Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall says 'the American people deserve transparency and accountability from the mainstream media'
A Republican senator demanded in a letter on Wednesday that ABC News turn over any correspondence it may have had with the Kamala Harris campaign ahead of last week's debate, alleging there was a clear bias on display against former President Trump.
"On debate night, it became abundantly clear that ABC News and its respective moderators had a biased agenda," Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, wrote to ABC News President Almin Karamehmedovic and Harris’ campaign manager, Julie Chávez Rodriguez, in a letter reported by NewsNation.
Marshall said there was a "three-on-one" onslaught against Trump, echoing the Republican's complaints about the debate moderated by ABC's David Muir and Linsey Davis.
The debate, which political pundits widely called a victory for Harris, featured five fact-checks of Trump in real time by the moderators, while Harris was never fact-checked on any of her remarks.
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Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall wrote a letter to ABC News demanding proof it hadn't coordinated ahead of time with the Kamala Harris campaign. (Getty Images)
According to NewsNation, Marshall's letter wants the media organization to turn over and also publicly release any texts and emails to dispel any concerns about advance coordination.
"The American people deserve transparency and accountability from the mainstream media and a full accounting of whether ABC News coordinated with the Harris campaign to skew the debate’s questions and fact-checking in favor of the Vice President," he wrote.
Marshall's letter cannot compel ABC News to do anything, the report noted. ABC News didn't respond to a request for comment.
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Trump, who claimed victory in the debate but has taken criticism for an uneven performance, suggested during a rally in Las Vegas last week that Harris had obtained the questions ahead of time.
"I hear she got the questions, and I also heard she had something in the ear," Trump said.
Trump ally Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., erupted on ABC this week for not correcting Harris' false remark at the debate that there was not "one member of the United States military who is in active duty" in a combat or war zone anywhere.
"This goes beyond bias--it's a media company effectively joining the Harris campaign," he wrote on X.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump during the second presidential debate at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (Getty Images)
ABC's Martha Raddatz, a network colleague of Muir and Davis, said Sunday that fact-checkers "found that to be false."
"There are currently 900 U.S. military personnel in Syria, 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq. All have been under regular threat from drones and missiles for months," she said. "We also have action in the Red Sea. Also, every single day, the Navy SEALs, Delta Forces special operators can be part of any sort of deadly raid."
Muir, who anchors "World News Tonight" for ABC, addressed the debate and the aftermath in an interview Monday on "Live With Kelly and Mark."
"All of the noise that you hear afterward about you know, ‘Which candidate won the debate, did the moderators win or lose?’ That's just noise. You all know that. The most important thing to remember is you all have the power," he told the audience.
The Trump and Harris campaigns didn't return requests for comment.