One of the benefits of this campaign season coming to a close is
that we won’t continue to be bombarded with TV commercials drenched in
lies and distortion. The closer it got to Tuesday’s election, it
seemed, the bolder the lies became. Much has been made of the
racially-tinged commercial in which a White actress claims to have met
Harold Ford Jr. at a Playboy party. The ad ends with the woman, with
only a necklace visible, pretending to be holding a phone, saying:
“Harold, Call me.” FactCheck.org, the Web site that serves as a
credible referee for all of the political charges and countercharges,
provides us with other examples of false political claims in Ford’s
unsuccessful Senate race in Tennessee and other campaigns. Former
Chattanooga Mayor Bob Corker’s campaign teamed up with the National
Republican Senate Campaign to produce a TV commercial that proclaimed,
“…Congressman Ford voted against reauthorizing the PATRIOT Act, which
protects us from terrorists. He voted to cut defense spending by 16
percent. Just who does he think is going to provide our security? And
get this, Congressman Ford even voted to let liberal judges release
felons from jail because of overcrowding...” FactCheck.org noted,
“It’s true, as the ad says, that Ford voted in favor of an amendment
proposed by the Congressional Black Caucus that would have cut defense
spending by over 16 percent for fiscal 2001, directing the additional
funds to education ad working class family safety net programs. “What
the announcer doesn’t tell us is that Ford cast the vote in 2000,
before the attack on the World Trade Center or the beginning of
hostilities in Iraq; the date of the vote does appear in fine print at
the bottom of screen, where you can see it if you squint hard.” The
watchdog site stated, “Since 9/11, Ford has supported rapid increases
in defense spending for the war and national security, voting, for
example, in favor of the fiscal 2006 defense spending bill as well as
the 2003 emergency supplemental funding bill. The ad also doesn’t
mention that on the same day he voted for the amendment Corker cites,
Ford voted in favor of an amendment that would have increased military
spending, though only seven-tenths of a percent, which isn’t enough to
keep up with inflation.” The ad correctly notes that Ford voted
against reauthorizing the PATRIOT Act, once on the House committee
report and again on the conference report. However, much of the
objection to the new legislation was based on concerns over civil
liberties. “…Republican Sen. John Sununu of New Hampshire then
introduced a separate bill containing civil liberties provisions on
which both Democrats and Republicans could agree,” FactCheck.org
reported. “Ford voted for the Sununu bill, without which, it seemed
clear at the time, the PATRIOT Act would not have been renewed.” As
for the claim that Ford “voted to let liberal judges release felons
from jail because of overcrowding,” again the ad misstates the facts.
The reference was to a bill introduced by Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas) that
would have prevented judges from exercising their right to release
prisoners in overcrowded state facilities back into society. “Ford, we
note, did not vote to allow judges to release felons from jail, he
voted against restricting their existing right to do so,” the group
said. The DeLay measure never made it to the Senate floor. Perhaps
the most egregious commercial was sponsored by the Republican National
Committee and aired against Rep. John Murtha, a Pennsylvania Democrat
who had been one of the staunchest supporters of the war in Iraq until
recent months. This is what Murtha said: “Fifty-six percent of
the people in Spain think it’s more dangerous, the United States is
more dangerous in Iraq than Iran is. Every one of our allies think that
the United States being in Iraq is more dangerous to world stability
and world peace, every one of our allies, Great Britain, every single
country, they think it’s, we’re more dangerous to world peace than
North Korea or Iran. That says something.” In the RNC ad, Murtha is made to say: “We’re more dangerous to world peace than North Korea or Iran.” The
monitoring group says, “…In this case the RNC manages to present Murtha
as seeming to say nearly the exact opposite of what he actually said.” The commercial ran on television and appeared on the Republican National Committee’s Web site. FactCheck
pointed out, “This is the same RNC web ad that attracted attention
because of an image of Democratic party chairman Howard Dean that
appeared to have been altered to give him the faint hint of a Hitler
moustache.” This election went beyond the usual mudslinging. It was downright nasty.
Next Column:
Ward Connerly: A Weapon of Mass Distortion
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