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Gardner acknowledges (and demonstrates) GOP PR problem on fiscal cliff

Sometimes KNUS’ Steve Kelley seems embarrassed by his own morning rants and rages against Obama and the nasty Democrats. The other day he asked, “Do you really want to hear a rant from middle-aged white guy?”

Kelley’s current behavior looks different from what you heard during of his 19-year career at KOA, where he at least acted like he didn’t have the answers.

But Kelley’s more level-headed roots return when he conducts interviews, which usually feature straight-forward questions you’d want, but don’t expect, from someone seated behind a microphone.

This morning, for example, during his Kelley and Company show, he asked Rep. Cory Gardner this really good question:

Kelley: Why do you guys [Republicans] seem to be losing the PR battle [on the fiscal cliff]? I mean, it’s so easy to blame a Republican, but it seems to stick to you?

Gardner: Well, you know, it’s tough. We’ve got to do a better job of messaging and explaining to people who are in the middle class, people who are lower income earners, that people who will be affected by this tax increase are people like you, people who are working hard to make ends meet, people who are struggling to pay the mortgage, because their business are going to be hard hit. That’s going to result in lower take home pay because the businesses they work with are suffering and struggling to bear the burden of the tax increases. That’s the bottom line and so the President controls the bully pulpit, regardless of who it is in the White House, whether it is a Democrat or a Republican. They have a tremendous opportunity to shape the outlines of the message.

Listen to audio of Rep. Gardner talking fiscal cliff on Denver radio station KNUS 710 AM on 12-11-12

Kelley was on the right track, but to get to the heart of the GOP’s fiscal-cliff PR/substance problem, Kelley should have contrasted Gardner’s head-spinning response with Obama’s crisp lines on the topic, which he delivered at a rally Monday:

Obama: “We can solve this problem. All Congress needs to do is pass a law that would prevent a tax hike on the first $250,000 of everybody’s income,” he said. “When you put it all together, what you need is a package that keeps taxes where they are for middle class families, we make some tough spending cuts on things that we don’t need, and then we ask the wealthiest Americans to pay a slightly higher tax rate.”

In another question, which Kelley didn’t acknowledge actually related to his previous question about the GOP’s PR problem, Kelley asked Gardner whether he’d compromise on a tax increase:

Gardner: “We cannot agree to a tax increase. That is not the solution. That is not going to solve our $16 trillion debt. That’s what I am urging our leaders, Speaker Boehner and others, to make sure they are adhering to…I think he knows that the [Republican] conference does not support a tax increase, that there is no will to increase taxes amongst the Republican Party and the House majority.”

That’s obviously part of the Republican PR problem on the fiscal cliff, but Kelley didn’t get into the fundamentals.

Gardner blames Romney loss on TV “news,” but he’s not asked for specifics

Election losers inevitably turn their anger toward the news media, and that’s what Rep. Cory Gardner did Tuesday night when he told KNUS.

Gardner: “When the American people were watching the news with their family at the dinner table, they saw a media that is gung-ho for the President,” Gardner told KNUS last night. “So not only were we running an election against the President of the United States, we were running an election against TV stations around the country and inside people’s living rooms.”

Seems like the 1950’s rearing itself up again in the GOP mind here, because when was the last time the family ate dinner and watched the evening news together? My kid tries to reach for his computer, while eating at our dinner table, but I’ve always assumed it’s Facebook he’s glued to, not Brian Williams. And TV anchors are the last things I want to see at dinner.

But more to the point, KNUS host Steve Kelley should have asked Gardner for examples of the pro-Obama media bent.

It’s far more productive to criticize the media with specifics than with generalities.

And here’s a specific example of how media intervention, albeit by print media, led, probably unintentionally, to a blip of pro-Romney ink.

Close readers of The Denver Post, and I mean really dedicated readers, may remember consultant Eric Sondermann’s prediction, which he prefaced with “abundant doubt” in the newspaper the Sunday before the election, that Romney would win the Electoral College Vote, due to Romney’s “closing momentum.”

The details of Gardner’s love for Ryan are left unexplained in radio interview

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) If you’ve been soaking up the sound waves from talk radio the past month, you know that Rep. Cory Gardner has been talking a lot about the horribleness of President Obama and the greatness of Romney vice presidential selection Paul Ryan. For example, here’s Gardner on KFKA’s AM Colorado […]

Which CO politico will be Ryan’s role model on personhood? Buck, Coffman? Coors? Gardner? Lamborn?

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) Colorado has a lot of experience with politicians endorsing personhood, then trying to slide away from it when the eyes of everyday people turn toward them. It’s time for reporters to draw on this experience in questioning Rep. Paul Ryan, when the opportunity presents itself. Will Ryan, who  supported […]

No word yet from Coffman and Gardner, say personhood supporters

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) Obviously, the key news from today’s personhood press conference was that personhood supporters turned in 112,121 signatures to Colorado’s Secretary of State, hoping to get their measure on the November ballot. But the political ramifications of the personhood amendment should continue to be a key part of the coverage. […]

Gardner’s partial defense of Coffman’s birther comments raises more questions for reporters

The story continues about Rep. Mike Coffman’s apology for saying Obama isn’t an American “in his heart.” And when an apology drags on, questions rise up, like did he really want to apologize? Did he mean it? Who’s pressuring him? What’s wrong with him? Etc. You recall that after 9News aired “Coffman’s Birther Moment,” Coffman […]

Conservative radio hosts join Gardner in denouncing Metro’s tuition decision

Conservative talk radio hosts don’t have too many kind words for Metropolitan State College these days, after Metro’s decision last week to offer a reduced tuition rate to undocumented students. Everyone knows this issue potentially alienates Hispanic voters in a swing state where Hispanics could decide the election. Still, the conservatives on the radio, many […]

Length of payroll tax cut extension didn’t seem to matter much to Gardner before this week

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) One reason we like to have reporters on the job is so they can join those boring conference calls with politicians who don’t say much. Unless they are asked right questions. The Denver Post’s Allison Sherry dialed into a call with Rep. Cory Gardner Dec. 14, and asked a […]

More reporters should try to find out if Coffman, Gardner, and Tipton still support Personhood

( – promoted by Colorado Pols) The Colorado Statesman went where no other media outlet dared go last week and asked Colorado’s congressional delegation whether they support the personhood initiative, born again last week at a Denver press conference. One could argue that the 2012 personhood initiative isn’t actually “born,” or alive in any way, […]

Denver news outlets lie there as Gardner, Gessler, and Whitman abuse them

(Delegitimizing the press makes everything else easy – promoted by Colorado Pols) When a public figure attacks journalism, reporters should see it as an opportunity to help people understand what reporters do and why they should continue to exist. I mean, if journalists don’t defend themselves, who will? Academics? Maybe, but who cares? And if only the […]

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