MSNBC host slams networks for sending '90 percent' Democrats to moderate Republican debates: 'It's insane!'
- Former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough says Republican debate moderators are '90 percent' Democrats
- Scarborough has been a prominent voice criticizing his network's sister channel, CNBC, for last week's GOP debate
- Host seems to advocate candidate Ted Cruz's call for requiring Republican debate moderators to be Republican voters
Former Republican congressman and MSNBC TV host Joe Scarborough on Monday ripped the major TV networks for their selection of debate moderators, accusing them of deliberately sending Democrats to referee Republican debates.
The channel's popular personality continued the still-simmering criticism of last week's Republican debate on CNBC, which was widely criticized for the performance of the moderators and has led to a revolt among the 2016 GOP presidential candidates.
'It is insane,' Scarborough said on his show, 'Morning Joe.'
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'Morning Joe' host Joe Scarborough and co-host Mika Brzezinski on Monday dissected the growing chorus for more Republican control over the moderation of the party's debates
GOP Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas on Saturday proposed requiring Republican debates to be moderated only by Republican voters
'I will say as a Republican watching these debates for years, it is insane that you watch all of these debates and you see Republican primaries moderated by people that you know have never voted in a Republican primary their entire life and have never voted for a Republican president their entire life.
'And that makes up about 90 percent of the people that we know that have moderated debates. And if we don't admit that, then we're lying to ourselves.'
From 1995 to 2001, Scarborough represented a congressional district in Florida's panhandle which is considered one of the most conservative districts in the entire United States.
His criticism is notable because of his political past and his stature as a senior figure in the NBC-Universal network.
Cruz was in Des Moines at Saturday's campaign rally in which he criticized the politics of Republican debate moderators
Scarborough was one of the first on-air hosts last Thursday to express disgust to the Wednesday night debate, calling it 'terrible.'
'It was one of the worst debates I've ever seen in my life. It was really a horrible, horrible cluster of a debate,' he said on Thursday.
The CNBC debate has been roundly criticized for the performance of its moderators, whom candidates and pundits complained asked loaded questions, a lack of balance, and a lack off control.
It led to the Republican National Committee yanking the party from a February debate that had been scheduled on NBC, as well as a weekend summit meeting between 12 of the 14 GOP campaigns and a list of demands to networks hosting future debates.
On Monday, Scarborough and Brzezinski were reacting to a speech by candidate Ted Cruz on Saturday at a campaign rally in Des Moines,
Cruz proposed in that speech that future debates should only be moderated by hosts who have voted in GOP primaries.
'Let me lay out a radical proposition: How about if we say from now on, if you have never voted in a Republican primary in your life, you don't get to moderate a Republican primary debate?' Cruz said.
Scarborough is a former Florida congressman from 1995 to 2001 who represented one of the most conservative districts in the country
Cruz's campaign has gone even further, using footage of the debate in a new campaign ad that attacks the media for attacking Republicans,
Republican front-runner Donald Trump has also been at the forefront of the candidates criticizing this year's debate moderators.
In an interview Monday on SiriusXM, Trump called one of last week's debate moderators, former Wall Street Journal reporter John Harwood, a 'sleaze.'
The 12 campaigns that met in Washington on Sunday have drafted a letter to networks hosting future debates, with a list of 25 question including some bizarre demands such as one insisting that studio temperatures are kept below 67 degrees.
The Republican National Committee was pointedly excluded from the meeting in a power play intended to demonstrate to the committee that the campaigns want more control over future debates.
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