TV
Networks Officially Refuse to Release Exit Poll Raw Data By Gary
Beckwith
The Columbus Free Press Wednesday 22 December 2004
Mainstream media finally displays true colors.
For those watching the growing body of evidence concerning election
fraud in our past presidential election, one question has remained:
Why don't we hear about this on the evening news?
As of yet it's been hard to explain why the controversies in Ukraine
make the headlines, but when similar problems are discovered at home,
you have to scour the Internet to find the information.
It certainly isn't for lack of events on which to report. Members of
The House Judiciary Committee have been meeting regularly reviewing evidence
of systematic voter suppression and voting machine tampering. A coalition
of lawyers have filed a lawsuit against the Bush campaign citing deliberate
manipulation of votes.
Sworn testimony and signed affidavits have implicated companies, individuals,
and a Florida congressman.
This developing story
could eventually turn out to be more explosive than Watergate. But
it's rarely mentioned on the major networks, and
when it is, there's almost always a chiding remark about the " conspiracy
nuts" and obscure "internet bloggers" who are behind it
all.
The truth is, it's not just conspiracy nuts, or bloggers, or even just
Democratic supporters of Kerry. It's a growing number of people who want
to know what really happened on November 2nd. It's teachers, doctors,
lawyers, all kinds of people who care about their Democracy just as much
as the people in Ukraine do. And a recent survey showed that even without
the media coverage, 20% of Americans believe the election was stolen.
For these people
it's been a difficult task to spread the word, and to tell the uninformed
about the election problems. That's because for
many, if it's not on the evening news, it isn't happening. And as soon
as you start telling someone about it, their first question is always, "Why
aren't I hearing about this on the news?".
That's a question we'd all like to see answered.
Until now, we've
only been able to speculate. Perhaps the media is just tired of a long
drawn out election season. Perhaps reporters don't want
to "stick their neck out" until more evidence is uncovered.
Perhaps the reporters just haven't seen the evidence that already exists.
And one possibility of many is that the mainstream media has been purposely
withholding this story from the American people.
Emails have floated around, purportedly written by reporters, saying
that they've been instructed not to write about the problems with the
election or they'll lose their job.
It's hard to believe that the media would cover up something like this,
considering that many reporters probably voted for Kerry and would want
the people to know if the election was stolen. But there's already enough
of a story that it should be getting attention - the Congressional hearings,
lawsuits filed, and sworn testimony are newsworthy of themselves, regardless
of their outcomes. The lack of coverage of already existing events forces
us to wonder why.
Attempts to get an explanation from the media have been met with cold
and evasive responses. Local media outlets say it's not their duty to
report the national news. National media people say there's not enough
evidence yet, and they're waiting to see how it pans out before they
give it the spotlight. This begs the question: Do we wait until the Superbowl
is over to report on it? Did they wait until the OJ trial was over to
report on it?
But as the story develops, no one has been able to explain why the media
is avoiding it like the plague.
Until today.
Yesterday Representative John Conyers called their bluff. He's the one
leading the investigation in the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee.
After weeks of investigation he's become more and more interested in
seeing the raw data of the exit polls. Exit polls were a red flag in
Ukraine, and many statistical experts have used the exit polls from our
election to demonstrate a high likelihood that there was some funny business
on November 2nd.
Like
most people trying to get to the bottom of the matter, Mr. Conyers
first came to the realization that the exit poll data has mysteriously
not been released yet. We only have the preliminary exit poll data,
which showed Kerry winning Ohio by several points.
But about half way through election day, the networks started " mixing
in" the "real" numbers with the exit poll data, and from
that point on, the raw exit poll data has been locked up.
So, Conyers wrote
to Warren Mitofsky, who owns the exit poll data, asking for the complete
raw data, without the "real" numbers mixed
in. Mitofsky balked, saying that the TV Networks actually own it and
he was not able to release it without their permission. Conyers then
took his inquiry to the leaders of ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and Fox.
And they promptly laid an egg. Through a spokesperson who spoke on behalf
of all the media companies together, they said they are still analyzing
the data and don't want to release it until they're done.
The egg they laid is frustrating for those who want to know the truth
and want to see the raw exit poll numbers. But it does answer one question
for us once and for all. It finally shows us that the media is not avoiding
the election controversy because they're tired of the election, or they
want more evidence. They are purposefully preventing the information
from getting out and they are hiding the information they have.
Any objective investigator,
or any concerned citizen for that matter, simply cannot accept their
answer to Conyers. The media has had over
6 weeks to "analyze" the exit polls and releasing the numbers
would not prevent them from continuing their analysis in any way.
The data is just
that - raw data. By itself it is not obscured by " analysis." The
networks can evaluate and analyze it all they want, but they should also
give others a chance to look at the same numbers and draw their own conclusions.
There is absolutely no precedent or moral ground for withholding this
information from the American public. The bottom line is that raw data
does not need to be analyzed. Conyers and the American people are not
asking for the analysis. We're asking for the data.
We're not talking
about proprietary trade secrets, or a "secret
source" that they're trying to protect. We're talking about information about
us, the American people who voted on Election Day. It's like having your
doctor refuse to let you see your own medical records.
The media is supposed to report the facts, whatever they are, not withhold
them. When the media stops reporting and starts withholding, it ceases
to be the media.
While
it's frustrating that we still can't see the exit polls, let's thank
the media for at least resolving one thing for us today. Now we
know why we don't see stories about the election on the evening news.
Their
refusal to release the exit polls shows us categorically that there
is a concerted effort on behalf of the major media outlets to consciously
prevent the information from getting out. It's not simple oversight,
and it's not because they don't think it's newsworthy. Now we know.
They
are withholding information from us. Now that that's been resolved, we can move on to the next question:
What are they hiding, and why?
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