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Edited on Thu Feb-05-04 10:36 AM by blm
I believe it was late June, IIRC, hearing on a Hardball show back at the time. An exact date would be helpful.
I do know in July he got TWO national covers, TIME and Newsweek. And then FIVE national covers right before the primary.
Interestingly, the media declared Kerry's candidacy as "dead" for months, and rarely aired positive developments for his campaign, as in the Fire Fighters endorsement or Gary Hart's and Joe Wilson's. Tough for Kerry because the negative reports dried up much of his fundraising.
Could it be that the media was deliberately skewing our primary to keep Kerry from gaining the national stage because of his opposition to the FCC?
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 2, 2003
Kerry Seeks to Reverse FCC's "Wrongheaded Vote" Commission decision may violate laws protecting small businesses; Kerry to file Resolution of Disapproval
Washington, DC - Senator John Kerry today announced plans to file a "Resolution of Disapproval" as a means to overturn today's decision by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to raise media ownership caps and loosen various media cross-ownership rules.
Kerry will soon introduce the resolution seeking to reverse this action under the Congressional Review Act and Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act on the grounds that the decision may violate the laws intended to protect America's small businesses and allow them an opportunity to compete.
As Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Kerry expressed concern that the FCC's decision will hurt localism, reduce diversity, and will allow media monopolies to flourish. This raises significant concerns about the potential negative impacts the decision will have on small businesses and their ability to compete in today's media marketplace.
In a statement released earlier today regarding the FCC's decision, Kerry said: "Nothing is more important in a democracy than public access to debates and information, which lift up our discourse and give Americans an opportunity to make honest informed choices. Today's wrongheaded vote by the Republican members of the FCC to loosen media ownership rules shows a dangerous indifference to the consolidation of power in the hands of a few large entities rather than promoting diversity and independence at the local level. The FCC should do more than rubber stamp the business plans of narrow economic interests.
"Today's vote is a complete dereliction of duty. The Commissioners are well aware that these rules greatly influence the competitive structure of the industry and protect the public's access to multiple sources of information and media. It is the Commission's responsibility to ensure that the rules serve our national goals of diversity, competition, and localism in media. With today's vote, they shirked that responsibility and have dismissed any serious discussion about the impact of media consolidation on our own democracy."
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