Daily Times Leader

'Controvers­ial' to Put Brakes on the Border?

- TIM GRAHAM Syndicated Columnist

When he reflected on his time as treasury secretary under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, William Simon joked the media called him "controvers­ial William Simon" so much he thought "controvers­ial" sounded like his first name.

"Controvers­ial" can certainly be an accurate adjective, but that doesn't mean it isn't wielded very deliberate­ly to define what liberal journalist­s don't like. On Monday, CNN morning anchor Christine Romans reported on Twitter under Elon Musk "reinstatin­g controvers­ial figures, including former President Trump." That's true — Donald Trump is controvers­ial — and it sounds like CNN finds that Musk move objectiona­ble.

Minutes later, Romans reported on President Joe Biden demanding in recent months that the oil companies pump more oil: "He did the same of Saudi Arabia during a controvers­ial visit in July." Wow, Biden did something controvers­ial — but put an asterisk on it because journalist­s are especially angry over the Saudi crown prince ordering the gruesome murder of Qatarbacke­d Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

NBC's "Today" used the

C-word accurately in describing Netflix shows on Jeffrey Dahmer and on Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle.

But this week, TV networks overwhelmi­ngly employed the word to describe Title 42 as the Supreme Court upheld it. CNN reporter Sara Sidner explained on Monday's "CNN This Morning" that "the Supreme Court is expected to rule on whether to keep the controvers­ial Trump-era border restrictio­n known as Title 42 in place." One could joke that this is the only COVID restrictio­n that the media didn't like.

When the high court ruled 5-4 to keep it, networks sounded the alarm. On ABC's "World News Tonight," fill-in anchor Mary Bruce led off the show: "Breaking news, as we come on the air tonight, the Supreme Court announcing that a controvers­ial Trumpera policy, allowing asylum seekers to be quickly turned away, known as Title 42, can remain in place." Notice that "controvers­ial" and "Trump era" fit perfectly for them.

On Wednesday's "Today," NBC co-host Kristen Welker lamented "the Supreme Court handing down a ruling that would keep the controvers­ial Title 42 policy in place by a tight 5-to-4 vote until they can take up the case and make a permanent decision next June. It comes as the immigratio­n crisis at many border towns around the country has reached a breaking point."

But here's the strangest part: It's "controvers­ial" when the "immigratio­n crisis" reaches a "breaking point" and someone puts the brakes on the surge?

MSNBC host Alex Witt used this framing on Tuesday's "Andrea Mitchell Reports." She said: "Left in limbo! The Supreme Court is keeping the controvers­ial Title 42 policy in place for at least another six months. What it means for thousands of migrants desperate for asylum and the communitie­s struggling to provide basic humanitari­an needs." The flood of "desperate migrants" are the sympatheti­c victims of "controvers­ial Trump-era" policies.

Fox News Channel has also used the C-word on Title 42, but the spin is different. On Wednesday's "Special Report," Bret Baier announced, "Breaking tonight, a controvers­ial COVID emergency immigratio­n policy remains in place. Yet the southern border crisis shows no signs of slowing down, and a plan for how to manage a post-Title 42 border is nowhere to be found, at least not yet."

As a candidate in 2019, Joe Biden openly encouraged a surge. "I would make sure that there is, we immediatel­y surge to the border all those people seeking asylum," Biden said. "They deserve to be heard. That's who we are. We're a nation that says, 'If you want to flee, and you're fleeing oppression, you should come.'"

Guess what that is not? "Controvers­ial."

Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBuster­s.org. To find out more about Tim Graham and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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