âIt certainly looks more partisan than it looks like a serious inquiry....You know, Iâll hear from Republicans that say, âBut there are unanswered questions!â Well, no, all the questions have beenâŠ
âWe have the committee, the Benghazi committee this week. Well, sheâs going to murder them because it has been a witch hunt. It has been partisan. Itâs a great opportunity for her.â
âThat one odd moment that a lot of people are talking about this morning, Mr.
âThere was a lot of shade thrown, but when Nancy Pelosi put on shades for exactly five seconds, that became the moment her fans immortalized.
âAre you comfortable tear gassing children, like what we saw at the border?â â Correspondent Hallie Jacksonâs question to Donald Trump as aired on NBC Nightly News, November 26.
The introduction for Democratic candidate Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke, on the October 30, 2018 edition of Hardball, played like a campaign ad.
On the October 31, 2018 edition of FNC's Tucker Carlson Tonigh, the host and guest Lisa Boothe discuss Democratic Senator Joe Donnelly's debate gaffe.
Democratic Congressman Joaquin Castro makes a wild claim, without evidence, about Jared Kushner being involved in killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, as aired on the October 19âŠ
On the July 18, 2006 edition of NBC's Today show, then correspondent Ann Curry trudged through flood-ravaged New Orleans to promote Brad Pitt's effort to rebuild the city.
Chris Matthews joined the chorus of apocalyptic media takes on Donald Trumpâs summit with Vladimir Putin, but it wasnât that long ago he mocked Mitt Romneyâs warnings about Russia back in 2012.
Charles Gibson: âA lot of Democrats say a dream ticket would be if John Kerry would reach across the aisle, take you as a vice presidential candidate. Are you going to say no?
âWell, however brave a stand campaign finance reform may be, members of your own party have rejected it. Whatâs the matter with them? Why donât they get it?â â ABC's Good Morning America co-hostâŠ
âSomething is going on. I mean I wrote about McCain, as you know, in the December issue of Vanity Fair and he has this remarkable appeal. Heâs a down the line conservative.
âYou could argue that no candidate since Bobby Kennedy in 1968, a long time ago, has so opened himself up to the press corps and so won over the press corps.