On Thursday’s CBS This Morning, chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett was not pleased with NBC’s handling of Wednesday night’s first Democratic primary debate. The reporter panned the moderators for giving Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren “five questions in the first 40 minutes” and therefore boosting her candidacy.

“What is interesting to me about last night is Elizabeth Warren got five questions in the first 40 minutes. That solidified the appearance of her being the most important person on that stage,” Garrett noted as he called out the rival broadcast network. Co-host Gayle King agreed with the criticism: “I noticed that, too, Major. If I was the other candidates I would say...‘I’m here too,’ yeah.” Garrett added: “And other candidates were getting a little uncomfortable with it.”

He explained why the numerous early questions were such an advantage for Warren: “Now, she was less visible in the second hour, but just that prominence of getting that many questions sort of signaled to the audience this is the most important person on the stage.”

Referring to Democratic Hawaii Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, one of the 2020 contenders, King pointed out: “Didn’t Tulsi’s sister tweet about that?” Garrett confirmed: “She did. She said, ‘It’s clear NBC wants Elizabeth Warren to be the nominee.’ I mean, sort of like saying, wow, why are they structurally doing it this way?”

Gabbard’s sister pointedly tweeted: “It’s clear who MSNBC wants to be president: Elizabeth Warren.”

In addition to taking NBC to task, Garrett made broader critiques of media debate coverage overall:

...we should not be in the position of acting like theater critics....lots of reporters watch those debates and come up with performance analysis. We actually talked to people in Ames and Des Moines last night. And Amy Klobuchar, who a lot of reporters said didn’t have a great night, they thought did very well. Tulsi Gabbard’s name came up. The New York Times said Julian Castro won the night, his name didn’t come up at all in Ames and Des Moines. What that tells you is voters look at this differently than we do. And if I learned anything from 2016, it’s that reporters shouldn’t tell the country what’s happening and what to think about what just happened. They’ll tell us over time, wait for that process to play out.

King joked: “But we can’t help it, though, Major.” Garrett replied: “The pull and the temptation never ends, but we need to resist it.”

At least someone in the media is telling journalists to stop putting their thumbs on the scale and let voters actually decide election contests. If only any of them would listen.

Many of questions from NBC’s moderators skewed decidedly to the left throughout the night.

Here is a full transcript of the June 27 segment: