The Media Research Center has no problem with the multitude of falsehoods President Trump peddles. It believes that merely pointing them out is a “Democratic Party talking point,” and Tim Graham thinks Trump deserves a pass because he and other Republicans can’t be bothered to find a candidate with more personal integrity.
But when a Democrat gets caught making false claims, the MRC is ON IT, and is quick to play whataboutism. When the Washington Post found that a story Joe Biden has been telling on the campaign trail about an Afghanistan veteran to whom he awarded a medal had numerous key details wrong — something the MRC largely avoided giving the Post credit for, since doing so would undermine its narrative of the Post being a wildly biased “liberal media” outlet — the MRC got mad that the media was, essentially, treating this the way the MRC handwaves Trump’s torrent of falsehoods.
Nicholas Fondacaro whined, “If President Trump got as many details wrong about a story, the liberal media would declare that he was intentionally trying to ‘gaslight’ the country,” complaining further thet “ABC and NBC helped him rationalize it” while “Biden’s crafted tale wasn’t even a priority for the CBS Evening News.”
Mark Finkelstein ranted that “Joe Biden might have set a personal record last week for the most gaffetastic gaffe of his storied, fact-mangling career,” while Trump has had only “alleged tangles with the facts.” Finkelstein was enraged when commentator said that Democrats “pride themselves on fact-checking and making sure that things are right,” sneering, “spare us the notion that when it comes to the truth, Democrats are some paragons of higher-standard virtue!”
Alex Christy spun away in portraying Trump as victim of a factual “double standard”:
Perhaps one reason why Trump has over 12,000 lies and misstatements attributed to him is because of a double standard that this story illustrates. When Biden tells a misleading story, the media decline to unequivocally condemn him, when Trump engages in obvious hyperbole to say that 1,000 hamburgers would reach a mile high, fact checkers are on the case. Even humor gets a “fact check.”
This from an organization that fact-checks cartoons.
Graham — one of those cartoon fact-checkers, by the way, complained that New York Times columnist David Brooks “came rushing to Biden’s defense, that unlike the president, he’s not ‘mendacious’ or ‘irresponsible’ with the facts.”
Fondacaro returned to grouse about the “double standard” the media allegedly has, refusing to admit his own in giving Trump’s whoppers a pass. He also grumbled that on NBC’s “Meet the Press, “the mostly liberal panel swooped in on Biden’s behalf to argue that President Trump’s lies were insidious, while the former VP’s were about American heroism” and that they were more Reagan-esque. Of course, Fondacaro never actually conceded that either Trump or Reagan told falsehoods.
Graham returned as well to attack Snopes for accurately pointing out that Biden’s story was a mixture of true and false claims and not the “complete factual collapse” he would like you to believe it is. Graham also huffed that “Snopes is building an unmistakeable record of cravenly serving up liberal-excusing and Democrat-excusing reports” — which, of course, is a part of a key right-wing narrative to discount fact-checks of Trump as supposedly biased.
The headline on this piece reads “FACTS or FLACKS?” As if Graham doesn’t care more about flacking than facts.
Graham and his boss, Brent Bozell, served up a column attacking the alleged “excusing frenzy” over Biden. But the two were essentially excusing Trump’s falsehoods by being silent about them other than to rehash commentators pointing out that Biden isn’t being as mendacious as Trump.
They whined: “This whole energetic frenzy of excuse-manufacturing once again underlines the fraudulent media boast that they are ‘facts first’ and care most deeply about ‘the truth.'” Treat Trump’s falsehoods as harshly as you treat Biden’s, and then maybe we can talk.