Skip to main content
  • Online media
  • Tariffs
  • Jeanine Pirro
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • Take Action
  • Search
  • Donate

Media Matters for America

  • News & Analysis
  • Research & Studies
  • Audio & Video
  • Archives

Media Matters for America

  • Nav
  • Search
  • News & Analysis
  • Research & Studies
  • Audio & Video
  • Archives
  • Online media
  • Tariffs
  • Jeanine Pirro
  • Take Action
  • Search
  • Donate
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
screen grab

Mainstream media outlets embarrass themselves on John Boehner’s book tour

Sunday shows let former GOP speaker talk up “common ground” and compromise, without confronting his own hard-line record

Written by Eric Kleefeld

Published 04/20/21 8:30 AM EDT

Former Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) is hawking his new book, On the House: A Washington Memoir, with a media tour playing up an image of his gruff demeanor and colorful denunciations of his intramural Republican rivals, who he blames for turning the Republican Party into an extremist political vehicle.

But something important is being lost in all this: Boehner’s effort to clean up his own legacy as a major player in that political radicalization. Instead, he is courting media outlets that worship a mythical bipartisanship while ignoring Republican intransigence — such as the politics that Boehner himself practiced during his entire tenure leading Republicans in the House.

Chuck Todd let Boehner off easy on immigration reform

Boehner kicked off Sunday morning with an appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press, during which host Chuck Todd asked about the effort to control the rise of white nationalism in the Republican Party, as exemplified by the recent attempt to start an America First Caucus dedicating itself to “Anglo-Saxon political traditions” and opposing immigration.

Todd asked Boehner about the role played by Fox News and other right-wing media in fomenting bigotry and stopping the reform of immigration laws — but he failed to grill the former GOP leader on his own role in playing to those same right-wing elements.

Video file

Citation

From the April 18, 2021, edition of NBC’s Meet the Press

JOHN BOEHNER (FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE): You know, my second-biggest regret during my time as speaker is not being able to come to an agreement with President Obama on an immigration reform bill. Our immigration system is a mess. It’s broken from top to bottom. And it needs to be fixed so that it’s fairer for Americans who are here and fairer for those who are trying to come here.

CHUCK TODD (HOST): Was it him or was it conservative media? I mean, you know, you wrote this about Roger Ailes. You said, “I just didn’t believe the entire federal government was so terrified of Roger Ailes that they’d break about a dozen laws to bring him down. I thought I could get him to control the crazies and instead I found myself talking to the president of the club.”

Here was the head of Fox News. You were trying to — you met with him to say, hey, can we cool this rhetoric down? So, you put the blame on President Obama. Isn’t it Roger Ailes and the radicalization of what happened on sort of right wing at night that torpedoed immigration?

BOEHNER: No, no. Believe me, Chuck, I wanted to get immigration reform done. President Obama wanted to get it done. But again, every time we’d get ready to move, the president would go out and give some speech or he’d loosen up some, some immigration regulation and just kind of set everybody on fire. And that’s not a prescription for getting things accomplished in the Congress.

The fact is, for all the times that the media’s obsession with bipartisanship is a hollow charade, there really was genuine bipartisan cooperation on this particular issue. The Senate passed a comprehensive immigration reform bill in June 2013 by a 68-32 margin — only for it to die in the Republican-controlled House, where Boehner gave in to far-right members such as former Rep. Steve King (R-IA) and Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL).

Boehner also stood in the way of basic democracy on this issue, reassuring his caucus that he would not allow a vote on any bill that did not have a majority among House Republicans, even if the bill could have achieved bipartisan majority in the House as a whole. (This practice among House Republicans is known as the “Hastert Rule” — named for former speaker and now-convicted criminal Dennis Hastert.)

Furthermore, Todd should know all of this history — he co-wrote pieces at NBC News on how Boehner and House Republicans disregarded the Senate bill, ostensibly to pursue a House bill, but noted that “conservatives are now creating new excuses” to oppose immigration reform.

Indeed, Todd raised the problem of radicalization in the Republican caucus as the reason that immigration reform had failed. But instead of following up on Boehner’s implausible denial of the problem and his attempt to blame President Barack Obama, Todd simply moved on to the next topic.

CNN’s Dana Bash let Boehner skate on gun laws and finding “common ground”

During Boehner’s other Sunday appearance, on CNN’s State of the Union, the former speaker of the House bemoaned the lack of “common ground” on reforming gun laws, both during his time in office — specifically dating back to the December 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut — and also while mass shootings continue in America today.

Video file

Citation

From the April 18, 2021, edition of CNN’s State of the Union

DANA BASH (CO-HOST):When you were speaker, there were 20 first-graders who were killed in Newtown, Connecticut. Looking back now, do you regret not passing new gun laws then? And do you want to see Republicans come to the table now at least to pass something?

JOHN BOEHNER (FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE): Well, back when Newtown happened, we couldn't find common ground with the other side. And I heard the earlier segment. And, hopefully, there's some common ground to be found.

I know that Sen. Pat Toomey has been working on this across the aisle, trying to come to some agreement. And, hopefully, they will find some common ground, because this is — frankly, it's heartbreaking. I think it's embarrassing our country to the rest of the world. And we have got to find a way to deal with this problem.

BASH: So, this would be a top priority for you were you — if you were still speaker of the House?

BOEHNER: Well, “if.” But I'm not. So, those in power now are going to have to figure out what can be done. It's not about what everybody wants. It's a matter of, what can be accomplished in a bipartisan way?

Bash had asked Boehner if he regretted not passing gun reforms at the time — and then she let him off far too easily on his answer, especially with a softball question over whether it be a “top priority” for him today. The fact is that Boehner’s own response to the horrific killings in December 2012 was a complete pattern of inaction.

At first, he refused to hold any immediate vote on gun reform, on the nominal basis that he was waiting for proposals from the White House. Then, when the White House unveiled its proposals, Boehner passed the buck -- referring them for review to House committees and offering to consider any potential bills that might come from the Senate. (Meanwhile, other Republicans in Congress and the National Rifle Association were gearing up to sink any such proposals.)

And while Boehner noted that Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA) had been “working on this across the aisle,” no further explanation was made of what exactly that entailed. Although Toomey had joined with centrist Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) in the months after Sandy Hook to propose a modest expansion of background checks — only for it to be blocked via a Republican-led filibuster in the Senate — the measure did not receive support from Boehner in the House.

Once that was done, Boehner simply continued to stonewall: “The relevant committees are working on this issue. I'm going to continue to work with them, and when we have a decision to announce, we'll announce it.”

And that was that, becoming a case study of Republicans’ mounting defiance against any “common ground,” while Boehner did nothing about it — not that Bash saw fit to remind him of any of those details.

Boehner’s snow job is already working with other mainstream outlets

Earlier this month, Politico ran an essay by Boehner, billed with the lofty introduction: “How America’s center-right party started to lose its mind, as told by the man who tried to keep it sane.”

And on Sunday, the site ran a news piece on Boehner’s Meet the Press appearance, noting his statement that “one of the top regrets from his time as leader of the House was the failure to reach a deal on immigration reform with former President Barack Obama.”

Yet, Politico had documented in the past all of the ways that Boehner stalled on immigration reform, while appeasing far-right House members who threatened his speakership every time he made the slightest feint toward compromise.

On Monday, Boehner sat down for an online interview with Washington Post senior congressional correspondent Paul Kane, who at one point remarked, “One of the things that really marked your almost five years as speaker was this continued search for the big deal,” such as on fiscal issues — or implausibly, as Kane listed, on immigration and gun reform — and asked Boehner which “deal” he regretted missing out on the most.

Boehner initially brought up fiscal issues, but when the subject turned to immigration Kane seemed to remember the actual record:

Video file

Citation

The Washington Post, April 19, 2021

JOHN BOEHNER (FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE): Now we did reduce the deficit five years in a row, even though I was the Republican speaker, Barack Obama was president, and Harry Reid was the majority leader for most of that time. We made progress, just not as much progress as I would have hoped.

But my second biggest disappointment was immigration. I told the president I want to get this done. Our immigration system is a mess from top to bottom. It hadn't been overhauled in decades and decades. And the Senate sent a bill over. I had a bipartisan group of members working together going back to ‘07, ‘08, and this bipartisan group, I kept waiting for them. They were very close to having an agreement. I mean very close. And no sooner we just get ready to move, President Obama would do something on immigration to kind of set the whole field on fire again that prevented us from being able to bring it to the floor. And so, it was a big disappointment. I wish we'd have gotten it done. But —

PAUL KANE (THE WASHINGTON POST): But on immigration, sir, they had a Senate bill that got 68 votes. That's a big vote in the Senate for a big bill with a lot of components, and you folks, you never even had anything that was being marked up in the Judiciary Committee. I mean, were you really ever that close to anything? 

If Kane knew that Boehner never actually did anything to advance immigration reforms, then why did he ask him about having such a reputation of seeking a “big deal” on it in the first place? Instead, the interview quickly moved on — leaving Boehner to continue whitewashing his long record of partisan obstruction.

The Latest

  1. In response to interview where Trump suggests an allegedly photoshopped image was real, Fox's Greg Gutfeld lashes out at ABC News' Terry Moran

    Video & Audio 04/30/25 6:37 PM EDT

  2. Sean Hannity downplays the shrinking economy: “The GDP drop was actually supposed to be much worse”

    Video & Audio 04/30/25 5:18 PM EDT

  3. Far-right media figures are launching their own crypto coins

    Research/Study 04/30/25 4:41 PM EDT

  4. Fox anchor pleads with Gov. Andy Beshear to give Trump “a grace period” as tariffs rock the economy

    Video & Audio 04/30/25 4:11 PM EDT

  5. JB Pritzker called for mass protests. Right-wing media falsely accused him of calling for violence.

    Research/Study 04/30/25 3:44 PM EDT

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Current page 11
  • …
  • Next page ››

In This Article

  • Chuck Todd

    Chuck Todd
  • Dana Bash

    Dana Bash
  • The Washington Post

    The-Washington-Post-MMFA-Tag.png
  • Politico

    politico_mmfa_tag
  • Meet the Press

    Meet the Press
  • CNN

    CNN-MMFA-Tag.png
  • NBC

    NBC-MMFA-Tag.png

Related

  1. How corporate broadcast networks covered Earth Month in 2025

    Research/Study 05/07/25 9:08 AM EDT

  2. CNN reporter: Trump's tariffs “are meant to ... break the global trading operation that has been built over the last 70 or 80 years”

    Video & Audio 04/03/25 12:36 PM EDT

  3. CNN features trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney as game changer of the week

    Video & Audio 03/14/25 4:09 PM EDT

Media Matters for America

Sign up for email updates
  • About
  • Contact
  • Corrections
  • Submissions
  • Jobs
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS

© 2025 Media Matters for America

RSS