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The Media's Election

By Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet. Posted February 27, 2008.


The corporate-owned media play a large, often unnoticed role in U.S. national politics.
Mark Weisbrot

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The major media plays a much bigger role in the formation of our national politics than most people realize. The media helps define and choose the issues, and acts as gatekeeper in setting the limits for political discussion and sometimes even candidacies for public office.

The most media-savvy candidates know how to play within the media's rules, and use them to their advantage. Barack Obama is a good example of such a candidate - more on that later.

The media can also veto candidates, as in the case of John Edwards. He was not by definition a "marginal" candidate: a U.S. senator and vice-presidential candidate in the last election, at various junctures he polled better against potential Republican contenders than the other Democratic candidates. He led his rivals in introducing a serious health care plan, and arguably transformed the contest in his appeal to the Democratic base on that and other issues.

But the media rejected Edwards, by a combination of ignoring him and subjecting him to much more negative reporting than the other major contenders. The same was true in 2004 for Howard Dean, who rallied the Democratic base but found himself with five or six times as many negative articles in the media than his major democratic primary opponents.

The media does much more than directly influence the opinion of voters. Most donors, politicians, institutions and other important political participants will not waste resources on a candidate that they think is unlikely to win. They often look at how the media treats a candidate in order to make this decision. If the media does not take a candidate seriously or is obviously hostile to him or her, these potential supporters will look elsewhere.

That's not to say that Edwards would have won if the media had not rejected him; most likely he would have lost anyway. But he would have been a more serious contender.

On the other hand, Obama knew how to define his candidacy within the limits of the media's constraints and still have a mass appeal. From the beginning of his campaign he mostly avoided challenging powerful interests, and talked about "getting all sides to the table" and overcoming "decades of bitter partisanship." The media and punditocracy lap this stuff up like honey. At the same time he was able to tap into the voters' deep desire for change, with inspirational speeches, transcendental narratives, and celebrity-studded videos.

Obama showed his political genius in knowing when to jump the fence and break out of the media corral. In Iowa and New Hampshire, and even the Super-Tuesday primaries he was winning the independent and upper-income voters while losing the traditional Democratic base, including union members and the majority of Americans that do not have a college degree. He had to switch to a more populist tune or risk losing the whole game to Hillary Clinton. He did so, just in time to trounce her among almost all demographic groups (notwithstanding Saturday Night Live's joke about her majority among white women over 80) in the Wisconsin primary. One of his best applause lines in that contest was his response to Hillary Clinton's remark that "speeches don't put food on the table." Obama's reply: "You know what? NAFTA didn't put food on the table, either."

Of course, there's nothing the chattering class hates more than "populism," which they seem to define roughly as appealing to voters on the basis of their real interests, without regard to what rich people or corporate moguls think. For this, Obama has provoked some media backlash: for example, the Washington Post editorial board accused Obama of delivering an "angrier, and intellectually sloppier, message ... of class warfare and populism," for complaining about the negative impact of trade deals such as NAFTA.

But it's a bit late for the media to reinvent Obama, after affirming his image as a post-partisan, non-ideological, charismatic uniter. If he can clinch the nomination, as seems increasingly likely, he will probably drop the populist rhetoric and once again hew closer to the media boundaries on their "sensitive" issues such as trade. In a different time and place this could risk alienating his base and suppressing turnout, but with the economy going down the tubes and -- no matter what the likely Republican nominee Senator John McCain thinks -- an unpopular war, this election should be the Democrat's to lose. The gulf between Obama and McCain on these and other major issues is sufficiently large, and Obama has the intelligence, knowledge, political skills, and mass appeal to capitalize on these differences.

There will be many battles ahead, and Obama can expect a dirty, even racist campaign from various Republican groups that McCain will try to distance himself from. This campaign will make any previous comments from the Clinton campaign or photos of Obama in a turban look mild by comparison.

But Obama has played the media like a violin, and unless he stumbles, it should carry him all the way to the White House.

AlterNet is a non profit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by our writers are their own.

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Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis (University of Chicago Press, 2000), and has written numerous research papers on economic policy. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.

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Yes biased media is the problem
Posted by: Swedish liberal on Feb 27, 2008 8:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although I live in the US I was born and lived in Sweden for the most of my grown life.

In Sweden we have the same problem as regards Public Service media it is biased as is the US media. In

The difference is however that the US media leans to the right and the Swedish media to the extreme left. Therefore any candidate in Sweden that is seen as to the right leaning will get bashed as will an US candidate that leans to the left.

In Sweden 75 % of journalists vote for the Greens, former Communist party and the Social Democrats. In fact in Public Television and Radio more than 50 % vote for the Grens and teh former Communist party, most are still hardcore marxistleninist.

This debate has raged as well in Sweden and the response seems to be the same in Sweden and in the US. "We are not biased, we only report facts."

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Media Doesn't Lead
Posted by: natedogg265 on Feb 27, 2008 9:08 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm afraid I have to disagree with this article. The media follows the polls.

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elite media hates populism
Posted by: whealeydj on Feb 28, 2008 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that why they attacked edwards and ignored Kucinich.

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Damn right the media is controlled...
Posted by: Jibbguy on Feb 28, 2008 1:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One has only to look at the extreme bias, and criminal conspiracy, against Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich to see just how controlled the media actually is...

Ron Paul came in 2nd in at least 2 primaries, and during the election night coverage, his name was NOT EVEN SHOWN on the screen.... Yeah thats right, they pretended he did not exist, showing all the other candidates' totals but never mentioning him: THE SECOND PLACE CANDIDATE. Just like a soviet "disappearing" act, they air brushed these viable contenders out of the picture. Because they were and are a danger to the status quo by daring to speak truth.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4QO7zXTljE&feature=related

The above example is postive proof that media is wholly controlled. You see it is very important for them to stop messages like Pual's and Kucinich's from getting out. Thats why they took such obvious risk. Usually they try to be more circumspect, lol.... But if they control what candidate is allowed to be seen on TV, they control the entire election.

Another proof is this: The subject of Impeachment is never discussed on MSM... EVER. Even though over 50% of the population wants it. The subject of 9/11 is rarely discussed, and especially if it is dissent towards the official report. The health problems of the 9/11 First Responders are also ignored by Big Media; these heroic people are getting very sick from the deadly dust they injested, and their story cannot be seen by the American people.

Nor will they show the recent reports that civilian casualties in Iraq are now estimated to be over 1,000,000 .

If you still don't believe it, Google "Sibel Edmonds". Your media is suppressing the fact that several key government officials, including Congressmen, are implicated in selling or deliberatly leaking nuclear secrets to Israel, Turkey, and Pakistan. Hmm. that sounds like it would be newsworthy, eh?

The article is a nice start, but goes nowhere near exposing whats really going on.

And BTW: Obama is a corporate shill just like the others. Here's the proof: If he wasn't, they would not allow him to be heard.

A nation that no longer has a free press, cannot call itself "free".... A controlled media an the absolute requirement for tyranny.

Only the foreign press or the internet has honest and reliable news any more... Please do more research on this yourselves.

You can just get used to it and remain silent... Or join the rest of us in passing the word and fighting them!

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GREAT ARTICLE
Posted by: Mewsician on Feb 28, 2008 4:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since most Amurkans have long ago abdicated any semblance of their end of the "democracy requires an informed electorate" bargain, this problem of a morally bankrupt media establishment is arguably the greatest one we face. People in the U.S. not only no longer demand responsible journalism from our so-called free press, but they don't even understand the necessity for it and instead reward the bald propaganda of outfits like Faux News - with huge audience numbers that translate into huge profits for the likes of Rupert Murdoch.

If this country doesn't wake up to the twin crises of an ignorant, uninformed citizenry and a criminally irresponsible press, we're altogether doomed. Possibly so already, as I don't see how it will be possible to turn this leaky tub around. The Internet is the one bright spot on the horizon, but if people won't use it to seek out accurate, vetted information about their democracy and their political candidates, then the whole of the Internet is just another bark in a hopelessly packed kennel.

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Interent dangerous to rely on
Posted by: Jibbguy on Feb 29, 2008 8:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with the Internet is, in event of "martial law" or whatever excuse, it can be shut-down in a heart-beat. And likely WILL BE.

That is why the reforming of our regular media media is so important.

http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/diarypage.php?did=6256

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Why the surprise over corporate media "coverage?"
Posted by: socrates2 on Feb 29, 2008 9:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some years back "The Nation" magazine sounded the tocsin and ran a great article on media consolidation. It was ignored at the time. W/Cheney took full advantage of it to bamboozle the republic into buying the Empire line. No voices in opposition were heard between 2001 and 2003 except on the www. From "Tompaine.com" to "alternet.com" to the late, great "Yellowtimes.org." The latter a brilliant and informed voice; so good that to this day I suspect foul play to silence it.
Today we are stuck with the one voice-- corporate America's info-tainment echo chamber. The Nielsons determine our candidates along with the checkbooks of corporate America, who vet the candidates fit for corporate consumption.
The the speeches are tailored accordingly for maximum emotional arousal and entertainment.
As I've always said, "He who makes you feel good about yourself controls...your soul."

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David J. Ginsberg, MD
Posted by: dginsberg109 on Mar 1, 2008 6:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree, that the media is heavily influenced by the corporate purchasers of advertisements. On the other hand, I think their are other aggravating factors, that we should keep track of in order to understand the MSN's approach.
First, I think, that if you review the behavior of the so-called pundits, you have to take into consideration the motivation involved in maintaining 'readership.' If Chris Matthews can make such a fuss over that fact that a spokesman (who was nominated by G-d knows who,) cannot name Obama's accomplishments, he thinks he is enhancing his own image and therefore validating this occupation as 'pundit.' If you review that tape, notice, that when he first asked the question, he interrupted before the gentleman could speak. It's clear, that Olbermann's challenge to Matthews, that followed that event has not been repeated even once. (He challenged Matthews to name any significant accomplishment of the Congress as a whole.)
Insofar as ignoring the second and third string candidates is concerned, that is also a matter of trying to increase their own audiences. You have to admit, that it works. Look at what the media coverage of Dean's scream in Iowa in '04. They essentially blew him out of the water, because ,that did not appear "presidential!" I believe, that he looked like a sure thing before that, but having destroyed him the MSN could look forward to following a real fight and hence increase the public's interest. If the public were so truly turned off by the 'scream,' I don't think
Dean could have become the Chairman of the party.
Last, but not least, one needs to look at these discussions and notice, how many take the format of "Let's you and him have a fight."

David J. Ginsberg, MD

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the media controlls the game
Posted by: jwpa13 on Mar 1, 2008 8:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i think this is comment is way off the mark. the Main Stream Media (MSM) lead the public and then looks to poll results to verify it is giving the public only that information that it wants reflected in those very polls. The MSM eclipsed Kucinich, Paul, Dodd, Byden and others. The MSM thus cleared the field by presenting as "news" what their Big Money owners desired as the outcomes of the races in both parties. It was all about limiting the scope of the debates to only the items the MSM wanted put forward. If the scores of all the games and the statistics of all the players in a baseball league are not fully reported to the public the public can not make an informed decision on which team is the best in the league. Informed decision is based on the information given. Limit the information and you limit the outcome of the polls This is how the MSM perverts the system.

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Hate to break the news, but ...
Posted by: johnclark on Mar 1, 2008 10:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
most people don't watch the news. Newspapers are cutting staff, getting fewer ads, circulation is falling (even faster now that subscription padding is gone). The nightly news shows from the networks are less and less relevant; the cable news networks have micro audiences,...

So, when those in the article & comments above say "media", is this what you mean?

Because, in this culture, media includes this site, the late night talk shows, the morning shows, popular magazines, ... (see where I'm going?). For instance, Hillary seems to be a regular on SNL. Isn't that "media"?

It is true that fewer large corporations control more the the major media than ever before. The number of perspectives therefore are fewer. Add this to cutting the budgets for reporters and news organizations becoming profit centers and we get to where we are today --- that is, a public in search of other media, be they blogs, alternative media, foriegn press (as well as the gov. news of UK), The Daily Show & Cobert ...

The unsaid in much critique of the "MSM" is that the "media" here has always been the exception in the world, that is: journalism is about "objectivity" and not point of view. Advertising has paid the very paper of the American newspaper for quite a long time, putting the cost of publishing paid by subscription impossible. Of course a capitalist perspective was the only one available to most consumers of news here. But is not the case today.

So, how many daily viewers are there of AlterNet? I bet you O'Reilly has many less. And Rush, ha ha ha, tiny #'s. This media you are reading right now is having a major impact on the so called MSM. Maybe this is one reason Obama is in the position he's in today. Certainly SNL, Letterman, & the View are NOT his friends, and them guys all got lots & lots of eyeballs, my friends.

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