Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz has called the events on Jan. 6, 2021, a “terrorist attack.” In fact, he has done so, reportedly, more than a dozen times in the past year, and most recently as last week — the anniversary of the insurrection.
Then he took it all back when Tucker Carlson put him on blast.
On his Fox News prime-time show, Carlson crushed Cruz, saying, “Every word Ted Cruz uses is used intentionally. He’s a lawyer. He described Jan. 6 as a violent terrorist attack. Of all the things Jan. 6 was, it was definitely not a violent terrorist attack. It wasn’t an insurrection. Was it a riot? Sure. It was not a violent terrorist attack. Sorry! So why are you telling us that it was, Ted Cruz?”
What happened next? Cruz begged his way onto Carlson's show so he could grovel for forgiveness. Cruz told Carlson, “The way I phrased things yesterday, it was sloppy, and it was frankly dumb.”
But Carlson wasn’t having it, telling Cruz, “I don’t buy that. … You take words as seriously as any man who has ever served in the Senate, and every word — you repeated that phrase, I do not believe that you used that accidentally. I just don’t.”
Carlson insisted Cruz was helping “the other side” by referring to what happened on Jan. 6 as a terrorist act. Cruz backed down.
And there you have it.
The exchange not only showed how spineless Cruz is, but more importantly, how much power Carlson has, particularly among many conservatives. It showed how in lockstep Fox News and Republicans are and the influence Fox News has.
Amanda Carpenter, a former staffer of Cruz and now a columnist for The xxxxxx, told CNN’s Brian Stelter on Sunday’s “Reliable Sources” that the key to the Carlson-Cruz interview wasn’t Cruz’s humiliation, but “his radicalization that happened right there in that interview.”
“This is how Tucker Carlson is guiding the message for the Republican Party on that network,” Carpenter said.
Meanwhile, another Fox News prime-time star, Sean Hannity, also has done more than opine about the news. He has been directly involved in the news. Last week, the Congressional committee investigating Jan. 6 released text exchanges that Hannity was having with then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows on Jan. 6, pleading that Donald Trump do something to stop the violence.
It was big news in most places.
“But,” Washington Post media reporter Paul Farhi wrote, “it was quieter on the network on which Hannity has starred for the past 25 years. Over three days, Fox News journalists collectively devoted 88 seconds to the news.
Fox News’s coverage has consisted of brief mentions during news reports hosted by anchors Bret Baier, Dana Perino and Shannon Bream, the last after midnight on Wednesday. It has offered no discussion, no interviews and no statements from Hannity.”
None of this is a surprise, right?
Back when she was on her book tour, former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham talked about how the Trump administration ran to Fox News whenever they wanted to get their message out. Grisham told The Washington Post’s Ashley Parker and Josh Dawsey, “There were times the president would come down the next morning and say, ‘Well, Sean thinks we should do this,’ or, ‘Judge Jeanine thinks we should do this.’”
(By the way, be sure to read the story by Parker and Dawsey.)
The fact that Hannity and Ingraham were even texting Meadows while insurrectionists were storming the Capitol shows the direct line of communications between Fox News and the White House and the potential influence Fox News commentators had.
Jeff Cohen, author of “Cable News Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate Media,” told The Post that the issue is the hosts are not disclosing how close they are with Trump. (Although, geez, by this point, we kind of know that, don’t we?)
Cohen told The Post, “Journalists and media are supposed to be public checks on power, not private advisers to power. A commentator is still a journalist, and even if the commentator doesn’t consider him or herself to be a journalist, they still have to tell the public when they played a role in something they’re commenting on.”
Many of those over at Fox News either don’t know that or they know that and simply don’t care. Neither is good.
A bad error
Ugh, here’s some sloppy work. Politico’s Playbook ran an item on Saturday morning saying Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor had dinner at some swanky D.C. restaurant on Friday night with Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. This would have been only hours after Sotomayor did not appear for oral arguments about COVID-19 mandates in the Supreme Court.
But, as it turned out, the woman in the photo that Politico thought was Sotomayor was actually Schumer’s wife, Iris Weinshall. Politico ran a correction that partly blamed the person who sent the photo and said, “POLITICO standards require we verify this information. The editor who received the tip failed to do so in this case. We deeply regret the error.”
Everyone makes a mistake now and then, but this is a bad one because of the implications involved had it been true. Not showing up for important in-person Supreme Court work but then hanging out at a restaurant that night? With Democratic leaders, no less?
This is a bad mistake that could’ve been cleared up with a phone call or two and, instead, has led to some bad misinformation and conspiracy theories.