CNSNews.com editor Terry Jeffrey has a serious double standard about federal spending — he’ll criticize Democrats all day long for running up deficits, but he’s loath to bring up the fact that a Republican president and a Republican-controlled Senate ran up trillions of dollars in federal deficits over the past four years. And with a new Democratic president, he’s back into his pattern of hypocritical Democrat-blaming.
In addition to the usual complaints CNS made against President Biden’s coronavirus relief bill, Jeffrey had his usual culture-war attacks on it, as summarized in the headlines of the articles he wrote on it:
- $1.9 Trillion ‘COVID-19’ Bill Would Pay for Abortions and NEA-Defined ‘Art’
- Biden’s $1.9T ‘COVID’ Bill Funds Abortion, NEA, NEH, EPA, Public Housing and Food Stamps
In the former, Jeffrey groused that the National Endowment for the Arts gave $25,000 to a theater group to put on a production calling itself “a groundbreaking trans and queer examination of American masculinity’s deep roots in Trouble.” Because he clearly has not seen the production and cannot attack it beyond its non-heteronormative subject matter, Jeffrey ranted about whether the NEA should get any money at all: “Did federally funded artists produce any great masterpieces in this period? Did American taxpayers get their money’s worth? Should we now use a bill allegedly designed to fight COVID-19 to pay the NEA an additional $135 million?” He went on to suggest the production was “bad ‘art'” even though, again, he has never seen it.
In the latter, Jeffrey bashed the NEA again, as well as complaining that “The bill also funds rental assistance and housing vouchers.” He didn’t explain why helping people who lost their jobs due to the pandemic pay their rant is such a terrible thing.
Meanwhile, Jeffrey returned to his old trick of airbrushing Republicans out of his complaints about spending. He wrote in a March 31 article:
The federal debt has increased by more than $1 trillion in the first six months of fiscal 2021, according to the official figures published by the U.S. Treasury.
On Sept. 30, 2020, the last day of fiscal 2020, the federal debt closed at $26,945,391,194,615.15. At the close of business on March 29, it was $27,990,843,257,187.65.
Thus, the federal debt has risen $1,045,452,062,572.50 so far in fiscal 2021.
Jeffrey failed to mention the fact that for the first 3 1/2 months of fiscal 2021, there was a Republican president and a Republican-controlled Senate, thus making Repubicans responsible for a good part of that debt. But the article is illustrated with a file photo of Biden and Nancy Pelosi.
Jeffrey followed up with an April 26 article:
Federal taxes, spending and the federal deficit all set records in the first six months of fiscal 2021 (October through March), according to the Monthly Treasury Statement.
Federal taxes climbed to a record $1,703,949,000,000 in the October-through-March period, while federal spending climbed to $3,410,194,000,000.
Again, Jeffrey failed to tell readers that there was a Republican president and a Republican-controlled Senate for the first 3 1/2 months of the fiscal year. Again, he illustrated his article with only Democrats — this time Pelosi and Chuck Schumer.
On May 12, Jeffrey lazily recycled that article but with updated numbers, ominously adding: “This is the first time that federal spending has exceeded $4 trillion in the first seven months of a fiscal year.” Once more, he censored the fact that there was a Republican president and a Republican-controlled Senate for the first 3 1/2 months of the fiscal year, and he again illustrated his article with only Democrats — this time Biden, Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris.
As usual, there’s a tag at the end of these articles stating, “The business and economic reporting of CNSNews.com is funded in part with a gift made in memory of Dr. Keith C. Wold.” Is Jeffrey really serving Wold’s memory with his journalistic deception and dishonesty?
Jeffrey’s bias was mirrored by anti-Biden CNS reporter Susan Jones, who complained in an April 28 article about spending under Biden headlined “In His First Hundred Days, Biden Calls for $6.2 Trillion in Taxpayer Spending.” She also baselessly implied a quid pro quo to the Obama by claiming that a program to improve nutrition standards in school meals was “a billion-dollar nod to former First Lady Michelle Obama.” Jones did not explain why nutritional meals for children are a bad thing.