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Election coverage study
Tuesday, March 15, 2005 7:16 AM on j-body.org
Politics - Reuters


Study Shows U.S. Election Coverage Harder on Bush

Mon Mar 14,10:01 AM ET Politics - Reuters


By Claudia Parsons

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. media coverage of last year's election was three times more likely to be negative toward President Bush (news - web sites) than Democratic challenger John Kerry (news - web sites), according to a study released Monday.


AP Photo


Related Links
• The State of the News Media 2005 (Project for Excellence in Journalism)



The annual report by a press watchdog that is affiliated with Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism said that 36 percent of stories about Bush were negative compared to 12 percent about Kerry, a Massachusetts senator.


Only 20 percent were positive toward Bush compared to 30 percent of stories about Kerry that were positive, according to the report by the Project for Excellence in Journalism.


The study looked at 16 newspapers of varying size across the country, four nightly newscasts, three network morning news shows, nine cable programs and nine Web sites through the course of 2004.


Examining the public perception that coverage of the war in Iraq (news - web sites) was decidedly negative, it found evidence did not support that conclusion. The majority of stories had no decided tone, 25 percent were negative and 20 percent were positive, it said.


The three network nightly newscasts and public broadcaster PBS tended to be more negative than positive, while Fox News was twice as likely to be positive as negative.


Looking at public perceptions of the media, the report showed that more people thought the media was unfair to both Kerry and Bush than to the candidates four years earlier, but fewer people thought news organizations had too much influence on the outcome of the election.


"It may be that the expectations of the press have sunk enough that they will not sink much further. People are not dismayed by disappointments in the press. They expect them," the authors of the report said.


The study noted a huge rise in audiences for Internet news, particularly for bloggers whose readers jumped by 58 percent in six months to 32 million people.


Despite the growing importance of the Web, the report said investment was not keeping pace and some 62 percent of Internet professionals reported cutbacks in the newsroom in the last three years, even more than the 37 percent of print, radio and TV journalists who cited cutbacks in their newsrooms.


"For all that the number of outlets has grown, the number of people engaged in collecting original information has not," the report said, noting that much of the investment was directed at repackaging and presenting information rather than gathering news.

Re: Election coverage study
Tuesday, March 15, 2005 7:47 AM on j-body.org
Like Clinton got great press when he was running for reelection. The press usually works over every incumbent whether they be Rep. or Dem. when running for reelection.







Re: Election coverage study
Tuesday, March 15, 2005 8:18 AM on j-body.org
Here

Michael Kelly (archive)
(printer-friendly version)

May 16, 2001

Media Bias!

Now that independent news organizations have reported that, under almost any conceivable scenario of recounting the Florida vote, George W. Bush beat Al Gore, the cry that Bush is a robber-president has lost a bit of oomph. So a new--well, actually, not new--cry arises: Media Bias! Media Bias!

Specifically, as both John F. Harris and Howard Kurtz have reported in The Washington Post, Democratic war-roomers have brought forth a new bottle of the old whine that the national press corps, manipulated by right-wing ideologues, unfairly savaged Bill Clinton--and is too soft on Bush.

The latest proof for this is supposed to lie in the differing tones of press coverage afforded to Clinton and to Bush in their first hundred days in office. ``The Washington press corps has become like little puppy dogs; you scratch them on the tummy and they roll right over,'' complained the master dog trainer and former Clinton aide Rahm Emanuel.

This would be interesting if true, since it would seem to confound all logic. That the national press corps, shown in every survey to be overwhelmingly liberal and Democratic, would grant friendlier treatment to a conservative Republican president than to a liberal Democratic president--can it really be so?

No. ``Contrary to Democratic complaints, George W. Bush has not gotten an easier ride from the American media in his first 100 days than Bill Clinton did in his famously rocky start. ... Despite a very good first month, Bush's coverage overall was actually less positive than Bill Clinton's eight years ago.''

That is the conclusion of ``The First 100 Days: How Bush Versus Clinton Fared in the Press,'' a report by the Project for Excellence in Journalism, an independent group run under the auspices of the Columbia School of Journalism and funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts. To produce this report, the project examined 899 stories reported by four network news divisions, two major newspapers and one major newsweekly during the first 60 days of the Clinton administration and the first 60 days of the Bush administration.

Among the specific findings:

--Clinton received far more coverage than Bush in his first 60 days: 41 percent more stories on network TV, in newspaper section fronts and on opinion pages.

--In the tone of stories, 27 percent of the Clinton stories were positive vs. 22 percent for Bush; both scored the same--28 percent--for negative stories.

--Bush did better in his first month than Clinton, with 27 percent positive stories to 23 percent negative, compared with Clinton's 22 percent positive and 32 percent negative. But Bush's coverage tanked in the second month: 36 percent negative to 17 percent positive.

--Bush fared much worse than Clinton in the editorial and op-ed pages of The New York Times and The Washington Post, with half of all editorials and 40 percent of all op-ed columns critical of Bush and only 20 percent of editorials and 16 percent of columns positive. Forty percent of Clinton's editorials were positive and only 20 percent were negative.

--Clinton was portrayed far more as ``a man of the people'' than Bush has been, while Bush is portrayed far more as a Washington ``insider.''

--Clinton was hammered in his first month for missteps in management, but ``his coverage became more positive because his policy positions on the budget, free trade, health care and reinventing government were depicted as widely popular.''

--For Bush, the dynamic was reversed: ``After expressing clear doubts about Bush's intelligence and competence ... the press gave the new president high marks'' for competence in the early days, but ``that began to give way when Bush's budget plans were released and more of his policy positions became clearer, including such issues as global warming, water pollution, bankruptcy law and mining cleanup.''

The truth here is really not so complicated. The media gave Clinton a hard time over events that tended to confirm its suspicions about his character. And there were, over the years, many such events, because Clinton in fact had a really awful character. But Clinton generally got good press for his policies--because they were policies most reporters approved of. Because they were liberal policies.

Bush does not suffer analogous doubts as to character, and has done nothing serious to confirm doubts as to intelligence. He has properly gotten decent press as a manager. But the coverage of Bush in policy terms has been sharply and heavily negative--because most reporters do not approve of his policies. Because they are conservative policies.

And this is the bias that endures.




©2001 Washington Post Writers Group
Re: Election coverage study
Wednesday, March 16, 2005 6:16 AM on j-body.org
No bias in that Write-up... *WTF
Quote:


The truth here is really not so complicated. The media gave Clinton a hard time over events that tended to confirm its suspicions about his character. And there were, over the years, many such events, because Clinton in fact had a really awful character. But Clinton generally got good press for his policies--because they were policies most reporters approved of. Because they were liberal policies.


Actually, Clinton might have done reprehensible things, but, his policies made sense, and helped the economy along by keeping the country on stable ground.

Bush isn't at all a shady character either (note, I'm being stupefyingly biting, caustically sarcastic here). No no.. not at all.. No sweeping under the rug for Enron execs, no problems with his Military accounting, oh, and of course, no problems with BS-ing the US into a protracted war, no smoothing over with local police when his daughters' followed in daddy's footsteps. No, Bush has an unimpeachable character.

What's worse? F**king a whitehouse clerk or F**king the country?

Put it straight, cut the media out of it, and look at who benefits from the policies of the Bush administration on the whole: His corporate cronies that bought into, and continue to buy into, "access to good government."




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Election coverage study
Wednesday, March 16, 2005 4:45 PM on j-body.org
BOOO

You forgot billions in No-bid contracts!




Image

Re: Election coverage study
Wednesday, March 16, 2005 5:11 PM on j-body.org
PCS:
I'm horrible, horrible person for forgetting those.

As punishment, I demand someone cover me in choclate and throw me to the lesbians.




Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Election coverage study
Thursday, March 17, 2005 5:42 PM on j-body.org
well if there was something positive to talk about ......goes to show you even the press hates that @!#$



1989 Turbo Trans Am #82, 2007 Cobalt SS G85





Re: Election coverage study
Thursday, March 17, 2005 6:55 PM on j-body.org
Well, I think that dipping me in chocolate and throwing me to the lesbians is a positive thing to talk about...

assuming lesbians would want me...



Transeat In Exemplum: Let this stand as the example.


Re: Election coverage study
Friday, March 18, 2005 7:11 AM on j-body.org
......*sigh politics.



www.emor8t.deviantart.com
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