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- - - - - - - - - - - - The "100" number crept into the public conversation about Rich just days after the pardon -- appearing first Jan. 24 in a story in the New York Post by reporter Todd Venezia, who wrote, "Sources close to [Rich] say the White House even contacted the multimillionairess -- who has visited the Clintons 100 times over the past year -- to serve as a go-between for the administration and Marc's lawyers." Venezia might have been first with the inaccuracy, but he wasn't the last. Below is a short list of those who called it wrong:
Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., Fox News, Feb. 25:
Steve Dunleavy, New York Post, Feb. 25:
Don Imus, on CNN's "Live With Larry King," Feb. 22:
Sean Hannity, on Fox's "Hannity and Colmes," to Dick Morris, Feb. 20:
Sue Reid, Sunday Times (London), Feb. 18:
The Houston Chronicle, editorial, Feb. 17:
Michael Barone, on "The McLaughlin Group," Feb. 9:
Dick Morris, on Fox's "The Edge With Paula Zahn," Feb. 8:
Dick Morris, on Fox's "The Edge With Paula Zahn," Jan. 25: A "modern-day reincarnation of slavery"? The Congressional Black Caucus convened Tuesday for close to six hours for a hearing about voting irregularities in the presidential race. Unlike hearings held by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and by the NAACP in the wake of the election, this event didn't feature any "real people" telling stories about being turned away from the polls on Nov. 8. Instead, leaders of civil rights organizations and left-leaning interest groups summarized their suggestions for improvement, including setting nationwide election standards, pursuing federal funding to modernize voting equipment and declaring Election Day a national holiday. Select Democratic Party bigwigs were on hand to praise the caucus and promise reforms. "This to me is the most important issue we face," said House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo. "It's at the heart of our Democratic experience." Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., also joined in the handwringing, calling the stories of disenfranchisement "troubling, to put it mildly." Though the volume stayed low for most of the hearing, the rhetoric occasionally got heated. The panel seemed particularly upset with CBC critics who had called for the group to quit talking about the Florida voting problems. "This is almost a modern-day reincarnation of slavery," said Maynard Jackson, national development chairman of the Democratic National Committee. He compared the calls to end the Florida probes to masters who beat their slaves harder the more they cried out. Rep. Major Owens, D-N.Y., said there was enough evidence that Florida officials took questionable actions to merit an investigation into whether there was a coordinated effort to suppress minority turnout. "Could we use the word 'conspiracy' and not be afraid of it?" he asked.
Kweisi Mfume, president of the NAACP, toed a more moderate line. "I'm not a conspiracy theorist myself," he said, "but I don't think Humpty Dumpty fell off the wall by himself."
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