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ABC
News Pulls Reporter off Kucinich Campaign
a Kucinich camp press
release
OpEdNews.com
The day after Presidential Candidate Dennis Kucinich took ABC debate
moderator Ted Koppel to task for avoiding questions that would be useful
to voters in favor of questions about endorsements, money, and polls, ABC
pulled its fulltime "embedded" reporter from the Kucinich
campaign, a reporter who had been given no warning that such a move was
coming and who had discussed at length yesterday with the Kucinich
campaign staff her plans and her needs for the coming months.
ABC has reportedly also pulled its reporters from covering the
presidential campaigns of Rev. Al Sharpton and Ambassador Carol
Mosley-Braun.
This appears to be another instance of what Kucinich criticized at the
debate, namely the media trying to pick candidates, rather than letting
the voters do so. In a democracy, it should be voters and not pundits or
TV networks who narrow the field of candidates.
This move, before any state's caucus or primary, appears based on a
belief that viable candidates can be predicted 11 months prior to an
election, a belief that flies in the face of the historical record. Time
and again candidates dismissed as "fringe" have wound up either
with the nomination or with a significant impact on the convention and in
the primaries.
This action by ABC, as well as Koppel's comments during the debate, can
only serve to disempower Americans, communicating to them that someone
other than they is deciding elections and that their votes don't mean
much.
This action also seems to conflict with the network's interest in
boosting ratings and Koppel's expressed interest in making the debate
exciting, given that Kucinich received the loudest applause of the
evening.
ABC presumably has no vested interest in discouraging voting or in
lowering its ratings. It may, however, have an interest in whether
Koppel's prediction of the viability of various candidacies proves true.
TELL ABC NEWS WHAT YOU THINK
Email nightline@abc.com or call
(202) 222-7364 or fax (202) 222-7976.
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