NEW YORK (AP) — CNN
moved swiftly to replace Lou Dobbs in its nightly lineup with John
King, who said Thursday that all views would be welcome on his
politically-oriented talk show when it debuts early next year.
Dobbs'
abrupt exit prompted a victory lap by advocacy groups that had sought
his ouster for outspokenness, particularly on illegal immigration. But
CNN President Jon Klein said their pressure had nothing to do with the
decision.
Klein said veteran political reporter King was the
perfect choice for the passionate, nonpartisan reporting that CNN wants
for its image. King will be leaving the Sunday political talk show he
has been presiding over, creating another opening.
King will
compete directly with another political hour, Chris Matthews'
"Hardball" on MSNBC (Shepard Smith's general interest newscast on Fox
News Channel is the cable news ratings leader at 7 p.m. ET). The CNN
personality said he hoped to establish a show offering more meaty fare
than his competitors.
"Anybody who has a major stake in a major
topic will be invited to be on the show," said King, whose
Washington-based program has no name yet.
Dobbs was a CNN
original who was one of the TV business' leading financial journalists
before taking on many other topics post-9/11, and increasingly offering
his own opinion. Latino groups charged that Dobbs' emphasis on illegal
immigration promoted an atmosphere of intolerance.
"We had
hundreds of thousands of people who said 'enough is enough,'" said Alex
Nogales, president and CEO of the National Hispanic Media Coalition.
"That he is gone from CNN is a great blessing and a great victory for
our community."
CNN supported Dobbs, particularly as the
opinionated fare boosted his ratings. But his show increasingly became
inconsistent with CNN's effort to present itself as the down-the-middle
alternative to Fox and MSNBC, and Klein pressured Dobbs to do a
straight newscast. Complicating things was Dobbs' new role as a radio
commentator, and the personas were often confused.
"To his credit, he tried (a straight newscast) and I think eventually he found that his interests lay elsewhere," Klein said.
The
men had been discussing an exit strategy for several months. Klein
characterized it as "a mutual decision," and released Dobbs from his
contract.
Beyond his radio show, Dobbs wouldn't say what else he would be doing. He promised he would be active in advocacy journalism.
On
a conference call involving 11 groups that had actively sought Dobbs'
ouster through petitions, pressure on advertisers and distribution of
attack videos, Eric Burns of the liberal media watchdogs Media Matters
claimed Dobbs left because of the campaign.
"I don't think there
is any doubt that it was a result — a direct result — of pressure from
these groups here today," Burns said.
But Klein said there were as many people expressing support for Dobbs' work than opposition.
"They
may be pleased by the outcome," he said, "but they are not responsible
for, or played any part in the decision whatsoever."
CNN is owned by Time Warner Inc.
Associated Press writer Suzanne Gamboa contributed to this story.