MSNBC, ABC, CNN realize Inflation Reduction Act doesn’t reduce inflation after bill is passed: ‘Marketing’

CNN's John Harwood admitted the bills name was a 'marketing ploy' after it was passed

Left-leaning media networks, including MSNBC, ABC, and CNN, finally realized that the Inflation Reduction Act does not actually reduce inflation, but not until the massive spending package had already been signed into law. 

The bill, which was passed by the Senate earlier this month and the House of Representatives last week, costs an estimated $437 billion, with $369 billion going toward investments in "Energy Security and Climate Change," according to a summary by Senate Democrats.

Democrats claim the legislation will soften the deficit by raising $737 billion, imposing a 15% corporate minimum tax which is predicted to raise $222 billion, and prescription drug pricing which the Senate estimates will raise $265 billion. 

One thing the Inflation Reduction Act is not expected to do, according to multiple analyses, is reduced inflation. The Congressional Budget Office said the bill will have "a negligible effect" on inflation in 2022, and in 2023 its impact would range between reducing inflation by 0.1% and increasing it by 0.1%.

MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR PRAISES DEMOCRATS' 'MARKETING BRANDING GENIUS' IN NAMING INFLATION REDUCTION ACT

President Biden moves to give Sen. Joe Manchin the pen he used to sign the Inflation Reduction Act as Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer applauds at the White House, Aug. 16, 2022. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

These facts were hard to come by on a number of liberal media networks, with reporters and hosts parroting the talking points of congressional Democrats, or at the very least failing to press them on the bill’s perplexing name. 

Four days before the Inflation Reduction Act was passed, CNN analyst Ryan Lizza called the legislation a "big deal," and said that its passage would make Biden an "enormously consequential president" whose legislative win would put him in the "modern pantheon" of great leaders. 

Less than a week before the bill was signed, NBC Nightly News hyped the Inflation Reduction Act as a "blockbuster billion-dollar deal" with "unprecedented" investments in energy that will put "downward pressure" on inflation.

A day earlier, CNN Newsroom host Pamela Brown claimed Biden was "one of the legislatively successful presidents in modern history," and became confrontational with former Trump campaign advisor David Urban over the Inflation Reduction Act.

According to an analysis of Grabien transcripts, only ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, CNBC’s Joe Kernen and CNN’s Poppy Harlow pressed their guests on the bills meager impact on inflation prior to it passing the Senate. 

CNN CELEBRATES ‘LEGACY-DEFINING’ INFLATION REDUCTION ACT PASSAGE FOR BIDEN: ‘HUGE LEGISLATIVE VICTORY’

President Biden speaks during a bill signing ceremony for the Inflation Reduction Act at the White House, Aug. 16, 2022. (Reuters/Leah Millis)

But, once the bill came into law, the liberal media suddenly began asking tough questions, asking guests why the legislation was named the Inflation Reduction Act if it did not in fact reduce inflation. 

On Tuesday’s installment of CNN's "New Day," CNN’s Brianna Keilar claimed that passage of the bill was a "significant victory for Biden’s agenda and for his party, even if questions remain about whether it will live up to its name.

John Harwood told John Berman and Keilar that the spending bill signed by President Biden was titled the Inflation Reduction Act as a "marketing device" to get moderate Democrats, such as Senator Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., to support it.

Harwood echoed the words of the Congressional Budget Office when he said the legislation would have a "negligible" effect on lowering inflation and asserted that the legislation did not live up to its name, and concluded that the bill did not live up to its name. 

However, six days before the bill was signed, Harwood made no mention of this "negligible effect" or "marketing device" name, instead calling the Inflation Reduction Act a "sudden reversal of fortune" for the president. 

"First of all, it's important to stop and recognize the breadth of accomplishments that Democrats and President Biden have achieved," he said at one point. 

CHRIS HAYES PROCLAIMS BIDEN SIGNING INFLATION REDUCTION ACT A 'HUGE DAY FOR THE COUNTRY, THE PLANET, EVERYONE'

CNN reporter John Harwood tells CNN's "New Day" that the Inflation Reduction Act will have a "negligible" impact on inflation. (CNN)

MSNBC contributor and Vote Latino's founding president Maria Teresa Kumar similarly praised President Biden and the Democrats for the "marketing branding genius behind their latest spending bill. 

On Wednesday, economist Jeffrey Sachs also claimed the legislation was a "marketing tool" that "doesn’t address inflation at all" during a conversation with CNN’s Randi Kaye. 

Just hours after the passage of the bill, ABC’s Jonathan Karl presented the findings of the CBO report to White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre. 

"But let me ask you, it's called the Inflation Reduction Act, but the Congressional Budget Office which is nonpartisan said that there would be a negligible impact on inflation this year and barely impact inflation at all next year, isn't it almost Orwellian?" Karl asked Jean-Pierre.

REPORTERS BLASTED FOR ABANDONING INFLATION REDUCTION ACT TITLE WITH BILL SIGNING: 'AREN'T EVEN TRYING ANYMORE'

President Biden delivers remarks on the Inflation Reduction Act at the White House on July 28, 2022. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Jean-Pierre said the legislation would benefit Americans by making sure billionaires in corporate America pay their fair share, lowering the deficit and making the tax system "more fair."

But, a week earlier Karl had no such concerns about the bill, instead hyping up Biden, and claiming he was "on a roll" legislatively. 

CNN’s Kate Bolduan similarly pressed Cecilia Rose, a member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, telling her there were a "lot of other names" the legislation could have been named that may have been more fitting. 

"If you passed a bill called the Fill Every Pothole act—I mean voters should expect you to fill every pothole," she said at one point. "So should voters measure the success of this bill on how much you reduce inflation in the next couple of years?"

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Days after the passage of the bill, CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin of the "Squawk Box" began a Wednesday interview with White House economic adviser Brian Deese by noting that "questions remain" over whether the Inflation Reduction Act will actually do what is says. He also directed Deese and the audience to a chyron which read, "will it live up to its name?"

Deese failed to answer whether the legislation will have a positive impact on inflation, and instead said he and others felt it was "consequential important step" to make sure the Biden administration’s fiscal policy was complementing the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve. 

Fox News' Brooke Singman and Gabriel Hays contributed to this report.

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