Researchers at the esteemed Columbia Journalism Review conducted a study of the election coverage on the front pages of The New York Times and The Washington Post and concluded, despite the protests of editors, that the pre-election coverage in recent years was not objective. Their biggest complaint was that the newspapers reported the Presidential campaign as a horse race instead of informing readers about real policy differences between the candidates. But there was another kind of bias at work: The New York Times published ten front-page articles about Hillary Clinton’s emails in the months before the election, which turned out to be a phony issue.
The article begins:
Seven years ago, in the wake of the 2016 presidential election, media analysts rushed to explain Donald Trump’s victory. Misinformation was to blame, the theory went, fueled by Russian agents and carried on social networks. But as researchers, we wondered if fascination and fear over “fake news” had led people to underestimate the influence of traditional journalism outlets. After all, mainstream news organizations remain an important part of the media ecosystem—they’re widely read and watched; they help set the agenda, including on social networks. We decided to look at what had been featured on the printed front page of the New York Times in the three months leading up to Election Day. Of a hundred and fifty articles that discussed the campaign, only a handful mentioned policy; the vast majority covered horse race politics or personal scandals. Most strikingly, the Times ran ten front-page stories about Hillary Clinton’s email server. “If voters had wanted to educate themselves on issues,” we concluded, “they would not have learned much from reading the Times.”
We didn’t suggest that the election coverage in the Times was any worse than what appeared in other major outlets, “so much as it was typical of a broader failure of mainstream journalism.” But we did expect, or at least hope, that in the years that followed, the Times would conduct a critical review of its editorial policies. Was an overwhelming focus on the election as a sporting contest the best way to serve readers? Was obsessive attention to Clinton’s email server really justified in light of the innumerable personal, ethical, and ultimately criminal failings of Trump? It seemed that editors had a responsibility to rethink both the volume of attention paid to certain subjects as well as their framing.
After the 2022 midterms, we checked back in, this time examining the printed front page of the Times and the Washington Post from September 1, 2022, through Election Day that November. As before, we figured the front page mattered disproportionately, in part because articles placed there represent selections that publishers believe are most important to readers—and also because, according to Nielsen data we analyzed, 32 percent of Web-browsing sessions around that period starting at the Times homepage did not lead to other sections or articles; people often stick to what they’re shown first. We added the Post this time around for comparison, to get a sense of whether the Times really was anomalous.
It wasn’t. We found that the Times and the Post shared significant overlap in their domestic politics coverage, offering little insight into policy. Both emphasized the horse race and campaign palace intrigue, stories that functioned more to entertain readers than to educate them on essential differences between political parties. The main point of contrast we found between the two papers was that, while the Postdelved more into topics Democrats generally want to discuss—affirmative action, police reform, LGBTQ rights—the Times tended to focus on subjects important to Republicans—China, immigration, and crime.
By the numbers, of four hundred and eight articles on the front page of the Timesduring the period we analyzed, about half—two hundred nineteen—were about domestic politics. A generous interpretation found that just ten of those stories explained domestic public policy in any detail; only one front-page article in the lead-up to the midterms really leaned into discussion about a policy matter in Congress: Republican efforts to shrink Social Security. Of three hundred and ninety-three front-page articles in the Post, two hundred fifteen were about domestic politics; our research found only four stories that discussed any form of policy. The Post had no front-page stories in the months ahead of the midterms on policies that candidates aimed to bring to the fore or legislation they intended to pursue. Instead, articles speculated about candidates and discussed where voter bases were leaning. (All of the data and analysis supporting this piece can be found here.)
Exit polls indicated that Democrats cared most about abortion and gun policy; crime, inflation, and immigration were top of mind for Republicans. In the Times, Republican-favored topics accounted for thirty-seven articles, while Democratic topics accounted for just seven. In the Post, Republican topics were the focus of twenty articles and Democratic topics accounted for fifteen—a much more balanced showing. In the final days before the election, we noticed that the Times, in particular, hit a drumbeat of fear about the economy—the worries of voters, exploitation by companies, and anxieties related to the Federal Reserve—as well as crime. Data buried within articles occasionally refuted the fear-based premise of a piece. Still, by discussing how much people were concerned about inflation and crime—and reporting in those stories that Republicans benefited from a sense of alarm—the Times suggested that inflation and crime were historically bad (they were not) and that Republicans had solutions to offer (they did not).
I urge you to open the link and read the article. It confirms what many of us suspected: the major media are all too easily sucked into the GOP narrative and parrot it. Expect to see a focus in the lead-up to the 2024 election that emphasizes inflation, crime, fears about Biden’s age, and every verbal slip up he makes, and every other reason either to abstain from voting or to vote for Trump. We will see, as we do already, a drumbeat of articles about why this group or that one will not vote for Biden (so far, I have seen such articles about the youth vote, the Black vote, the Hispanic vote, and the Muslim vote). It would be ironic if Muslims didn’t vote for Biden because of his support for Israel, since Trump tried to ban immigration from Muslim-majority nations and is openly nativist.
Will the major media allow Trump and his enablers again to set their agenda?
Robert Hubbell read this study and remarked that the major media are again treating the Presidential campaign as a horse race between Biden and Trump, as though it were a normal election. It’s not. Trump has already sketched the plans for his second term, and they are a recipe for enhancing his power and destroying his enemies.
Hubbell wrote:
I am going to take this opportunity to make a direct plea to journalists, producers, and editors in the news media who read this newsletter. I know you are out there because I hear from you when you feel that I unfairly bash the news media. I occasionally receive mistaken “reply-to-all” or forwarded emails to your colleagues that inadvertently include me. (Don’t worry; I delete them immediately.) (Hint: Do a Google search for “How to remove a name from autofill in an email address field.”)
Let me start with an olive branch. There are exceptional journalists doing great work every day. I cite them every day. They can’t please everyone all the time. They deserve our support and thanks—and forbearance for the occasional mistake. So here it is: Thank you to every journalist who is doing a tough job well in a news environment that is the equivalent of a war zone of disinformation.
Ignore my whining and carping; dismiss me as a crank if you want. But please ask yourselves whether the news reporting and editorial stances at your outlet are rising to this perilous moment in American history. Everyone—including you—knows in their bones that Trump is a unique threat to democracy. He is consciously emulating the worst dictators of the last century. His aides are leaking their plans to undermine democracy. That existential threat must be in every story you write. If you must, report on polls or horse races or political infighting but do so while acknowledging that one candidate seeks to destroy democracy while the other candidate seeks to operate within its confines.
I believe that Americans will prevail against the threat of MAGA extremism with or without the support of a free press rising to the challenge of this moment. But it would be easier—and victory would be more assured—if major media outlets did not treat Trump as just another candidate after his failed coup and incitement to insurrection.
Imagine if Hitler had survived WWII and then ran for re-election as Chancellor of Germany from a prison cell. Would any story be written that merely reported on polls discussing the level of voter support for Hitler versus his opponent? Or would every story include discussion of his fascist takeover of Germany, his war on Europe, and his attempt to exterminate the Jewish people? Why does Trump get a free pass in hundreds of articles a day that treat him as the legitimate political opponent of Joe Biden? How can any story be written that asks, “Is Biden too old,” without asking the more urgent question, “Will Trump end democracy in America.”
I have slipped back into offense when I meant to invite you to reflect on the balance and editorial position of your news organization. Tens of millions of Americans are hoping that you will get it right. You don’t have to defend Democrats or Joe Biden. But defending the Constitution and democracy is not partisan. The future of our democracy is partly in your hands. It should be a part of every story you write.

Politics as a sporting event with only winners and losers. Entertainment over education for the voting public through our media. Sadly, this is what late stage, out of control Capitalism has done to our society. EVERYONE is reduced down to a “W” or “L”….a data point! It is so bad that it has seeped into the lives of our children through schools and extra curricular activities. We live in a very sick society.
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“…Americans will prevail against the threat of MAGA extremism with or without the support of a free press…” -Hubell
I do not believe this, and the investigation above suggests that at least some of the debate over what kind of mustard Obama puts on his hot dog or the color of Trump’s hair comes from media many believe to be inherently “liberal.” This study suggests the myth of the liberal media is like the myth of the violent society: both are bunk.
Still, watch the local news at 6 or 10 (7 or 11 if you are in Eastern or it was when I was in eastern), and you will get a steady diet of who shot whom instead of discussion of policy and its effects. We are about to have a big voucher push in the Tennessee legislature. Which of the local TV networks will run articles on it that fairly present the policy changes with their implications? Even though education is the largest and most pervasive state expenditure, the answer to that question is none. Even if they did, most people will watch crime channel or a sporting contest in lieu of trying to understand the policy.
The problem is that the scare them and offer yourself as an antidote to the pain plays right into the way the media are constructed. This has been the Republican go to since the McCarthy era began the long push to the right. Now that we are about to go over the precipice into fascism, I do not know what will bring people to read policy unless something they want is taken away (Dobbs comes to mind).
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headline: Woman catches boyfriend teaching dog Taylor Swift lyrics
true headline. No joke
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Yes, and this article refers mainly to newspapers, while millions of people get their information–and misinformation–from TV, radio, and increasingly, the internet. We are being killed by the collapse of the Fairness Doctrine, where major electronic media were required to have a high measure of balance. In addition, our population is being “dumbed down” by the takeover of public education by the technocrats, reducing every issue to a pre-conceived multiple guess answer. Once again I suggest that media and information folks in NY or California get in their cars and drive across the nation. Listen to the radio, including satellite. It’s VERY skewed to the right. No union or public service group–except PBS–owns or operates a station, radio or TV, while religious right, neo-fascists, etc., own and operate radio and TV stations. Al Gore had a TV channel and let it go. Why did we let that happen? The surprise is that liberals and progressives have done as well as they have, given the twisted news we are fed.
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The only way to get a liberal point of view is on the Internet. I listen to Thomas Hartmann, Randi Rhodes, Sam Seder, The Young Turks and Stephanie Miller, for example, on my computer. Talk radio went hard right decades ago. Liberal leaning radio stations are very rare.
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Excellent comments! But what I am advocating is activism. It’s great if we each find places to get actual news–and comments from like souls, as I do on this blog–but for those of you in a “liberal” or seaboard area, the other states matter–Ohio, Alabama, Younameit, all have 2 senators, and voices in Congress. All have access to lawyers, funding from the Koch’s, etc., so they affect you. We MUST find ways to get more people “educated” (in its broadest terms). That will probably require action–such as boycotts of networks, sponsors, etc.
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Trump Conservatives don’t read the New York Times. For them Fox News is too liberal.
It is not what is published in mainstream media that is important, but what people read. They would skip the policy articles, even if the Times, et.al. included them.
Roy confirms what Lisa M. says, “We live in a sick society.”
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That may be true but those stories in our nations papers of record are covered by and referred to by many other media outlets. When the Times runs a story in September 2021 when gas was all of $3.20 a gallon (historically not high especially when adjusted for inflation and millage improvements ). The article featuring a station in the middle of the Pacific Ocean with $7. gas. That narrative of out of control inflation went nationwide. Those headlines are then manipulated by Right Wing Media as well!
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The headlines in the major newspapers guide the news stories reported on TV news programs, both network and cable. These outlets don’t have staffs of investigative reporters. They read the Times and the Post for ideas and leads.
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Reminds me Robert Parry’s work on the media bias against Al Gore:
Journalists freely call him “delusional,” “a liar” and “Zelig.” Yet, to back up these sweeping denunciations, the media has relied on a series of distorted quotes and tendentious interpretations of his words, at times following scripts written by the national Republican leadership.
In December 1999, for instance, the news media generated dozens of stories about Gore’s supposed claim that he discovered the Love Canal toxic waste dump. “I was the one that started it all,” he was quoted as saying. This “gaffe” then was used to recycle other situations in which Gore allegedly exaggerated his role or, as some writers put it, told “bold-faced lies.”
But behind these examples of Gore’s “lies” was some very sloppy journalism. The Love Canal flap started when The Washington Post and The New York Times misquoted Gore on a key point and cropped out the context of another sentence to give readers a false impression of what he meant.
The error was then exploited by national Republicans and amplified endlessly by the rest of the news media, even after the Post and Times grudgingly filed corrections.
Almost as remarkable, though, is how the two newspapers finally agreed to run corrections. They were effectively shamed into doing so by high school students in New Hampshire and by an Internet site called The Daily Howler, edited by a stand-up comic named Bob Somerby.
The Love Canal quote controversy began on Nov. 30, 1999, when Gore was speaking to a group of high school students in Concord, N.H. He was exhorting the students to reject cynicism and to recognize that individual citizens can effect important changes.
As an example, he cited a high school girl from Toone, Tenn., a town that had experienced problems with toxic waste. She brought the issue to the attention of Gore’s congressional office in the late 1970s.
“I called for a congressional investigation and a hearing,” Gore told the students. “I looked around the country for other sites like that. I found a little place in upstate New York called Love Canal. Had the first hearing on that issue, and Toone, Tennessee – that was the one that you didn’t hear of. But that was the one that started it all.”
After the hearings, Gore said, “we passed a major national law to clean up hazardous dump sites. And we had new efforts to stop the practices that ended up poisoning water around the country. We’ve still got work to do. But we made a huge difference. And it all happened because one high school student got involved.” https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0703/S00405/robert-parry-us-news-medias-war-on-gore.htm
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Yes, Gore got the full treatment. I can’t recall why it was supposedly hilarious when he said that Social Security should be put in a lockbox. He meant it should be protected. What’s funny about that?
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I think Gore was the victim of regionalism. The north identified him as southern, this own constituency, whom he had served well, accused him of being a northern politician.
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Well it certainly does validate what some of us have said about the papers of record and the supposed Liberal Media. I would add that not only did the NY Times assault Hillary, it killed at the same time, its own investigative story that Cross Fire Hurricane was investigating TRUMP COLLUSION with Putin. But perhaps we are better off when they don’t discuss issues. It is no wonder Biden’s numbers are so low. They hyped both inflation and crime far beyond reality. Most people never get beyond the first paragraph so a disclaimer in part 2 on page 32 is never seen.Economist Dean Baker of CEPR has a “Blog Beat the Press”. For years he has been battling the nonsense out of the NYT and WaPo. Here is a recent post from 11/19/23″The Washington Post ran another “trash the Biden economy, let the facts be damned” piece today. The theme is that the economy is really awful for new college grads. The paper finds us a few real-life examples of struggling recent grads to make its case.
The problem is that the data in the article actually tell the opposite story. While it tells us that the unemployment rate for recent college grads is higher than for the workforce as a whole, it actually is lower than it had been for most of the decade prior to the pandemic.
In fact, instead of being a bad time for recent college grads, the data shown in the graph in the article indicate that their employment prospects are relatively good today. Their unemployment rate was more than 30 percent higher a decade ago.
In fact, this is a point made by the economists featured in the article. The experience of recent grads only looks bad compared to the strong labor market for other workers, it is not a story of recent grads becoming impoverished.
This fact comes out in the other major data point in the piece, the share of young adults (ages 18 to 24) living at home. While it tells us that the share is higher than in 2019, the chart in the piece tells a different story.
For men in this age group, the share living at home is higher than lows hit in 2005-07, just before the Great Recession, but well below the average of the last two decades. There had been an upward trend in the share of women in this age group living at home, with a big pandemic jump. This pandemic jump has now been largely reversed. In other words, the story here is that fewer young women are living at home.
So, the Post really doesn’t have a case for new college grads struggling, but it apparently wants to tell a bad economy story and doesn’t intend to let reality stand in the way.”
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to add to your point, we are finding that the job market is now so strong that the colleges to which my daughter has applied are working hard to get children
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All the above responses bring out valid points. Which is why we need some kind of “Fairness Doctrine” at the FCC which requires some measure of balance and broadcasting “in the public interest.” We also need that on the internet. Otherwise super wealthy folks take it over and spew out a stream of one-sided stuff. Schools (when I attended and taught in Ohio and Michigan) had more time for discussion, debate activities, etc., before the onset of the testing regime. Democracy–like football, or the arts, you name it–requires practice. We learn by doing, not by memorizing and taking a multiple-guess test.
As to what can we do? Write to the Times and cancel your subscription. Organize a boycott of Fox sponsors. We need strong action before it is too late.
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It doesn’t help that the Biden administration doesn’t seem to be making any attempt to educate the country about the positive things they have already accomplished compared to Traitor Trump’s record of failures.
Here is one simple example easy to find, at least it was easy for me.
Politico ran a report card piece about Biden’s campaign promises in detail. So much has already been accomplished, it’s too much to copy and paste.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/04/26/biden-2020-campaign-promises-report-card-00093779
PolitiFact does a better job keeping the scorecard easy to read showing Biden has kept 27% of his campaign promises, compromised on 5%, with 31% stalled (thanks to Congress-the House and the Free-DUMB caucus), 34% in the works, and only 1 broken promise.
https://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/biden-promise-tracker/?ruling=true
I’ve read Governor Newsom’s email newsletters pointing out what Biden has done right and how dangerous the traitor and MAGA are.
I read rational comments on Quora but I also read a lot of questions that break every rule in the book when it comes to the rules of debate.
What I like about PolitiFact is how easy it is to also find Traitor Trump’s Promise Tracker Scorecard. The first think I noticed is how many of the Traitors promises were broken ones.
53%
https://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/trumpometer/?ruling=true
Has the New York Times and the Washington Post published a front page story about that?
one percent (1%) vs fifty-three percent (53%)
I doubt it. If it doesn’t bleed, it won’t lead. Trump’s ruthless threats and endless lies must attract more eyes.
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Two of the 5 researchers are with Microsoft Research. One is at the Ivy League UPenn and one is at Latin school. Their production of a paper about fairness, that’s irony?
The Gates Foundation funded research about authoritarianism conducted by the Catholic Georgetown University which hired the Koch network’s Ilya Shapiro for a top position in its law school. Irony is rampant and glass houses plentiful.
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Linda,
Lots of people who went to Ivy League colleges are good people.
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Can’t disagree with that. An informed study that would have significance likely can’t be constructed. It would examine the ratio of “good” vs. “bad” at elite schools e.g. Harvard that produces people like the founders of for-profit, Bridge International Academies and, contrasts it with output from people at public institutions.
The truth of the statement, all great fortunes begin with a crime and, the relative probability that the progeny of the great fortunes attend legacy- skewed ivy leagues, produces speculation that can be used for conclusions. If children of privilege who use their entitlement are not to be judged as having traits of their exploitive lineage then there’s still the argument about the grooming that occurs from programs like the James Madison project at campuses. I think it originated at Princeton.
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It is intentional. Corporate foundations feed reporters with topics and angles. Profit is the motive. Socialism for the rich and rugged individualism for the poor is the goal.
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Your first sentence has been proven by evidence, as example, the attack against public pensions which included the statehouse testimony of Pew people (not, the research side, instead the same-named foundation of the rich) and, by a much criticized professor who subsequently landed at Stanford and Hoover. The Stanford Institute for the Evisceration of People’s Retirement (as critics describe SIEPR) carries on.
John Arnold funded the pension stuff at the Urban Institute.
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