Kristine Marsh complains in a Nov. 19 Media Research Center post:
On Sunday night’s miniseries The Clinton Affair, A&E took potshots at conservatives in their attempt to create a sympathetic portrayal of Bill and Hillary Clinton. While praising Clinton as a feminist president, the network gave soundbites to Democrats attacking anyone on the right who dared to criticize the political couple for their numerous scandals.
Right from the get-go, the series portrayed conservatives and Republicans as the villains of the story, with a barrage of soundbites from journalists, and Clinton operatives, attacking Newt Gingrich, independent counsel Ken Starr, and anyone who dared to be critical of the Clintons as fueled by “Republican lies,” out for a witch hunt against President Clinton:
[…]Who did A&E blame for Hillary becoming an “object of hatred?” Right-wing commentators and Republicans of course. Immediately after those soundbites, the network played clips of Newt Gingrich and Rush Limbaugh criticizing Hillary for implementing policy as First Lady.
Marsh headlined her piece “A&E Docuseries Paints Clintons as Victims of Conservative Hatred” — which is what, in fact, they were. She might want to check with her boss, Brent Bozell, who declared in 2001 that “Yes, Virginia, the vast right-wing conspiracy did exist all along!”
So the right didn’t merely “criticize” the Clintons for their “numerous scandals” — it targeted them from the get-go. It’s not “liberal bias” to report that fact, no matter what Marsh claims.