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Americans Move Left; New York Times Misses It
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The headline atop Saturday's op-ed page was a hallowed standby for the New York Times: "Americans Move to the Middle." Assembled by Times "visual columnist" Charles Blow, the text of the column was dwarfed by 15 graphs tracking recent movement in American public opinion, based on Gallup polls. There was one problem: The headline totally distorted the data.
An accurate headline would have been "American Opinion Moves Leftward" -- but accuracy was apparently trumped by centrist ideology. (Yes, there are ideologues of the center, as well as of Left or Right.)
It's a cherished myth of many in establishment punditry that most Americans perpetually and happily find their way to the safe center of American politics. This pleasant status quo consensus is marred, in Blow's text, by "party extremists sharpening their wedge issues" to rally their bases and caricature their opponents.
Here's the data, presented by Blow and the Times: 15 public opinion graphs on various issues starting in 2001-2003 and ending in 2006-2008. Of the 15, about a dozen track issues on which there are recognizable positions associated with Right and Left. Of those dozen, the trend in opinion is unmistakably leftward on virtually every one.
On foreign policy:
On cultural issues:
Asked if the following were "morally acceptable," trend lines were leftward.
Some might argue that there is one Times graph that trends rightward: "The state of moral values in the country as a whole is getting worse." It went from 67 percent in May 2002 to 81 percent in May 2008. Yet I'm no conservative, and I'm absolutely part of the 81 percent -- given the declining morals that descend from corporate, government and religious elites.
So the Times presents Gallup data showing a clear trend toward the left and calls it a "Move to the Middle." Is the assumption that we were mostly right-wingers a few years ago? Or is the "move to the middle" line simply more reassuring to an establishment newspaper?
The reality is that long-term trends in American opinion are generally leftward on issues, as documented in well-researched studies.
It's a reality that troubles those Beltway pundits who constantly goad Barack Obama toward "the center" on issues like Iraq and NAFTA; they're actually urging him to move away from the center of mass opinion and upward toward the center of elite opinion.
A demagogue like Sean Hannity instinctively knows this reality, which is why his attacks on Obama emphasize Wright-Ayres-Bitter-Michelle more than issues.
See more stories tagged with: politics, new york times, mainstream media, media bias
Jeff Cohen is director of the Park Center for Independent Media at Ithaca College. He founded the media watch group FAIR in 1986.
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