News coverage of political campaigns
A review and evaluation
What should news coverage be like?
• Informative• “Objective”
– Fair and balanced– Focused on what’s important
• Contextualized
– Accurate
• Adequate• Useful
Has this always been the case?
• No—early newspapers were partisan in the extreme– Party papers were financially supported by
politicians or their supporters
To what extent to do people use the media?
• There has been a continuing and fairly precipitous decline in newspaper reading, tv news attendance, newsmagazine circulation.
• The only increase is in use of the Internet for political information, but that does not nearly offset the declines elsewhere
Everyday news consumption(Source: Gallup)
Source: Gallup
Source: Gallup
Source: Gallup
Source: Gallup
Source: Gallup
Everyday news consumption(Source: Gallup)
Everyday news consumption(Source: Gallup)
How do people get their campaign news?
• Television news dominates• Local TV is more heavily used that network TV
Source: Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, “Cable and Internet Loom Large in a Fragmented Political News Universe,’’ January 11, 2004
* Survey qu.: "For each item that I read, please tell me how often, if ever, you learn something about the presidential campaign or the candidates from this source." Chart shows percent of Americans who "regularly" learn something from given outlet.
What can we say about news coverage?
• Although we will review political knowledge in more detail later, we can certainly say that Americans have very low levels of political knowledge and understanding– It’s a running joke on the Tonight Show, etc.
• Can we trace this to lack of interest or is it tied to news media performance?
News media performance
• The news media can be evaluated on a number of dimensions of campaign coverage, but the most common are:– The amount of information provided– The nature of the presentation
• Bias• Sensationalism
What do we find in the news?• The agenda of the American news media continues to narrow, not broaden. A firm grip on this is
difficult but the trends seem inescapable. A comprehensive audit of coverage shows that in 2007, two overriding stories — the war in Iraq and the 2008 presidential campaign — filled more than a quarter of the newshole and seemed to consume much of the media’s energy and resources. And what wasn’t covered was in many ways as notable as what was. Other than Iraq — and to a lesser degree Pakistan and Iran — there was minimal coverage of events overseas, some of which directly involved U.S. interests, blood and treasure. At the same time, consider the list of the domestic issues that each filled less than a single percent of the newshole: education, race, religion, transportation, the legal system, housing, drug trafficking, gun control, welfare, Social Security, aging, labor, abortion and more. A related trait is a tendency to move on from stories quickly. On breaking news events — the Virginia Tech massacre or the Minneapolis bridge collapse were among the biggest — the media flooded the zone but then quickly dropped underlying story lines about school safety and infrastructure. And newer media seem to have an even narrower peripheral vision than older media. Cable news, talk radio (and also blogs) tend to seize on top stories (often polarizing ones) and amplify them. The Internet offers the promise of aggregating ever more sources, but its value still depends on what those originating sources are providing. Even as the media world has fragmented into more outlets and options, reporting resources have shrunk.
• Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism “State of the News Media 2008”
Local news coverage, Oct. 4-10, 2004(Source: Lear Center Local News Archive)
Campaign coverage on local TV news
• Average length of a campaign story– 81 seconds
• Nearly two-thirds contained no candidate soundbites– When they did speak, it averaged 12 seconds
• Strategy or horserace: 45%• Campaign issues: 29%
• Local elections: 5%
MNI Average 30 Minute BroadcastSignificant Variance by Market
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN NEWSLAB
Category 9.7.06 – 10.6.06
Advertising 10 min 7 sec
Sports and weather 7 min 1 sec
Crime 2 min 27 sec
Other 2 min 18 sec
Local interest 2 min 1sec
Teasers, bumpers, intros 1 min 46 sec
Non-campaign gov’t news 1 min 6 sec
Health 1 min 4 sec
Business, economy 1 min 2 sec
Election coverage 36 sec
Foreign policy 23 sec
Unintentional injury 11 sec
Broadcast-Level Analysis
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN NEWSLAB
The breakdown by office:•Gubernatorial coverage consumed a third of the airtime (34 percent) devoted to election stories.•More than one out of every ten stories (11 percent) was about U.S. House candidates, almost double the coverage of U.S. Senate candidates (6 percent).•Voting issue stories comprised 8 percent of election coverage.•Ballot initiatives and bond issues also received 5 percent of all election coverage.
Broadcast-Level Analysis
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN NEWSLAB
• Strategy and horserace stories vastly outweighed substantive issue coverage by a margin of almost 3 to 1 (63 to 23 percent).
• Roughly one out of every twenty stories (6 percent) was about former Congressman Mark Foley.
•In the last week of the study (Foley resigned on September 29), 19 percent of all election stories were about Foley. Also, in the last week, 42 percent of stories about the House were about Foley.
Broadcast-Level Analysis
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN NEWSLAB
• Only a little over one in four (30 percent) of stories contained a candidate sound bite. When candidates were allowed to speak, the average sound bite was just under 13 seconds. • Local candidates averaged slightly longer sound bites (just over 18 seconds)• US House candidates received roughly 12 seconds, gubernatorial candidates received 10 seconds, and US Senate candidates received 9 seconds on average
THE HESS REPORT
On Campaign Coverage on The Nightly News
Minutes Devoted to Campaign Coverage
• Note : Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
1474
788 805
100250400550700850
1000115013001450
1992 1996 2000
Minutes Devoted to Campaign Coverage: ABC, CBS, NBC
• Note : Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
498266 278
0
200
400
600
1992 1996 2000
ABC
486268 241
0
200
400
600
1992 1996 2000
CBS
490254 286
0
200
400
600
1992 1996 2000
NBC
THE SHRINKING SOUNDBITE
• Note: Based on 589 stories from September 5, 1988 to November 7, 1988 ; 728 stories from September 7, 1992 to November 3, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
9.8
8.4
8.2
7.8
0 2 4 6 8 10
Seconds
1988 (9/5-11/7)
1992 (9/7-11/3)
1996 (9/2-11/4)
2000 (9/4-11/5)
Horse Race as Percent of Total Campaign Coverage
– Note: Horse Race stories focus on who’s ahead, who’s behind, and candidate election strategies. Statistics on the percent of stories based on total number of election stories from that particular news organization. Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
– Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
71%
48%
55%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
2000
1996
1992
Horse Race as Percent of Total Campaign Coverage: ABC, CBS, NBC
• Note: Horse Race stories focus on who’s ahead, who’s behind, and candidate election strategies. Statistics on the percent of stories based on total number of election stories from that particular news organization. Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
70%
51%
51%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
2000
1996
1992
ABC: Horse Race
69%
47%
55%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
2000
1996
1992
CBS: Horse Race
71%
45%
59%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
2000
1996
1992
NBC :Horse Race
Horse Race as Percent of Total Campaign Coverage
• Note: Horse Race stories focus on who’s ahead, who’s behind, and candidate election strategies. Statistics on the percent of stories based on total number of election stories from that particular news organization. Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
0%
10%
20%30%
40%
50%
60%70%
80%
90%
Week
1
Week
2
Week
3
Week
4
Week
5
Week
6
Week
7
Week
8
Week
9
2000 Horse Race
1996 Horse Race
1992 Horse Race
Negative Tone
• Note: Statistics on the percent of positive and negative evaluations based on total number of evaluations in the stories. Explicitly negative and positive statements by non-partisan sources were considered when judging whether coverage was negative or positive Based on 772 stories from August 31, 1992 to November 2, 1992; 483 stories from September 2, 1996 to November 4, 1996; 462 stories from September 4, 2000 to November 6, 2000 from the ABC, CBS, and NBC evening news.
• Data: Center For Media And Public Affairs/Brookings
55%
71%
50%
67%60% 63%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
What does the public think of press performance?
• The public’s view of the press has been in decline for many years– See the press as biased– See the press as having few morals– See news as obsessed with sensational stories,
fluff
Project for Excellence in Journalism
Trend in public attitudes toward the press(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
Trend in public attitudes toward the press(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
Trend in public attitudes toward the press(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
Believability of news media
Percent of public rating medium highly believable, 1985-2002Source: Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, ’’News Media’s Improved Image Proves Short-Lived,’’ August 4, 2002Survey question: "How would you rate the believability of (item) on [a] scale of 4 to 1?"
Public beliefs about the press
Media too liberal
Media tooconservative
It's about right
No opinion
Source: Gallup poll of 1,025 Americans, September 2003
Trend in public attitudes toward the press(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
Trend in public attitudes toward the press(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
2007 % 1985 %
Katie Couric 5 Dan Rather 11
Bill O’Reilly 4 Walter Cronkite 6
Charles Gibson 3 Peter Jennings 6
Dan Rather 2 Tom Brokaw 4
Brian Williams 2 Ted Koppel 2
Anderson Cooper
2 Other 33
Jon Stewart 2 None/DK/Refuse 35
Other 24
None/DK/Refuse
44
To what extent is this due to the beliefs of the critic?
Percent saying press criticism does more good than harm(Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism)
Perceived bias in campaign coverage
Source: Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, “Views of Press Values and Performance: 1985-2007”
Source: David A. Jones, Why Americans Don’t Trust the Media, Press/Politics 9(7): 60-75
Newsworthiness
• This is the term used by journalists and critics to describe characteristics of some topic or event that identify it as something that should be covered by the press or by a journalistic organization– What are the features that make something
newsworthy?
Newsworthiness features• Two types of values
– Importance– Sensational value
• Importance relates to the impact the event or topic is likely to have on the audience– Tax policy
• Sensational values relate to the oddity or emotional charge a story has– Murder– Accidents– Sex– Weirdness (“Lipstick on a pig”)
Why sensational values?
• Simply put, journalists believe that the public is more likely to tune in to see sensational coverage than important stories– They may be right
Audience preferences• Sensationalism
– People watch news in large numbers– Small audiences for “serious journalism”, e.g. Newshour,
opinion journals, editorial pages– Screaming matches rather than debate
• Common focus on bizarre, conflictual, seamy, violent– Look at popular culture
• Movies• Television shows• Success of more sensational news formats
– 60 Minutes
Source: Patterson, 2001
• Horserace news is widely available for the simple reason that it attracts readers and viewers. Our evidence shows that substantial numbers of readers sought out the news reports on the horserace, even though these reports were located at the end of the CD. After taking into account the longitudinal trend in page visits, horserace stories attracted the most traffic within the CD, even more than “scandal” stories.– Source: Consumer Demand for Election News: The Horserace Sells Iyengar,
Norpoth, and Hahn, Journal of Politics, February 2004
• "At the end of the day, I hope this is more about the fairness and accuracy of my reporting than about my hairstyle." -- Jennifer Eccleston
Can the two values work together?
• The challenge, then, may be to combine the two values
• Emphasize sensational features of a story to draw attention while including important information that has value in the long run– Does the audience better understand tax policy
from the “Joe the Plumber” stories?
Bias
• The most common complaint against the news media is the charge of ideological bias– It has become almost an automatic belief among
conservatives• Repeated regularly among radio talk hosts, pundits,
party functionaries
He was known for attacking his opponents with unusual turns of phrase. Among his most famous were "nattering nabobs of negativism", and "effete corps of impudent snobs". Both expressions refer to the press corps, whom both Agnew and Nixon considered to be their ideological enemies and which ultimately played a role in Nixon's downfall. • "pusillanimous pussyfoots" and "hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history"
Speech excerpt
Journalists’ self-designation
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
National Local
Source: Pew Center poll of print journalists
Print journalists’ views on bias
National Local
It is a valid criticism that journalists are letting their ideological views show in their reporting too frequently
43% 43%
It is a valid criticism of the press that the distinction between reporting and commentary has seriously eroded
58% 57%
Source: Pew Research Center poll of print journalists
Source: Lichter et al.
Audience preferences
• Right-wing populism– “Patriotism”
• Fox• Limbaugh, etc.
– “Militarism of local news” (Gitlin and Hallin)• Local news, especially, dropped all pretension of
neutrality during Gulf War I• Same appears true today
Opposition:
• A smaller number of critics argues that the media lean right rather than left
• Robert Parry: “The notion of a ‘liberal’ national news media is one of the most enduring and influential political myths of modern U.S. history. Shaping the behavior of both conservatives and liberals over the past quarter century, the myth could be said to have altered the course of American democracy and led the nation into the dangerous corner it now finds itself.”
Survey of journalists
Q#22. On social issues, how would you characterize your political orientation?
Q#23. On economic issues, how would you characterize your political orientation?
Left 30% Left 11%
Center 57% Center 64%
Right 9% Right 19%
Other 5% Other 5%
Journalists and public on specific policiesJournalists appear to be left of public
Journalists appear to be right of public
Protecting Medicare and Social Security XX
The expansion of NAFTA XRequiring employers to provide health insurance for workers X
Stricter environmental laws XConcern over corporate power XTaxing the wealthy XImpact of NAFTA X‘Fast track’ trade authority XGovernment guaranteed medical care X
Punditry
• Modern journalism is heavily dependent upon sources of information– Journalists often either simply quote or interview
sources of information• Sources are much more likely to be
government officials than any other group• Those who act as ‘pundits’ are significantly
more likely to be conservative than liberal– Think tanks, etc.
Number of think tank citations in media by ideology
2003 2002
Conservative or Center-Right 13,989 47% 12,249 47%
Centrist 11,605 39% 10,599 41%
Progressive or Center-Left 3,896 13% 3,217 12%
Total 29,490 100% 26,055 100%
Source: Nexis database on major newspaper and radio and TV transcripts.
Owners’ and managers’ attitudes
• Rights of ownership– Fire dissident employees
• Relatively rare
– Hire according to political tendencies• Not common• However, may be becoming more common
– “Fox phenomenon”
– Advancement according to acceptance of editorial policy
Consolidation
• Fewer and fewer large corporations own more and more of the media
Socialization of journalists
• New journalists learn ‘editorial policy’ subtly through the working of the news system – Editing of stories handed in– Success of journalists who follow the rules
• Placement of stories• Star reporters with perks
– Occasional ‘talking to’ by editors– Coffee klatches– Evaluation of elite press coverage– Read own paper each day
The influence of professionalism
• Journalists neither simply follow their personal political philosophy nor kowtow to their employer’s wishes– Schools of journalism, etc. that help to inculcate
values and expertise of the ‘profession’• Objectivity• Accuracy• Newsworthiness• Storytelling skills
Objectivity as a press value• "Good reporters write balanced, rounded stories," says David
Cay Johnston, a Pulitzer Prize winner now covering tax issues for The New York Times, who has lectured widely on journalism issues. "I have worked at five major newspapers and sat next to people who held political views that ranged from fascist to communist, and I would be hard pressed to find any sign of that in their work as reporters or editors. A better test than the liberal-vs.-conservative paradigm would be ideological-vs.-non-ideological, and rounded-vs.-not rounded. – Source: Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)
Source: Survey of 101 reporters by Iyengar, McGrady and Woo reported in Nieman Reports, Fall 2005
Perhaps the most significant influence
• Massive cutbacks at newspaper, TV news (local and network) and newsmagazines have significantly changed the approach to news– Very little investigative news left– Greatly increased dependence upon materials
supplied by public relations specialists– No cushion left for news to be insulated from
economic pressures
• Journalists in this survey are much less concerned than three years ago or eight years earlier about issues of quality and credibility. In earlier years the quality of the coverage was the chief concern among those surveyed. In 1999, 44% named issues of quality as the top problem facing journalism as did 41% in 2004. Now half as many, about two in ten, place these issues at the top. The same drop occurred among local journalists, falling from 33% in 2004 to 21% in 2007.
• Concerns about the lack of credibility declined even more, falling from 28% of national journalists and 23% of locals naming it as the top problem in 2004 to just 9% for both groups this year.
• Yet this does not mean that journalists are now satisfied. Less than 20% of journalists named the quality of coverage as something that journalism “is doing especially well these days.”
• But these concerns over quality may now be more concerned with resources than with the attitudes or professionalism of the journalist. Indeed, this concern is overwhelmingly shared. More than eight in ten journalists surveyed, a greater percentage than in 2004, agree that news organizations have cut back too much on the scope of their reporting and that too little attention is paid to complex issues.
• What seems to be happening instead is that other, more pressing issues have evolved — namely those of money and bottom-line pressures.
Ultimately:• Journalists are personally liberal
– Elite media more so than the rest– They are not so clearly or unambiguously liberal as they are portrayed
• Majority are centrist• Actually centrist or conservative on economic matters, liberal on social
equality issues, government social action– Trend has been toward a more conservative or libertarian position for
journalists• Definition of ‘liberal’ and ‘conservative’ have both drifted to the right• ‘New news’ and non-fiction formats have been on the conservative side
• Editors and management are more conservative• Professionalism and organizational influences run counter
to a liberal news bias
Mostly:
• News is a product of a large number of influences, not just political views of the journalists themselves
• The greatest influence is probably the search for profit
• Definition of ‘liberal’ and ‘conservative’ are fluid and dependent upon the audience attitudes at least as much as the news performance
The 2008 Election
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign: How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign: How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: MediaTenor
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”
Source: Project for Excellence in Journalism, “Winning the media campaign:How the press reported the 2008 presidential general election”