Given the tenor of the recent debates, anyone short of Cincinnatus as moderator would likely raise some eyebrows. After Chris Wallace's disastrous outing during the first exchange, we had l'affaire Scully and then the dueling town halls, where NBC's Savannah Guthrie was apparently under the impression that "moderator" and "prosecutor" were synonyms while Joe Biden was given questions only slightly more difficult than what his favorite movie was. (That'd be "Chariots of Fire", by the way, just in case you needed more evidence the Democratic nominee couldn't be more basic.)
WND . . . "According to CNN, Scully issued an apology last week, saying he'd made "errors in judgment." He's currently on "administrative leave," meaning he won't be fielding prank calls on "Washington Journal," much less moderating any debates.
"Next up to the plate when it comes to debate moderators is Kristen Welker, an NBC News White House correspondent. Welker is in charge of questioning during this week's debate, scheduled to begin at 9 p.m. Thursday at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.
"Now, remember, Steve Scully -- a soporific non-entity for the oatmeal of cable political channels, a man even C-SPAN watchers could only probably identify after they were told he's the one that kind of looks like Lindsey Graham if you squint -- turned out to be a biased mess. Welker is a reporter for the most left-leaning of the major broadcast networks in an era where White House correspondents are expected to behave in the combative mold of Jim Acosta. What are the odds she turns out to be less partisan?
"Probably not great, but she'd prefer you not know that. Welker, famous for tipping off Hillary Clinton's spokeswoman on camera about a question she would ask during an interview, briefly deactivated her Twitter account in the wake of Scully's scandal." . . .
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