THE WRITER of this Associated Press headline, appearing the week
before the Republican National Convention in August, was either
witty or clueless: “Obama Defends Tenor of His Campaign, Slams
Romney.” The mixed metaphor almost seemed appropriate for such a
mixed message. At a press conference, the AP reported, the
president “took questions from four reporters, the most he has
taken from the national press corps in two months.” CBS’s Nancy
Cordes confronted the president about the viciousness of his
attacks on Mitt Romney. Reporters also brought up a third-party ad
that, essentially, accused Romney of killing a man’s wife by
shutting down the steel mill where he’d worked, causing her to lose
medical insurance.
In response, Obama “defended the tone of his campaign…and
insisted it’s actually Mitt Romney’s ads that are ‘patently
false.’” But his very denials of negative campaigning amounted to
negative campaigning. As the AP put it, he “did distance himself
from a particularly provocative negative ad by a political group
that supports him.”
Said the president: “I don’t think that Governor Romney is
somehow responsible for the death of the woman that was portrayed
in that ad”—repeating the allegation in the course of weakly
repudiating it.
Obama similarly employed apophasis when he asserted that “nobody
accused Mr. Romney of being a felon.” In fact, as the
Washington Examiner noted, Obama aide Stephanie Cutter had
done just that, suggesting to reporters in July that Romney might
have been guilty of “misrepresenting his position at Bain to the
SEC, which is a felony.”
The preceding week, in an interview with Entertainment
Tonight (!), Obama made this risible assertion: “I don’t think
you or anybody who’s been watching the campaign would say that in
any way we have tried to divide the country. We’ve always tried to
bring the country together.” The reader who sent me that interview
clip observed that Obama probably believed what he was saying and
described him as the “most isolated president since Nixon. That’s
always the problem. Who tells his boss he is acting like [a
jerk]?”
Nixon was famously paranoid, though that didn’t mean his
adversaries, including in the media, weren’t out to get him. By
contrast, journalists for the most part are favorably disposed to
Obama. “The media is very susceptible to doing what the Obama
campaign wants,” Time’s Mark Halperin observed. He should
know. In March 2010, just after Obamacare was enacted, he opined
that if Republicans “make the fall election a referendum on
Obamacare…they may be playing right into the Democrats’ hands” (see
Presswatch, TAS, February 2011).
No pundit is immune to errors of prognostication, but how could
Obama be so out of touch not to realize that he was running a nasty
campaign, or even that he was perceived as doing so? The Taranto
Principle—the theory that approving coverage from liberal
journalists encourages self-defeating behavior by liberal
politicians—would not seem to apply here, at least not directly.
Even admiring journalists had taken note (sometimes admiringly) of
the nastiness and divisiveness of the president’s re-election
campaign. The New York Times reported in early August that
Obama “is an avid consumer of political news and commentary.” So he
could hardly have been unaware that some people thought his
campaign was divisive.
The Times report suggested a resolution to the
conundrum. It seems Obama has adopted a system to rationalize away
whatever critical coverage he receives:
In his informal role as news media critic in chief, he developed
a detailed critique of modern news coverage that he regularly
expresses to those around him.…
While Mr. Obama frequently criticizes the heated speech of cable
news, he sees what he views as deeper problems in news outlets that
strive for objectivity. In private meetings with columnists, he has
talked about the concept of “false balance”—that reporters should
not give equal weight to both sides of an argument when one side is
factually incorrect. He frequently cites the coverage of health
care and the stimulus package as examples, according to aides
familiar with the meetings.
It gives Obama too much credit to say he “developed” this
“critique,” and the Times piece acknowledged that his
“assessments overlap with common critiques from academics and
journalism pundits.”
But what exactly is meant by “false balance”? As the
Times noted, the term, “which has been embraced by many
Democrats, emerged in academic papers in the 1990s to describe
global-warming coverage.” In the ensuing years, a few news
organizations expressly took this complaint to heart, announcing
that thenceforth they would treat global warming as a “fact” and
refuse to acknowledge dissent.
The Times reported that Obama “frequently cites the
coverage of health care and the stimulus package as examples” of
false balance. The story didn’t elaborate on the complaint, but I
have an idea of the kind of deference to “fact” he’s looking for.
At one point in Times reporter Kate Zernike’s generally
fair 2010 book, Boiling Mad: Inside Tea Party America, she
puzzles over how Tea Party activists “could be impervious to
reports from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the
closest thing the government has to a neutral arbiter, that the
federal stimulus had cut taxes and created millions of jobs and
that the health care legislation passed in 2010 would reduce the
federal deficit.”
The complaint of “false balance” turns out to be little more
than an appeal to authority—a denial of the distinction between
opinion, or at least authoritative opinion, and fact. Global
warmism is not actually a fact but a set of vague and ever-changing
warnings of disaster. The CBO’s rosy view of Obamacare was a
prediction, not a fact, and its assertions that the stimulus
created jobs were an interpretation that not everyone accepted.
“What you need to realize is that the CBO is the servant of
members of Congress, which means that if a Congressman asks it to
analyze a plan under certain assumptions, it will do just that—no
matter how unrealistic the assumptions may be,” Times
columnist and former Enron adviser Paul Krugman observed in
2010.