-Caveat Lector-

  http://insightmag.com/archive/200012053.shtml

 12/04/2000
the last word

By Paul M. Rodriguez, Managing Editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Press Bias Clouds Election Reporting


It has come down to this: In the face of a potential constitutional
crisis, press bias has fanned the flames of American discontent
with the electoral process. Beyond the double-whammy mistakes
on election night involving Florida, causing voters already in line to
walk away, the press has compounded its blunders with shameful
bias by reporting the results there out of context.

       No sooner was the election over than Democrats began
hooting and hollering and getting massive press play concerning
alleged irregularities in Florida that included Palm Beach County�s
screwy butterfly ballots, designed and approved by Democrats on
the model of those used in Chicago! Yet, as the stories continue to
cascade, if this is mentioned it is done only as an afterthought and
with a discernable disdain for Republicans who point it out.

       Then there�s the issue of voters who screwed up the ballots.
The way the television mavens tell it, the alleged confusion is an
outrage and Democrats have been wronged. But when Republicans
respond with the facts that in previous elections similar numbers of
ballots have been thrown out for precisely the same human errors,
it gets nary a mention, let alone explanation in context.

       Now what about Missouri? By law no dead person can be
considered for public office, yet hardly a mention has been made of
how Democrats insisted on proceeding with the election of the
deceased Mel Carnahan under a legal theory that would allow his
widow to be appointed to fill his seat. Sure, incumbent Sen. John
Ashcroft has said he won�t bring a legal challenge, but there are
Republicans aplenty who are madder than hell about it. Why has
hardly a word about this cruel trickery appeared in the general
press?

       And what about the estimated 1 million voter-identification
cards mailed out to immigrants in this country in predominately
Hispanic areas (see �Chicanery Roils Election 2000,� p. 26.)?
Where�s the outrage by the press at this White House-sponsored
shenanigan inviting voter fraud? It�s okay to provide a constant
drumbeat about the Florida mess but not to so much as mention
the voter-card scam? As nearly as we can tell, the failure to report
on the latter centers on a journalistic decision somewhere that
exposure now would have no effect on the vote count between Al
Gore and George W. Bush.

       Military personnel by the thousands also have complained that
they did not receive ballots in a timely manner and/or never got
them when requested. We suspect this would be a running news
story if there were a hint or a whiff of possibility that absentee
military ballots might favor Gore. But they don�t, and hence there�s
neither daily coverage of the military absentee balloting nor so
much as a sign of press outrage.

       We raise these issues not as political partisans but as
loyalists to a strange notion that the role of the press is to report
the news honestly, in context and without favor.

       Consider the polls: How many media stories created false
impressions by suggesting that Gore was leading (or Bush was
ahead) without ever pointing out that other polls gave far different
results? What�s appalling is how media bias routinely skews the
reporting of polling statistics and thus, we are told by experts,
manipulates the body politic.

       There were stories aplenty we saw in big-city newspapers and
on broadcast news that reported how the rich and powerful backed
Bush. Yet stories on Gore supporters tended always to make it
appear that, except for those crazy (but popular) actors in
Hollywood, only the poor and the downtrodden backed the vice
president.

       Then there was all of that worker support for Gore from the
unions. But it turns out that more than one-third of the rank and file
voted Republican. The tens of millions of dollars from union dues
spent to promote Gore simply were bled off by fatly paid union
bosses who often receive more than the so-called captains of
industry. But routinely the press doesn�t make such distinctions.
And we�ve come to believe this is deliberate. For example:
Reporting on rumors about alleged Bush drug use and, lately, his
1976 drunk-driving conviction, has been steadily and loudly heard.
Yet concern about Gore�s illegal drug use � allegedly even while a
senator � gets no play. Neither does Gore�s own White House e-
mail scandal, detailed in Insight two weeks ago, not to mention
new information that clearly raises issues of lying by the vice
president and his staff (see �E-Mail Paper Trail Leads to Gore,�
Nov. 20).

       We long have thought the fact that the majority of Americans
eligible to vote do not cast ballots is a national scandal that reflects
poorly on the character of our country. But what�s worse is having a
press which, while free, has created a patina of unbiased news-
reporting that is in fact utterly dishonest. Whatever the standard
that any one news organization wishes to employ ought to be
steadfastly followed when reporting on every facet of the same
issue. But that hardly has been the case, such as, for example, in
reporting on drug or alcohol abuse by the candidates.

       Something is terribly wrong with the press. Its continuing gaffs
and slant undermine the freedoms newsmen enjoy. We�ve had a
bellyful of that since election night. No wonder talk radio and the
Internet are overtaking establishment media as the sources to be
trusted. While we applaud ordinary Americans who search out the
truth for themselves, we are saddened that the great institution that
once was the American press no longer can be trusted. No wonder
so many are on the cusp of rage.

Copyright � 2000 News World Communications, Inc.
Web site developed by Griffin Strategy Group


* * *
One consequence of Clintonism is that facts have
become irrelevant to political debate....  Under
the new Clinton Rules, by now imbedded in media
coverage, it doesn't matter whether something
is true; what counts is whether it works
politically. ... Mr. Clinton has taken to lying
with such fluency that his whoppers are barely
even noticed. -Wall Street Journal

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