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"Clark leads in Oklahoma" my foot. They called half of the races on exit polls alone and now they refuse to say that Clark won Oklahoma for a freakin' week until the state certifies the vote?!? This is beyond ludicrous--there is no way that a 0.5% margin will be overturned by challenges.
Clark supporters, we need to take Wes Jr.'s example and hit back. We need to win in TN next week and we can't continue to take this kind of disrespect. My letter to CNN follows--please phone or write them now!
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Dear CNN,
I have never been more appalled at election night coverage than I was at CNN's tonight. Your commentators' endless promotion of the narrative that it is a race between Kerry and Edwards have caused them to reach unheard of levels of inaccurate and tendentious reporting. Wolf Blitzer, Judy Woodruff, and Jeff Greenfield's intimation that Clark's showing in Oklahoma was "disappointing" whereas Edwards was "surprisingly strong" doesn't take into account the coverage of the media itself. Please go back through your archives for the last 6 days and measure the amount of time you spent covering Edwards as opposed to Clark. Clark got less coverage than Lieberman, who finished behind Clark in New Hampshire (along with Edwards, although you wouldn't have known that, considering the coverage) and Dean, who explicitly indicated that he wasn't really contesting the Feb. 3 votes.
The hard fact is that despite the massive amount of free media awarded to Edwards as compared to Clark over the past week, Clark kept it very close, winning a state and winning delegates in more states than Edwards (I couldn't help but laugh when Judy Woodruff dismissed Clark's chances because he had only won delegates in Oklahoma and a "couple other states"). Actually, in the hard pledged delegate count for the night, Edwards won 59 delegates (please correct your delegate scorecard as it doesn't properly reflect each states' primary rules, which assign only some delegates proportionally over the entire state; some are also assigned by the amount of vote won per congressional district) in 3 states and Clark won 47 delegates in 4 states. This hardly constitutes a resounding difference between Edwards and Clark.
Finally, your treatment of Clark winning Oklahoma is completely unprecedented. The idea that you would call half of the states minutes after the voting booths closed based on exit polls alone, but "wait for the state to certify the results" when, after counting all of the ballots, Clark won Oklahoma by a margin well out of the reach of spoiled or miscounted ballots (the number of ballots that "swing" as a result of recounts is typically less than 0.1% and Clark beat Edwards by 4 times that amount) is mindblogging. No other news network reported Clark as "leading" Oklahoma--after 100% of the votes were counted, it's quite clear that he won it, certainly clearly than it was that Kerry had won Arizona after 5% of the ballots had been counted.
Given the amount of sway that the members of your profession have on the primary process, from setting expectations to (literally) framing the debates, the message should be clear: you need an ombudsman or a public editor in the worst way.
Sincerely,
ET Yale University Department of Political Science 124 Prospect Street New Haven, CT
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