GOP senator demands pre-debate discussions between ABC News and Harris

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Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) has issued a letter to ABC News demanding it reveal any communication it had with Vice President Kamala Harris‘s campaign ahead of last week’s presidential debate that held “blatant partiality.”

Marshall’s letter comes after many Republicans criticized ABC News’s handling of the debate between former President Donald Trump and Harris, with the Kansas senator citing how Trump was fact-checked multiple times while Harris was not. The letter stated that the 67 million viewers witnessed the network, along with debate moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis, engage in “a biased agenda” against the former president.

“For these reasons, I demand that you make public all correspondence, records, and potential coordination between the Harris campaign and ABC News ahead of the September 10th ABC debate,” the letter read. “I also request you publish all internal ABC News texts and emails, both between ABC employees themselves and with the Harris campaign, to elucidate any potential biases that ABC News employees may have demonstrated prior to the debate between President Trump and Vice President Harris.”

The letter also cites how Dana Walden, co-chairwoman of ABC News’s parent company, The Walt Disney Company, has been donating money to Harris’s political campaigns since at least 2003. It was also noted that Harris has referred to Walden as an “extraordinary friend.” 

Marshall stated Friday that he would investigate claims that ABC News was biased toward Trump in its debate. The senator has given the network a deadline of Sept. 27 to respond with the requested information.

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Despite the criticism of ABC News’s handling of the debate, Trump has dismissed doing another debate between him and Harris. He argued the vice president has asked for another debate because “I won,” and Harris wants a rematch.

Since the debate, Muir’s ABC World News Tonight ratings have fallen by 12%, with an average of 6.7 million viewers on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, compared to an average of 7.6 million before the debate.

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