Suppose that you picked up your paper this morning and the top
story on the front page began something like this:
Timothy Geithner proved himself as incompetent at political
spin as he is at tax evasion, attempting Sunday to convince
Americans that President Obama’s economic policies “were incredibly
effective.”
In a series of televised interviews on all three major
broadcast networks, the bumbling and dishonest Treasury Secretary
lamely attempted to defend the failed policies of the incumbent
Democrat, while dismissing as “ridiculous” and “misleading” recent
comments by former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, the Republican
presidential candidate who hopes to replace the administration’s
wrongheaded statist policies with a growth-oriented program of tax
reduction and deregulation.
You won’t find such an article on the front page of today’s
papers. This is not how the story will be reported by the
Washington Post, the New York Times or USA
Today, nor will you see this kind of blatant tendentiousness
in whatever accounts the Associated Press or other syndicates
provide for the major metro dailies. Nevertheless, this story as
reported by “mainstream” news organizations will not be entirely
free of a perceptible slant, and conservatives have asserted for
decades that the media are guilty of a liberal bias, providing
ostensibly “objective” reporting that in fact clearly favors
Democrats.
Conservative efforts to counterbalance such bias have taken many
forms over the years, including the publication of journals such as
The American Spectator and the formation of such
organization as the Media Research Center. Talk-radio hosts like
Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, and Laura Ingraham have flourished as
part of the conservative pushback against media bias, as have
websites like Hot Air, daily papers like the Washington
Times and, perhaps most famously, the Fox News Channel. It is
interesting to observe, however, that this concerted pushback has
had a mixed record of success. The “Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy,” as
Hillary Clinton dubbed it in 1998, was incapable of persuading a
majority of Americans that Mrs. Clinton’s husband should be drummed
out of office for his “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Similarly,
conservative alternative media could not prevent Democrats from
winning control of Congress in the 2006 midterm elections, nor
prevent Obama’s 2008 election. And, although Republicans took back
Congress in a historic 2010 midterm landslide, the prospects for
defeating Obama’s re-election bid and unseating Harry Reid as
Senate Majority Leader are uncertain at best, despite what most
conservatives would view as the demonstrable failures of Democratic
Party policies. Thus the question arises: “What are conservatives
doing wrong in their efforts to expose, correct and offset liberal
media bias?”
One answer to that question is to consider the obverse of the
problem: What have liberals been doing right? Despite all the
changes in the journalistic ecology in recent years, one fact has
remained constant: Liberals dominate the “mainstream” media, both
in absolute numbers and in terms of power and prestige. Consider
the fact that Obama’s White House spokesman, Jay Carney, is a
former Time magazine reporter whose wife, Claire Shipman,
is employed as a reporter by ABC News. The same network employs,
both as anchor of Good Morning America and as host of its
Sunday program This Week, veteran Democratic Party
operative George Stephanopoulos. From this simple handful of facts,
we may conclude that if ABC News should ever be accused of fairness
toward Republicans in its political coverage, we would have to
classify this as an inexplicable accident or perhaps even a
miracle.
How do such things happen? Why would Stephanopoulos be able to
go from Democrat operative to “objective” journalist with such
ease, while no one seems to blink an eye when Carney goes through
the media/politics revolving door the opposite direction? Why is it
nearly impossible to think of comparable examples among Republican
operatives? As research cited
by the Media Research Center shows, the fact is that Democrats
outnumber Republicans in our nation’s newsrooms by at least 7-to-1.
One survey found that, in 1992, nearly 90 percent of top Washington
journalists voted for Bill Clinton, compared to just 7 percent who
voted for George H.W. Bush. We have no evidence that Democratic
preponderance has declined, and it may have actually gotten worse.
The national press corps was so obviously in the tank for Obama in
2008 that even liberals themselves remarked on it.
Why have conservative efforts to rectify or counteract liberal
bias so clearly failed? Several answers have been offered. More
than 10 years ago, famed ABC anchor Peter Jennings suggested to me
that journalism is, by its very nature, a liberal kind of
enterprise. This is arguably true, insofar as one has the desire
(as do so many in the profession) to “make a difference” by
crusading journalism on behalf of the downtrodden and oppressed
“victims of society.” Peter Finley Dunne was being sarcastic when
he described newspapers as seeking “to comfort the afflicted and
afflict the comfortable,” but many starry-eyed idealists in the
news business view this as their sacred duty, and conceive of
themselves as engaged in a species of humanitarian philanthropy. It
is also true that, in the decades since journalism became a career
requiring a college education, many in the news business have
absorbed in their youth the left-leaning perspective that pervades
academia. Thus we might say that selection bias is at
work: More liberals than conservatives are attracted to the news
business, and the process by which journalists are educated tends
to inculcate liberal views. Once the news business became dominated
by liberals, conservatives were discouraged from entering the
profession and hindered in their advancement if they did seek
journalism careers.
If journalists are so much more liberal than the average
news-consumer, wouldn’t competition for readers and viewers favor
conservative alternatives? This seems logical, but ignores the
difficulty of producing such alternatives, given the obvious
shortage of conservatives in the news business. As I’ve often
remarked, smart liberals go to journalism school, while smart
conservatives go to law school. Among young conservatives, there
are plenty of wannabe pundits — clever writers who wants to be the
next Ann Coulter or the next Charles Krauthammer — but relatively
few who want to spend years toiling in relative obscurity as beat
reporters covering regular news, working their way up the ranks to
become senior editors, producers and executives. Staffing a news
organization with an all-liberal staff is a piece of cake in an
industry where Democrats so vastly outnumber Republicans. Staffing
a conservative news operation is more difficult, as was illustrated
by the recent
exposure of a “mole” inside Fox News.
In fact, it might be argued that Fox News has become part of the
problem it was intended to solve. True, Fox News has been the
number one cable network for the past decade, but its viewership is
still only a fraction of the national new audience. In January of
this year, the nightly audience for the three major broadcast
networks’ evening news programs averaged a combined 24.2 million
viewers (9.3 million for NBC, 8.2 million for ABC, 6.7 million for
CBS). By comparison, the highest-rated program for Fox News, “The
O’Reilly Factor,” averages less than 3 million views nightly. The
very existence of a conservative-friendly TV news alternative,
however, relieves liberals at other networks of any twinge of
conscience about bias in their programming. They may well reckon,
“If conservatives don’t like it, let ‘em go watch Fox.” And given
how liberals have demonized Fox — portraying it as an all-powerful
evil force in media — some reporters may even feel the need to
slant their coverage more stridently leftward, so as to counteract
the exaggerated right-wing news menace.
Many conservatives, however, do not fully grasp how this
phenomenon (which I’ve come to think of as “The Fox Trap”) may
actually result in mainstream media coverage that shows a shameless
disregard for political fairness. Even if the audience for the
major network news broadcasts slowly shrinks, that audience — like
the readership of liberal “mainstream” newspapers — is still much
larger than the audience reached by conservative alternative media.
Yet too many conservatives have been lulled into complacency.
Self-selecting their media choices (Fox News, talk-radio,
conservative websites, etc.) many conservatives may believe that
their viewpoint is adequately represented in the overall media
ecology, when in fact the larger news industry is as liberal as it
ever was, if not more so.
In this crucial election year, when Republicans are attempting
to hold on to the House of Representatives, gain a majority in the
Senate and retake the White House, the headwinds of liberal media
bias can be expected to blow as fiercely as ever. Thus we return to
the sarcastic example cited at the opening of this column: If you
believe that the wrongheaded statism of the Obama administration’s
policies is harmful to the economy — if you similarly believe that
Geithner is dishonest and incompetent — then you should not
tolerate journalism that ignores those Neutral Objective Facts.
Networks that hire Democratic operatives to anchor important news
programs have forfeited whatever claim to “fairness” they ever
had.