<p>It failed to make his master's thesis at the university Pat Robertson founded a campaign killer, but the Washington Post is still intent on finding ways to damage governor-elect Bob McDonnell even before he takes office. </p><p>In a Metro-section <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/14/AR200911... target="_blank">front-pager today</a>, Post staffer Rosalind Helderman insisted that some recent remarks by Robertson about the nature of Islam following the Fort Hood shooting have "put McDonnell in a bind" and are forcing the Republican governor-elect "to confront how he plans to handle his friendship with" the "long-time ally" and "highly controversial figure." </p><p>Just four paragraphs into her story, Helderman cast McDonnell as one who "tried during the race to convince Virginians that he was a social conservative who could speak more broadly to issues that cross party lines." </p><p>Of course, McDonnell did just that, winning the Virginia governor's race by an 18-point margin (59-41 over Democrat Creigh Deeds) in a race where the economy, taxes and transportation were the key issues, so it's specious for Helderman to paint the governor-elect as though he were someone of whom moderate voters were skeptical. </p>
Rosalind Helderman
<p>The first major electoral contest following any presidential election is the Virginia governor's race, and no less so this year given Barack Obama having been the first Democratic presidential candidate to win the state since 1964. But this year, the Obama magic may have worn off in the Old Dominion, with Republican Bob McDonnell showing a consistent lead over Democratic opponent Creigh Deeds and on target to end eight years of Democratic governors. </p><p>As <a target="_blank" href="/blogs/scott-whitlock/2009/09/03/wapo-continues-relentless-attack-mcdonnell-nine-stories-five-days">we've documented</a>, the Washington Post has done its best to drag down McDonnell's numbers and boost Deeds, namely by trumpeting a decades-old graduate thesis and hyping it as a potential game-changer in the race.</p><p>But today, when it came to a big snag in his campaign, the Post <a target="_blank" href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/15/AR200909... but buried</a> an article that cast the Deeds campaign in a decidedly unfavorable light. </p><p>The bottom line: either Deeds lied to a police union or his campaign is incredibly inept. Or both. </p><p>It seems the Deeds gubernatorial campaign told two different law enforcement interest groups two conflicting positions on collective bargaining. Yet in reporting the story, the Post placed Rosalind S. Helderman's article on <a target="_blank" href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/15/AR200909... 4 of the Metro section</a> rather than page A1 or even the front page, page B1, of the Metro section.</p>
<p>She's the nation's <a href="http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1077/is_11_58/ai_106700553/" target="_blank">first black female billionaire</a>, a co-founder of Black Entertainment Television (BET) whose political contributions <a href="http://www.opensecrets.org/indivs/search.php?name=Johnson%2C+Sheila&... target="_blank">skew heavily Democratic</a>, and in 2005 she backed the now outgoing-Democratic Gov.Tim Kaine's bid for office. But now Sheila C. Johnson has crossed the aisle to endorse Republican Bob McDonnell in his bid to be Virginia's chief executive, arguing that he has a better grasp on economic issues than his Democratic opponent. </p><p>Yet in reporting the news of the endorsement, the Washington Post elected to leave any word of Johnson's endorsement from its Metro front page headline. Instead, the Post blandly offered readers this headline and subheader:</p><blockquote><a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/20/AR200907... target="_blank">Business Leaders Are Major Prize In Va. Race</a>: McDonnell, Deeds Seek Credibility Among Execs</blockquote><p>Indeed, in her July 21 story, staffer Rosalind Helderman pitted McDonnell's newsworthy endorsement against a "competing" announcement from the camp of McDonnell's Democratic opponent:</p><blockquote>
As veteran readers of NewsBusters know, a good deal of liberal media bias comes in subtle labeling and phrasing. Today's Washington Post provides an excellent example of just that in a Metro section article pitting "victims' advocates" against "gun rights advocates" in a story about new gun restrictions lobbied for by Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown (D) and approved by the Maryland House of Delegates.
The House yesterday approved two measures that make it easier for judges to confiscate the guns of people accused -- but not yet convicted -- of domestic violence. Brown had "campaigned for the proposals in the name of his cousin, who was killed last year by an estranged boyfriend," staffer Rosalind Helderman noted.
Meanwhile a separate bill by a Republican legislator that would make it easier for persons filing restraining orders to be granted concealed carry permits was defeated "along heavily partisan lines. Maryland is a "may-issue" state where the state police have wide latitude in denying concealed carry requests:
