Bryan Ballas complains in a Sept. 2 NewsBusters post that the Washington Post did an article on right-wing pastor Rafael Cruz’s assertion that his son, Sen. Ted Cruz, is eligible to run for president, blaming the author for bringing up “a long settled birther issue” (never mind that it was Rafael Cruz who brought it up and that the Post is merely reporting what he said). Ballas further complained that the Post article noted that “Rafael Cruz himself has made birtheresque jabs at President Obama,” adding, “One can only hope this was a filler piece and not the first sign of a long pattern of birther mud slinging.”
So the Media Research Center has now decided that birther conspiracy theories are “mud slinging”? That’s interestiing, because the MRC never really took that aggressive of a stance regarding birtherism as applied to Obama. While the MRC didn’t exactly further Obama birtherism, it also did little to counter it.
Let’s take a look back at how the MRC handled Obama birtherism, which mixes semi-denouncements with semi-endorsements:
- A 2009 post by Clay Waters grumbled that the New York Times “questioned those questioning Obama’s birth certificate, his citizenship, and his resulting eligibility for the presidency” while purportedly showing “far more respect to a conspiracy theory many times more incendiary and implausible: That the 9-11 attacks were an inside job, that the controlled demolition of the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon were engineered by President Bush.”
- Another 2009 post by Waters complained that the Times columnist Frank Rich “smeared the Birthers as racist with no evidence.” Waters added: “Conspiratorial and wrong? Fair enough. But there’s nothing necessarily racist about believing Obama was born in Kenya instead of Hawaii.” It was not until 2011 that Waters finally admitted that birtherism is “discredited,” and even then Waters was still trying to equivocate by bringing up 9-11 truthers, which no serious Democratic presidential candidate, actual or potential, has ever brought up, unlike with Republicans and birthers.
- Noel Sheppard took offense in 2009 when someone called Lou Dobbs, then with CNN, an “immigrant-hating, birther-supporting zealot,” refusing to admit that birtherism was extreme: “It sure is fascinating watching all manner of media member attack anyone that has the nerve to question the new President, isn’t it?”
- Sheppard took a somewhat different view in a 2011 post complaining that MSNBC “cherry-picked something Mike Huckabee said on Steve Malzberg’s radio show in order to depict the possible Republican presidential candidate as a birther” — but then said it was “relevant” to question why Obama had purportedly refused to release his personal records, which includes his longform birth cert ificate (which hadn’t yet been released at the time of this post). Shappard also uncritically repeated Huckabee’s assertion that he “disavows birthers” on the first page of his book “A Simple Government.” In fact, Huckabee did no such thing; all Huckabee does on the first page is acknowledge that critics claim Obama is “lying about his citizenship” and adds that his book won’t be about that because “I don’t like to make politics personal.”
- Also in 2011, Mark Finkelstein took exception to columnist Charles Blow’s claim that Donald Trump should not be allowed to spout his birther views on TV because “we know that this is not true”: “Consider Blow’s curious suggestion that the MSM collectively knows various things to be true, and should ban those who disagree. What else does the MSM ‘know is not true’? Who else should it collectively ban from TV?”
- In a May 2011 post, it was MRC director of media analysis Tim Graham who was rushing to the defense of the allegation that birthers were racists, asserting that the allegation was “unproven.”
- When its benign birtherism/non-birtherism didn’t wash, the MRC also took the interesting position of blaming birtherism on the media — the “liberal” media, of course, not right-wing outlets like WorldNetDaily who actively promoted birtherism. A 2009 post by Jeff Poor cheered on Rep. Michele Bachmann’s assertion that “the left” is pushing birther questions (and her utter lie that “You don’t hear people on the right bringing this issue up”) under the headline “Bachmann Makes It Clear Who Is Driving the ‘Birther’ Train: The Media.” (WND highlights Bachmann on its “big list of eligibility ‘proofers‘,” which shows that WND considered her an ally to its birther cause.)
- In a 2012 post, Scott Whitlock calls birther claims “untrue” and notes that CNN’s Jake Tapper has pointed this out — but he’s mad that Tapper pointed out that Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney campaigned with Trump without denouncing those “untrue” claims. Later on in the presidential campaign, Brent Baker whined that news outlets “pounced on Romney for daring to make a birth certificate joke.” Baker didn’t offer his view on the leigitimacy of birtherism.
- Jeffrey Meyer used a 2012 post to complain that MSNBC’s Chris Matthews “decided to hurl a ridiculous question about birtherism” to then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, calling it “an issue that numerous Republicans have disavowed since the beginning.”
- Sheppard took extreme offense to MSNBC’s Joan Walsh pointing out that the right-wing Breitbart website had sunk “lower than Andrew Breitbart” by advancing birther claims: “Does Walsh have absolutely no shame or respect for the dead? Is nothing sacred when it comes to getting Barack Obama reelected?” Apparently, birtherism was OK with Sheppard as long as one didn’t invoke a dead person’s name in criticizing it.
- Matt Vespa complained in 2013 that “Birtherism isn’t all that bad to the liberal media when a rising conservative star may be the target.” He then bizarrely blamed birtherism on the media: “If only the press suspended their affection for the 44th president, and wrote these articles affirming Obama’s eligibility – and he is eligible – then perhaps we would’ve been spared the idiocy of Orly Taitz, Joesph Farah, and others, who gave some in the media to label the conservative movement as racist.”
Vespa is being dishonest by suggesting that non-conservative media ignored the birther issue: FactCheck.org was pointing out that Obama’s birth certificate was genuine as far back as August 2008, and the Associated Press reported in November 2008 that the state of Hawaii confirmed that Obama was born there.
If only the MRC had suspended its hatred for the 44th president and wrote articles affirming Obama’s eligibility, it would be more likely that the “idiocy” of Taitz, Farah, et al, could have been kept from tarring the right-wing media. But it did not — after all, letting the accusation hang so that the president was damaged by it was more important than building the credibility of right-wing media.
That strategy has come back to haunt right-wing media as a whole and the MRC in particular. Because the sections of right-wing media that fancy themselves more “respectable,” like the MRC (not to mention Fox News, which was also a promoter of birther claims), wouldn’t aggressively shoot down the birther conspiracies, birtherism has remained an issue. The MRC’s silence back then means it has little basis to complain now.