There's some
carping on the left accusing the McCain campaign of screening
questioners on its conference calls so that he or his surrogates
only get asked soft balls by preferred journalists. I have no idea
whether or not this is true. There have been many occasions on
which I wasn't able to ask a question, which I find especially
frustrating when the operator closes the call by saying "at this
time there are no further questions."
But I will say this. I have been called on a number of
occasions, as have many other journalists on the right and left who
have asked critical questions of McCain or his aides. Last month,
Quin, a long-time critic of McCain, was called on during a
conference call, and confronted
McCain on his treatment of conservatives. On the same call,
Townhall's
Matt Lewis grilled McCain on Juan Hernandez, his Hispanic
outreach director who has been controversial on the right.
Personally, I've gotten into a
scrap with McCain over James Baker, and more recently, pointedly
asked his top economic adviser, Doug Holz-Eakin, whether McCain
would rule out raising taxes as part of a bipartisan compromise on
Social Security (sadly, he wouldn't).
McCain also reached out to allow liberal bloggers on the calls,
and has received a number of critical questions from them.
But I'd like to know, how many conservative journalists are
invited on Obama calls? I've only been on a few myself, but have
never been able to ask a question. I have spoken to David Axelrod,
but only when I've caught up with him at an Obama event or cornered
him in the spin room following a debate, in which case I basically
had to shout my question louder than other reporters.
topics:
Taxes, Social Security