Heh.
So NPR, the national organization, is also calling the impeachment inquiry the Democratic impeachment inquiry to emphasize its partisan nature. You know, just like Benghazi was a Republican investigation. Same thing. (Only, oddly, NPR covered that without emphasizing it was exclusively Republican in nature).
Here's the NPR public editor defending this decision:
https://www.npr.org/sections/publicedit ... t-languageSo instead of Congress launching an impeachment inquiry, it's Democrats doing so. This, the argument goes, is fair because the votes are almost perfectly split by party. It's just accurately reporting the partisan breakdown and reflecting the sign-o-the-times intense partisanship in politics.
Only, it's like no trouble at all to find NPR describing the votes won almost exclusively by Republicans as the body they are part of deciding something. Happens all the time. If Democrats do something it's partisan. If Republicans do it, it's Congressional. What gives?
The high priests of both sides explain that one though. Republicans bitch about media coverage more given their much greater ability to leverage the national conversation with allied media, so the fair thing to do side with the framing that advantages them in both cases. Then truly things are fair.