Related: Big Media again and again miss party ID on democrats connected with crime but not so with Republicans
CBS isn't telling us when a Democrat is under investigation but makes sure we know when a Republican is....
Ever wonder why the Republican party is more scandalous then the Democrat party? And The White House vs NBC with the video to prove it.
Party affiliation mysteriously disappears when democrats are in the hot seat but are always present when Republicans are. hmmm...
NBC: Only GOP Governors Caught in Sex Scandals Get Party Label
If this didn't happen time and time again and if Republicans were treated the same then maybe Big Media has an excuse but until then see: Commercialism and Capitalism are not the cause to Big Media bias. Only Big Media would have you conclude that way....Do your own test!!!
Name That Party, Congressional Scandal Edition
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. of Illinois is in hot water over the Ill. Senate seat scandal, but the Times didn't identify him as a Democrat until the ninth paragraph. How did the same paper treat a Republican in trouble?
Posted by: Clay Waters
4/14/2009 1:48:36 PM
The Times uses double standards when it comes to labeling congressmen in potential legal trouble. Just see how the paper treated the case of former New York Republican Vito Fossella with how it treated current Illinois Democrat Jesse Jackson Jr., son of the left-wing activist.

Representative Jesse L. Jackson Jr. went to see the Illinois governor in December to press for an appointment to the United States Senate seat being vacated by Barack Obama. Mr. Jackson took along a black binder filled with letters of support, poll numbers and lists of his accomplishments over 13 years in Congress.
By dawn the next morning, the governor, Rod R. Blagojevich, was under arrest and accused of trying to sell his appointment to the seat. And Mr. Jackson landed in his own political hot seat as federal prosecutors revealed wiretap evidence that one of his fund-raisers had promised to raise $1.5 million for Mr. Blagojevich in exchange for the appointment.
Meanwhile, Vito Fossella, who represented Staten Island until abandoning his re-election run after a drunken driving arrest, is readily identified in the lead sentence of Raymond Hernandez's Tuesday story as a "once-rising star in the New York Republican party".
Previously, the paper completely left off the party affiliation of besieged Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd in a March 20 story."
