They Tried to Kill Trump. Again.
Democrats Have a Massive Graham Platner Problem
Axios Delivers a ‘Scoop’ With No Information; ABC News Struggles With the Term...
Cole Allen's Lawyer Makes a Bid for Release. Here It Is.
Democrats Are Back to Arguing Bathroom Bills and Immigration Enforcement Will Literally Ki...
Salem Media Names Townhall Editor Larry O’Connor As New National Morning Host
At Townhall LIVE, Lawmakers Say Trump's Federal AI Framework Is Critical to Beat...
Rep. Wesley Hunt Shuts Down Question on the Declining Number of Black Republicans...
Here's How Justice Thomas Would Have Taken the SCOTUS Voting Rights Act Decision...
This Dem Senator Says the Iranian Regime's 'Death to America' Chants Are Just...
The 75-Day Partial Government Shutdown Is Over As House Passes DHS Funding Bill
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Levels Hakeem Jeffries' 'Maximum Warfare' Comment With Hilar...
Wait, Did an Illegal Alien Make a Meth Lab in This Michigan College...
Detroit Man to Stand Trial for Allegedly Stealing 12 Identities to Pocket $400K...
Ohio Mother and Daughter Allegedly Abused Government Jobs to Steal Nearly $2 Million...
Tipsheet

CNN's Hatchet Job on the O'Donnell Debate

CNN's Hatchet Job on the O'Donnell Debate
Constitution 101: the actual phrase "separation of Church and State" does not appear anywhere in the Constitution. Sorry to disillusion you, liberals.

Christine O'Donnell was trying to make this simple point in a debate Tuesday with Democrat opponent Chris Coons, but CNN misconstrued it and angled its
Advertisement
write-up of the debate on CNN.com to read that O'Donnell was clueless on the First Amendment.

If you compare the write-up to the CNN video, you can see how flagrant the article's misinterpretation of the debate is. The author chooses to quote from one of two identical phrases that are included in the video. O'Donnell asks once in the video, "You're telling me that the separation of church and state, the phrase "separation of church and state," is found in the First Amendment?" (Emphasis added.)

The article, however, includes her second quote as part of an exchange with Coons: "Let me just clarify: You're telling me that the separation of church and state is found in the First Amendment?"

O'Donnell's point, if you listen to CNN's actual video, is pretty clear from her inflection -- she's challenging Coons on a common Constitutional misconception that he perpetuated: "separation of church and state" is explicitly named in the Constitution (it's not). As a journalist, you have two responsibilities: quote accurately, and make sure that, if there's something you've decided not to quote, you're still allowing whatever you do write to be framed by the context provided from the unquoted material. So a good journalist, writing this story, would have listened again to the transcript, heard her ask the same question which specifically asked about phrasing, and made sure O'Donnell's point was brought across in context.
Advertisement


Meanwhile, Coons could not name the five freedoms listed in the First Amendment. But CNN didn't lead with that -- in fact, the only place in the story that CNN decides to mention the fact is from a direct quote from O'Donnell's campaign manager.  CNN also reports O'Donnell had to be reminded what the Fourteenth and Sixteenth Amendments were when a panelist's question asked her about them, but they fail to mention that the question also asked about the Seventeenth Amendment, which O'Donnell knew off the top of her head.

There's nothing like misrepresenting your opponent's position to expose your own ignorance, CNN. O'Donnell's biggest mistake was assuming the media would have the sense to realize she was asking a rhetorical question.

Watch CNN's video here:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos