, Chris Matthews, Wolf Blitzer, name your favorite nighttime anchor and/or analyst) served at the pleasure of the bu$h administration and they are greedy cowards with nice million dollar homes (NOT IN BULLALO or PHILADELPHIA EITHER!!) but NO integrity. I will mourn heroes like Greg Palast or William Rivers-Pitt when they are gone. (HOPE NOT SOON.) While Tim Russert obviously seemed to be a good parent (amassing wealth to pass to his son is something every parent would like to do, among other gifts) and maybe even a nice person (ghee whiz, he told a few jokes, what a SAINT!!), he was a RAT in his chosen profession b/c a rat will do anything for his own survival. Now, why does that merit 3 days of total double-speak coverage? Because calling a journalistic COWARD a journalistic HERO enough times not only absolves Russert's culpability but the hope is it will absolve their own as well! NOT!!!!!

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Very easy attacking dead people, the most easy thing to do
Posted by: Nanouq on Jun 24, 2008 3:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do not agree with all the garbage about Tim Russert. Why not to say it before he left?

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To my knowledge...
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Jun 25, 2008 8:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...there is no major "news" network that essentially is telling their "reporters" to ask the hard questions and get to the truth anymore. Exception may be the token Oberman.

Most of these people are essentially told by the Rupert Murdocks of the world what to say, how to say it and when. He who pays the piper picks the tune. I might do the same thing if I was paid big bucks to just shill someone else's opinion. It is a lot less work, but I would not expect anyone to believe me and see through the charade.

S