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CNN's Yellin: Congress's Low Polls Numbers Due to Failure to Repeal DADT?

By Matthew Balan | December 15, 2010 | 20:36

A  A
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On Wednesday's Newsroom, CNN's Jessica Yellin bizarrely implied that Congress's low poll numbers was linked to their failure to repeal "don't ask, don't tell." After noting the public's support for repeal, Yellin stated that "Congress has its lowest approval rating in the history of polling...So it's clear that the American people are in one place, and one place where they're not so happy with Congress."

Anchor Brooke Baldwin raised the "don't ask, don't tell" issue and how the House of Representatives was taking up a stand-alone bill that would repeal the 17-year-old policy. She asked the liberal CNN correspondent whether the Senate would pass the legislation, given how a previous repeal proposal was rejected just last week (as part of the defense authorization bill): "Why might the Senate change its collective mind? I remember the vote last Thursday. It was 57 to 40. They didn't have those three extra. So, all right, who's going to change their mind or why?"

After a discussion about the legislative dynamics on this specific issue in the Senate, Baldwin set up Yellin for her citation of the poll numbers:

Jessica Yellin, CNN Correspondent | NewsBusters.orgBALDWIN: Might this, Jessica, be one of those things where- you know, the public, thinking this was a done deal- it died in the Senate last week, case closed- but simply, Congress just is lagging behind that sentiment?

YELLIN: Yeah. There- it's clear, Brooke, that a clear majority of Americans supports repealing 'don't ask, don't tell.' A new Gallup poll has 67 percent of Americans supporting repeal. So the American public's ready for it. Interestingly, Gallup also shows that Congress has its lowest approval rating in the history of polling-

BALDWIN: Right.

YELLIN: Just 13 percent approve of the job Congress is doing. So it's clear that the American people are in one place, and one place where they're not so happy with Congress either.

Neither CNN personality mentioned that a November 23, 2010 Gallup poll found that Americans didn't rank the "don't ask, don't tell" repeal as a high priority for the lame-duck Congress. Those who responded to the poll put keeping the estate tax low, extending the current tax rates, extending unemployment benefits, and passing the new START treaty ahead of this issue. The only issue that ranked lower than the "don't ask, don't tell" repeal was the passage of the DREAM Act. One could reasonably conclude that Americans are more frustrated with Congress over economic issues, instead of what Yellin concluded.

The full transcript of segment from Wednesday's Newsroom, which began 17 minutes into the 3 pm Eastern hour:

BALDWIN: Remember, late last week- I think it was Thursday- it seemed the effort to let gays serve openly in the military- you know, was done for. Remember, how it died in the Senate? We brought it to you live here on CNN. Well, how about this? This is happening right now. The House is about to start this debate all over again, and we're hearing, within the next hour, we should have a vote on a law to repeal 'don't ask, don't tell.' Right now, it's a stand-alone bill.

So, I want to explain. If you're sitting there scratching you head, wondering- wait a second, how could this happen? Here's how: an earlier effort in the Senate was part of a bigger defense bill. Remember, the defense authorization bill, doing away with the 'don't ask, don't tell'- that was just one part, just one part of that massive piece of legislation and that one of part of the bill was killed. Well, yesterday, two House members proposed this stand-alone measure to repeal, specifically, 'don't ask, don't tell'- that and that alone- and, yes, they can do that. And so, the debate, I'm told, is about to start with an up-or-down vote to then follow, and we're going to be watching some of this together. We will bring it to you live, of course. But I want to just jump ahead a step or two, if you will allow me to do that. If the vote here in the House succeeds, then the measure, of course, has to go back to the Senate.

And Jessica Yellin, I want to bring you in to this in Washington. My question to you is this: why might the Senate change its collective mind? I remember the vote last Thursday. It was 57 to 40. They didn't have those three extra. So, all right, who's going to change their mind or why?

YELLIN: So, Brooke, when the repeal of 'don't ask, don't tell' failed last time, it wasn't on the merits of the issue itself. As you pointed out, that repeal was included in a huge bill that had many other issues in it and that vote failed mainly because Republicans vowed not to vote for anything else until tax cuts and budget issues were revolved. So, the House of Representatives said- okay, we'll just vote on a simple bill that's just to repeal 'don't ask, don't tell,' and send it back to the Senate to give them a second pass at repeal, after tax cuts and budget votes are done, and that's what we're looking at now.

BALDWIN: So, going back to last week, I mentioned the vote tally. The Senate was three votes short of the- that 60, the magic number 60, that the supporters of this needed. So, I want to tick off some of the names here- and it was Republican Lisa Murkowski. It was Scott Brown and Dick Lugar. On the Democrats' side, you had Joe Manchin and Blanche Lincoln. All five have expressed- you know, in differing degrees, some support for letting gays serve openly, but none of the five was among the 57 who supported ending the ban last Thursday. So if- you know, you do your math, it's pretty simple. Only three of the five would need to switch. But, Jessica, there's another issue here, and that being, sort of, the calendar. The lame-duck session could run out of time, could they not? I mean, is there any guarantee that they could even get a vote into this thing by the end of the year?

YELLIN: There's no guarantee and that's an excellent question. As a friend of mine here says, it's beginning to look a lot like last Christmas, when the Senate stayed way late. Remember, they stayed way late into Christmas to vote on health care, and part of the unknown here is the timetable. So, right now, working on the side of those who want to repeal 'don't ask, don't tell' is a lot of momentum. If this passes the House, the White House wants this measure passed. Defense Secretary Gates has called for Congress pass it. It's co-sponsored by Senators Joe Lieberman and- an independent- and Susan Collins, a Republican, who have both bipartisan and national security credentials. So, those are all reason why it seems likely to get through. Senate aides say you did some of the faces who voted- were- didn't vote or were no-votes before. They say they have 60 votes to pass it. So, all they need to do is get it to the floor. The question is, will there be time? [Senator Majority] Leader Reid says they are going to- they are planning to bring it, but there are all sorts of ways- this is the Senate- where it could be delayed, put off. Republicans could block it in other ways- who knows?

BALDWIN: Might this, Jessica, be one of those things where- you know, the public, thinking this was a done deal- it died in the Senate last week, case closed- but simply, Congress just is lagging behind that sentiment?

Story Continues Below Ad ↓

YELLIN: Yeah. There- it's clear, Brooke, that a clear majority of Americans supports repealing 'don't ask, don't tell.' A new Gallup poll has 67 percent of Americans supporting repeal. So the American public's ready for it. Interestingly, Gallup also shows that Congress has its lowest approval rating in the history of polling-

BALDWIN: Right.

YELLIN: Just 13 percent approve of the job Congress is doing. So it's clear that the American people are in one place, and one place where they're not so happy with Congress either.

BALDWIN: Not good-looking numbers for Congress coming out today.

About the Author

Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Matthew Balan on Twitter.
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Comments

If that's really what they

Submitted by ant on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 8:58pm.

If that's really what they were getting at, that Congress' approval numbers are in the gutter because of DADT, then the media are even more clueless than I gave them credit for.

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Exactly.

Submitted by needle on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 11:43pm.

And just think: Many of those who reject, or even puke just thinking about, FOX news are "informed" by CNN.

I am beginning to think the Democrats are itching for another shellacking in 2012.  This could get really interesting.  I wonder at what point they are going to get the message.

- Looking forward to the self-annihilation of the Manipulated Stories Machine.

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Yeah. That's it.

Submitted by Chris Norman on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 9:15pm.

Yeah. That's it.

Let's make the 2012 campaign: "The War on Error"
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Wow.

Submitted by In Excess on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 9:16pm.

Just when you thought you've heard it all.

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I used to see CNN at airports

Submitted by Thoreau on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 9:17pm.

I used to see CNN at airports sometimes, but not much anymore.  I'm still trying to figure out what simple SOB still watches that network.

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The question is, have you

Submitted by Chris Norman on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 9:33pm.

The question is, have you ever seen Fox News on at any airports? If so, where? I want to go there just to see. :)

By the way, can you imagine being stuck at a gate with a flight delay with MSNBC playing?

Let's make the 2012 campaign: "The War on Error"
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DFW

Submitted by almostacowboy on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 11:19pm.

Has FOXNEWS Stands with FoxNews playing

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You don't meet many of these people.

Submitted by thestalkinghorse on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 10:09pm.

YELLIN: Just 13 percent approve of the job Congress is doing.
Do you think they could fog-up a mirror?
Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/matthew-balan/2010/12/15/cnns-yellin-congre...
If he's not a socialist, then what is he, a free-market champion?
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Um, maybe.

Submitted by almostacowboy on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 11:20pm.

But, I doubt they could see their own reflection.

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The once mighty CNN has become nothing more than a...

Submitted by Dave. on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 10:16pm.

...depository for otherwise unemployable, government-educated morons who couldn't find an ass in an ass-field with both hands, a map, two flashlights, verbal and video directions, and a three hour head start.

Of course, there is always the government left for them, I guess, but their prospective interviewer is still lost somewhere in the ass-field.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

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It's the spending, stupid!

Submitted by Mary Louise Turner on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 11:40pm.

To the morons at CNN who can't understand why Congress' approval rating is in the toilet:

It's the spending, stupid!

With the latest "omni-pork" turkey stuffed with 6,400+ earmarks, Obamacare, and other outrageous spending bills (including another omnibus with 9,000+ earmarks), Congress has almost taken this country over the cliff.  CNN is even worse than I thought...

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speaking of changing minds

Submitted by jon_torlin on Wed, 12/15/2010 - 11:45pm.

I see that Senator Demint is backing off from forcing a reading of the START business rather than doing so thus making the government shut down till Congress convenes its 112th next year with the Republicans in charge of the house.

What the hell??  Is he a RINO after all?

Can anyone else confirm this?  This was linked from Drudge.

http://nationaljournal.com/member/whitehouse/gibbs-blasts-demint-for-att...

-Jon

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Whatever happened to Jessica?

Submitted by Herbster on Thu, 12/16/2010 - 1:07am.

Wow.  Maybe she and Contessa Brewer are meeting in the same ladies room?   Hmmmm.  Was that Yellin yellin' in the third stall?  Maybe she'd rather switch than fight. 

Jessica Y.  Just another empty skirt mediamoron!  Pimpin' for the administration.  What a surprise.

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I agree

Submitted by TheHistorian on Thu, 12/16/2010 - 9:43am.

Every time I think of the bad job that Congress is doing, I think of Don't Ask, Don't Tell (DADT).  That is the FIRST thing I think of after:

  1. A health-care bill that was not done in full and open legislative mode, but was done in secret with one party excluded and then "has to be passed so that we know what is in it"
  2. A lack of budget (due in April) 10 months later
  3. A lack of appropriations other than continuing resolutions
  4. Stimuluses for "shovel ready jobs" that are later admitted to not exist and are not even fully spent
  5. A focus on "cap and trade" and trying to resurrect it again
  6. A lack of tax policy, that makes an increase of 50% in the 10% tax rate for the poor taxpayers and which affects ALL taxpayers because they don't want to address it.

Yeah, DADT is right at the top of my list.

Where do these lieberals dig up this tripe?  And why does a "responsible" network put such lame, limited talent on it?

“Liberals tend to put the onus of your success on society and conservatives on you and your family.”

Dennis Prager

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Not even 1/2 of 1% of Americans watch CNN.

Submitted by Red Jeep on Thu, 12/16/2010 - 9:57am.

Reporting like this could be why.

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The reason...???

Submitted by Pilgrim1949 on Thu, 12/16/2010 - 12:12pm.

And here I thought the Libs' main (ir)rationalization for the abyssmal poll ratings would have been because Congress hadn't totally resigned enmasse and anointed our Narcissist-in-Chief as Despot for Life and Supreme Ruler (pbuh).

Surely that must be Congress' penultimate failure in Lib eyes, yes?

The mental pretzel-bending contortions required of the Lib mind must render the cerebral cortex resembling a Gordian knot.

It's a wonder their heads don't explode under the strain of both synapses being so overworked...

 

"Ye canne change the laws of physics....." but some politicians believe that with the right legislation you can pretend they don't really apply to your own pet projects... 

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