MSNBC Host Attacks Pro-Lifer Cathy McMorris Rogers: “Where’s the Needlepoint?”

National   |   Matthew Balan   |   Jan 29, 2014   |   4:21PM   |   Washington, DC

On Tuesday night, Alex Wagner gave the latest example of “if it weren’t for double standards, liberals would have no standards at all” (a regular saying of conservative talk show host Chris Plante). msnbc6The MSNBC host took to Twitter to slam Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers’s fireside setting, where she delivered the official Republican response to President Obama’s State of the Union: “Living room. Lady on a settee. Where’s the needlepoint?”

Conservatives struck back at this condescending attack from one of MSNBC’s resident uber-feminists. Townhall.com’s Kevin W. Glass pointed out what would have happened if the roles were reversed:

  Several – including Andy Levy, co-host of Fox News Channel’s Red Eye – snarkily replied by using the left-wing channel’s oft-used “war on women” attack headline as a hashtag. Conservative talker Derek Hunter of Baltimore-area radio station WBAL shot back, “It’s an office. Had you had a real job in life you’d recognize one.” The Blaze’s Steve Krakauer, formerly of Mediate.com, expressed his surprise:

 

But one of the more creative replies to Wagner’s patronizing Tweet came from Twitter user @redsteeze, who replied directly to the MSNBC anchor by linking to a YouTube video of Hillary Clinton’s 2007 announcement that she was forming a presidential exploratory committee. The former New York senator gave her statement in a similar setting as Rep. McMorris Rodgers.

Mediaite’s Andrew Kirell noticed @redsteeze’s retort, and wondered, “Curious to know how Wagner would have reacted if someone had said something similar about this Hillary Clinton video.”

LifeNews.com Note: Matthew Balan is a news analyst at Media Research Center. He graduated from the University of Delaware in 2003, and worked for the Heritage Foundation from 2003 until 2006, and for Human Life International in 2006. This post originally appeared at MRC’s NewsBusters web site and is reprinted with permission.