One of the interesting dynamics of political discourse is the
use of campaign surrogates -- third parties who act as spokesmen or
"attack dogs" for the candidate. It is always helpful to have a
surrogate with a non-partisan image, which was why Zell Miller was
such an effective surrogate for Bush's 2004 campaign, and why John
McCain is grateful to have Joe Lieberman on his side this year.
This is why Republicans have complained so bitterly about the
media's liberal bias over the years. The careful student of this
phenomenon will note the tendency of network news reporters to
present accusations against Republicans as if the accusations were
self-evidently legitimate, often without adequately identifying the
partisan origin of the charges. The passive voice -- "President
Bush came under fire today ..." -- is used to distract viewers from
the source of the criticism. Democratic talking points are repeated
without being identified as such.
How does this happen?
Mark Finklestein and Matthew Sheffield at Newsbusters catch
MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell arguing that Obama didn't play the race
card yesterday because reporters covering the campaign didn't
think he did so. Where reporters sympathize with the candidate
and share his political worldview, the candidate's rhetoric tends
to be viewed as inherently legitimate. And because the press corps
is overwhelmingly liberal, the sort of water-cooler conventional
wisdom that shapes the media consensus tends to hinder recognition
of unfair tactics by Democrats. Thus do liberal reporters function
as Democratic campaign surrogates.