I have recently begun to listen to Air America’s Rachel Maddow Show, which is a fairly entertaining and informative program, and Maddow mentioned the other day that she has noticed a systematic anti-Obama bias in the stories coming out of the AP.
No sooner was I alerted to this claim than–lo and behold–I read the AP’s “analysis” of Obama’s decision to select Biden as his VP candidate. The headline of this “analysis,” written by Ron Fournier, reads “Analysis: Biden pick shows lack of confidence.” The “analysis” begins like this: “The candidate of change went with the status quo.”
This “analysis”–which confirms Maddow’s observation (which was, I should note, targeted not just the AP’s analyses but also its journalism), and almost borrows talking points from the McCain campaign’s playbook–has rightly set off a firestorm on the blogosphere, led by Steve Benen at the Washington Monthly, who observes, among other things, the basic lack of logic in Fournier’s “argument”:
By his logic, any potential running mate shows a “lack of confidence” — picking Hillary would mean Obama lacked confidence in his ability to win over women voters; picking Bayh would mean Obama lacked confidence in his ability to win over independents and conservative Dems; picking Webb would mean Obama lacked confidence in his ability to win over voters concerned about national security; picking Kaine would mean Obama lacked confidence in his ability to win over voters in the South; etc.
Beyond the amply documented fact that Fournier is very cozy with Republicans, and the controversy over the direction Fournier is taking the formerly more neutral AP in, there is a more important point here: this is what we’re going to be getting, not only from the AP but also from every major “Serious” source of journalism, from now until November. We’ll have reframing of every decision Obama makes in negative terms, attacks on his character and fitness to command based on the slimmest of evidence, practically naked partisan attacks on every utterance he makes by supposedly objective journalists (like our friend, Matt Lauer).
It is in this context–the usual context within which the right-leaning mainstream media establishment operates–that Sacha Zimmerman, over at The New Republic, can worry about how troubled she is that Maddow is getting her own show on MSNBC:
I really like Maddow and have found her thoroughly compelling throughout this latest campaign season, but I am not so thrilled about this trend toward partisan networks and news. By all means we should have progressive and conservative commentators and analysts, but is there no room for argument between the two? Where have all the iconoclasts gone? With this split in the networks and a near perfect red-blue divide nationwide, it seems that we are more and more retreating to our comfortable trenches and refusing to acknowledge anything but spite, paranoia, and conspiracy theory when it comes to the other side. And, since cable news is not exactly renowned for its nuance or intellectual rigor, knee-jerk reactions can pass for smart commentary. I think Maddow will be a wonderful host (and God knows MSNBC could use a smart woman), but how exciting is it really if she is just preaching to the choir?
It is in this context that Democrats, no matter how completely mainstreamly centrist they are, will always have to fight. Even being at the center of the center of the political spectrum–which I think is a fair description of Obama-Biden, and no insult on my part, just an observation–is no guarantee that you won’t be painted as a terrorist-loving, Weatherman-supporting, radical antiwar, Code Pink-worshipping, soft-on-national-defense commie/anarchist or whatever.
Slight deviations from the center toward the left are regarded–by the stalwart liberals at TNR–as mortal crises to democracy and journalistic integrity. Meanwhile, systematic bias toward the right by supposedly objective news wires, like the AP, to say nothing of Fox News, is just par for the course, occasionally noteworthy when their bias becomes too blatant to ignore, as it is in this case, but usually accepted as being as natural as air.
As a study by the Center for Media and Public Affairs at George Mason University has shown, the media has indeed covered Obama more than McCain. Thing is, that coverage has been overwhelmingly negative.
Welcome to our political discourse.
If Obama wanted to project confidence, he could have picked Ronald McDonald.
Then we’d know just how confident he is that he can win the election and govern the country with no help at all. Except the help McDonald can provide in the way of cheeseburgers.
Then they’d say Obama wasn’t confident he’d have sufficient access to cheeseburgers in the White House, which is why he picked a cheeseburger maven as his running mate. (Am I using the word “maven” correctly? Anyone?)
But the “traditional” media loves to beat up on Obama these days, just to show how fair they are. “Fairness,” among people who haven’t been slurping right-wing kool-aid, means launching ridiculous attacks on Obama under cover of supposed objectivity.
I especially appreciate Lee’s reference to the study at the Center for Media and Public Affairs at George Mason University.
I agree with Maddow: we WANT the media to cover John McCain, because the more media scrutiney he receives, the more ridiculous he looks. The media isn’t interested in covering McCain, perhaps in part because they’re afraid to tell the truth about him — afraid, that is, that if they told the truth about him they’d be accused of trying to smear him.
The truth about McCain isn’t pretty.
Comment by Ian — August 24, 2008 @ 12:24 am