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Bernie Sanders
Showing Original Post only (View all)Bernie Sanders can’t win: Why the press loves to hate underdogs [View all]
Bernie Sanders cant win: Why the press loves to hate underdogs
By Steve Hendricks
MAY 21, 2015
ON THE EVE OF THE 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, Newsweek asked the 50 reporters on President Trumans campaign train to forecast the winner. To a man they went the way the Chicago Tribune infamously would on election night: Dewey defeats Truman. Lay historians will recall that not only did Truman defeat Dewey; he clobbered him. Sorting out how the media got it so wrong, The New York Times James Reston concluded that he and his brethren had been a lot like the aloof Governor Dewey himself, who was said to be the only man who could strut sitting down. Dewey played well with plutocrats and publishers. [J]ust as he was too isolated with other politicians, Reston wrote, so we were too isolated with other reporters; and we, too, were far too impressed by the tidy statistics of the polls.
This was true, but it fell to A. J. Liebling, the nonpareil of The New Yorker, to pick out the crucial vice that Reston and similarly minded colleagues overlooked. A great wave of contrition hit the Washington newspaper world in the days immediately following the joyous catastrophe, Liebling wrote, and men swore that they would go out and dig for the real truths of politics as they never had dug before. But few publishers encouraged them in their good resolutions, and most of them are back again running errands designed to bolster their bosses new illusions. Bad as insiderism, arrogance, and poll-worship were, Liebling knew the real peril was that those sins usually furthered the bosses agenda. It is one reason Lieblings most memorable bon mot is also his most eternal: Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one.
Those of a Lieblingian turn of mind could not have been surprised by the reception Bernie Sanders got last month when he entered the race for the Democratic nomination for the presidency. Sanders, of course, is Vermonts junior senator, barbers worst nightmare, and IKEA socialist (he favors the term democratic socialist, as in the Scandinavian variant), who quaintly maintains that people and the planet are more important than profit. Not long ago such beliefs fell well within the waters of the main stream where politicians swam, but the current has since been rerouted, and Sanders now paddles hard against the left bank. For not going with the flow, and for challenging Hillary Clinton, the big fish many elites have tagged as their own, Sanderss entry into the race was greeted with story after story whose messagestated or understated, depending on the decorum of the messengerwas This crank cant win.
The trouble with this consensus is the paucity of evidence to support it. This crank actually could win is nearer the mark. But having settled on a prophecy, the media went about covering Sanders so as to fulfill it. The Times, for example, buried his announcement on page A21, even though every other candidate who had declared before then had been put on the front page above the fold. Sanderss straight-news story didnt even crack 700 words, compared to the 1,100 to 1,500 that Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Hillary Clinton got. As for the content, the Times reporters declared high in Sanderss piece that he was a long shot for the Democratic nomination and that Clinton was all but a lock. None of the Republican entrants got the long-shot treatment, even though Paul, Rubio, and Cruz were generally polling fifth, seventh, and eighth among Republicans before they announced.
Full editorial:
http://www.cjr.org/analysis/bernie_sanders_underdog.php
By Steve Hendricks
MAY 21, 2015
ON THE EVE OF THE 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, Newsweek asked the 50 reporters on President Trumans campaign train to forecast the winner. To a man they went the way the Chicago Tribune infamously would on election night: Dewey defeats Truman. Lay historians will recall that not only did Truman defeat Dewey; he clobbered him. Sorting out how the media got it so wrong, The New York Times James Reston concluded that he and his brethren had been a lot like the aloof Governor Dewey himself, who was said to be the only man who could strut sitting down. Dewey played well with plutocrats and publishers. [J]ust as he was too isolated with other politicians, Reston wrote, so we were too isolated with other reporters; and we, too, were far too impressed by the tidy statistics of the polls.
This was true, but it fell to A. J. Liebling, the nonpareil of The New Yorker, to pick out the crucial vice that Reston and similarly minded colleagues overlooked. A great wave of contrition hit the Washington newspaper world in the days immediately following the joyous catastrophe, Liebling wrote, and men swore that they would go out and dig for the real truths of politics as they never had dug before. But few publishers encouraged them in their good resolutions, and most of them are back again running errands designed to bolster their bosses new illusions. Bad as insiderism, arrogance, and poll-worship were, Liebling knew the real peril was that those sins usually furthered the bosses agenda. It is one reason Lieblings most memorable bon mot is also his most eternal: Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one.
Those of a Lieblingian turn of mind could not have been surprised by the reception Bernie Sanders got last month when he entered the race for the Democratic nomination for the presidency. Sanders, of course, is Vermonts junior senator, barbers worst nightmare, and IKEA socialist (he favors the term democratic socialist, as in the Scandinavian variant), who quaintly maintains that people and the planet are more important than profit. Not long ago such beliefs fell well within the waters of the main stream where politicians swam, but the current has since been rerouted, and Sanders now paddles hard against the left bank. For not going with the flow, and for challenging Hillary Clinton, the big fish many elites have tagged as their own, Sanderss entry into the race was greeted with story after story whose messagestated or understated, depending on the decorum of the messengerwas This crank cant win.
The trouble with this consensus is the paucity of evidence to support it. This crank actually could win is nearer the mark. But having settled on a prophecy, the media went about covering Sanders so as to fulfill it. The Times, for example, buried his announcement on page A21, even though every other candidate who had declared before then had been put on the front page above the fold. Sanderss straight-news story didnt even crack 700 words, compared to the 1,100 to 1,500 that Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Hillary Clinton got. As for the content, the Times reporters declared high in Sanderss piece that he was a long shot for the Democratic nomination and that Clinton was all but a lock. None of the Republican entrants got the long-shot treatment, even though Paul, Rubio, and Cruz were generally polling fifth, seventh, and eighth among Republicans before they announced.
Full editorial:
http://www.cjr.org/analysis/bernie_sanders_underdog.php
Much more at the link.
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I plan to do everything I can to make the press eat its words about Bernie Sanders'
JDPriestly
May 2015
#9
Corporations have had free rein for too long. Of course they are opposed to Bernie.
Enthusiast
May 2015
#11