Both ABC and NBC were desperately backing calls from partisan Democrats, Monday night, to have a special prosecutor investigate the Donald Trump’s campaign for evidence of collusion with Russia. But, took a liking to a call from one particular Republican. “In Washington tonight, pressure is intensifying for an independent investigation on Russia, including a call from a leading Republican,” announced anchor Lester Holt during NBC Nightly News, “There's also new resistance to those calls by the White House.”

The Republican Holt referred to (and ABC praised as well) was Representative Darrell Issa of California. “But now a prominent House Republican is calling for an independent investigation saying Attorney General Jeff sessions shouldn't be involved because of the prominent role he played in the Trump campaign,” reported ABC’s Jon Karl on World News Tonight.

But their respect for Issa’s opinion is a new phenomenon for these two liberal news outlets. In the past, they wanted nothing to with his active investigations and probes when it was Barack Obama’s administration that was under the microscope.

In 2014, they ignored the findings of Issa’s House Oversight Committee when they exposed the fact that the Obama administration covered up the motivation behind the Benghazi attack that killed four Americans. NBC didn’t think much of his investigation into the IRS’s targeting of Tea Party organizations neither, while ABC completely ignored it for months. Nor did they like it when another one of Issa’s probe’s discovered an “idiotic” ATF policy that got a Border Patrol agent killed.

But that hypocrisy didn’t stop them from using him to discredit the Trump administration. “Tonight, mounting scrutiny over Russia after top Republican congressman Darrell Issa breaking ranks with the President, calling for a special prosecutor to look into potential ties between Trump campaign aides and Russian officials,” Kristen Welker declared. She also leaned on an interview her colleague Matt Lauer conducted with former President George W. Bush where he tried to get the former president to trash Trump.

“The White House insisted today there's nothing left to investigate even though key questions remain unanswered,” Karl warned in the middle of his report. But he never expressed what those questions were. He only insinuated that there were dark secrets as he played highlights of his sparring with Press Secretary Spicer from the press briefing earlier in the day.

He brushed off Spicer’s argument of “how many people have to say that there's nothing there before you realize there's nothing there?” He’s comeback was that the FBI and Congressional investigations were still going on. He never mentioned that leaks from the FBI investigation (which is how they know anything about it) have said that there has been no evidence found of Russia collusion with the campaign, and that media reports were overstating the facts.

This lusting for a special prosecutor to look into Trump campaign/administration demonstrates their obscene levels of bias and contempt that they have for the beater of Hillary Clinton. They never accepted Republican calls for a special prosecutor to investigate Hillary’s or Obama’s misconduct but they’re now throwing their full weight behind one for Trump.

Transcripts below:

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NBC Nightly News

February 27, 2017

7:06:08 PM Eastern LESTER HOLT: In Washington tonight, pressure is intensifying for an independent investigation on Russia, including a call from a leading Republican. There's also new resistance to those calls by the White House. And now former President George W. Bush, who has rarely spoken out on politics since leaving office, is weighing in exclusively with NBC News. Our White House correspondent Kristen Welker has details. [Cuts to video] KRISTEN WELKER: Tonight, mounting scrutiny over Russia after top Republican congressman Darrell Issa breaking ranks with the President, calling for a special prosecutor to look into potential ties between Trump campaign aides and Russian officials. DARRELL ISSA: You're going to need to use the special prosecutor's statute and office. WELKER: The president declining to directly weigh in today. UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: Do you support a special prosecutor on Russia? WELKER: But as the press was hustled out, whispering he hasn't spoken to Russia in years. DONALD TRUMP: I haven't called Russia in 10 years. WELKER: That contradicts Mr. Trump's own public statements. This 2014 speech one of many in which he's touted his ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin. TRUMP: As an example I own the miss universe, I was in Moscow recently. And I spoke indirectly and directly with President Putin, who could not have been nicer. WELKER: But even former President George W. Bush insisted more information is needed in an exclusive interview with Matt Lauer on Today. GEORGE W. BUSH: I think we all need answers. Whether or not a special prosecutor's the right way to go, you're talking to the wrong guy. I am sure, though, that that question needs to be answered. WELKER: Today the White House tried to knock down the controversy. SEAN SPICER: I guess my question would be, a prosecutor for what? We have for six months heard story after story come out about unnamed sources, say the same thing over and over again. And nothing's come of it. WELKER: Tonight the fight is heating up on Capitol Hill. DEVIN NUNES: We still have not seen any evidence of anyone from the Trump campaign or any other campaign, for that matter, that's communicated with the Russian government. WELKER: Foreign policy experts weighing in. MICHAEL MCFAUL: I think the President himself would do well to get all the facts out. Nobody's talking about rerunning the election. But we do need to know what happened during the elections. [Cuts back to live] WELKER: Tonight Darrell Issa called an independent investigation critical for transparency. All looming as the President prepares to give his first joint address to congress tomorrow night. Lester? HOLT: Kristen Welker at the White House, thank you.

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