Poll-Obsessed Media Focus On Strategy Over Substance
With just a few weeks to go before the Iowa caucuses, polls are providing pundits and political junkies with fresh data to spin out a new round of the usual "who's up, who's down" campaign coverage. But while the press seems settled on a new narrative for the campaign, journalists should recall what the polls told them last time around about who would likely win the Iowa caucuses.
The tone of coverage of the Democratic race seemed to shift when a Nov. 19 ABC/Washington Post poll of likely caucus-goers showed a tight race among three candidates: Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards.
The difference from the previous survey was within the poll's margin of error, so the actual data said very little. Much of the media seemed to think otherwise. "The ground may be shifting," announced NBC anchor Brian Williams. The Los Angeles Times called it "a shift in momentum in this crucial state" - in an article that boiled the race down to just two candidates, Clinton and Obama.
The Washington Post's write-up was downright confusing - the Post mentioned the results were "only marginally different" from their poll several months prior, yet nonetheless pointed to "significant signs of progress for Obama - and harbingers of concern for Clinton."
On ABC, reporter Kate Snow mentioned something most of her colleagues seemed unconcerned with: the fact that these polls actually tell you very little about the outcome of the race. Snow recalled that "four years ago, John Kerry - who eventually was the Democratic nominee - he was polling in Iowa at 4 percent."
Indeed, campaign reporters should all remember the lesson of the 2004 Iowa caucus. A little more than a month before Iowa Democrats actually caucused in January, the poll-obsessed media had narrowed down the field to two "front-runners": Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri and Vermont Gov. Howard Dean.
"Two See Iowa as Crucial Battleground," announced The Washington Post on Nov. 29, 2003, billing the race as a "fight rich in substance and symbolism." A Nov. 9 Post report said that Dean was "for the first time, threatening to pull away from the pack," and even discussed his "opening for a quick-kill strategy" by winning Iowa and New Hampshire.
The polling was presumably a key factor leading reporters to reach such conclusions. A December 2003 Pew poll of likely Iowa caucus-goers showed Dean leading the pack with 29 percent, followed by Gephardt at 21 percent.
Kerry was in third with 18 percent, followed by John Edwards at 5 percent. A Zogby poll from around the same time had a closer race between Dean and Gephardt (26 to 22 percent), with Kerry and Edwards picking up 9 and 5 percent, respectively.
And what happened when Iowa Democrats actually caucused? Kerry won with 37 percent, followed by Edwards at 32 percent. "Front-runners" Dean and Gephardt finished with 18 and 11 percent, respectively.
The point is not just to note that polls at this stage are hardly predictive - though the media acknowledging as much would be a start. Nor is it to wish that the national press would simply work at finding a better method of declaring which candidates are "front-runners," and whose campaigns aren't worth your attention.
The more fundamental problem for the press - and for American democracy - is that the media's over-reliance on polls encourages a kind of political conversation that prioritizes strategic consideration and tactics over substance.
A recent study from the Project for Excellence in Journalism confirmed that much of what passes for campaign journalism focuses primarily on the tactical dimensions of the race (like poll results and fundraising) and not on the actual policy differences between the candidates.
In a recent New York Times op-ed, former ABC News political director and current Time magazine editor-at-large Mark Halperin admitted that most political coverage is built around the notion that you can judge candidates' potential to be a good president based on how well they run their campaigns.
Halperin admits he was "wrong," and suggests a change of course: Journalists "should examine a candidate's public record and full life as opposed to his or her campaign performance." What a concept. But then Halperin added a strange qualifier: "But what might appear simple to a voter can, I know, seem hard for a journalist."
Halperin seems to be saying that if you think it's hard to cover the substance of electoral politics, it's a good bet you're a campaign reporter.
That's bad news, to say the least - and makes it hard to imagine journalists are going to change any time soon.
Peter Hart is the activism coordinator at FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting), a media-watch group based in New York.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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18 Comments so far
Show AllWhat's Progress?
Our tiny blue marble Earth rotates around its polar axis (at the Equator), once a day at
1000 miles per hour
Our Earth orbits around our Sun (tiny compared to Mu Cephi, whose diameter is larger than the orbit of Saturn), once a year at
67,000 miles per hour
Our entire solar system revolves around the Milky Way's Black Hole (toward the constellation Sagittarius, from ~30,000 light years out from the gravity center), once every 230 million years at
560,000 miles per hour
Our Milky Way Galaxy dances around nearby Andromeda Galaxy, in a progressively faster death spiral for another 5 billion years, while moving together as a local group, toward Virgo's super cluster of galaxies (50 million light years away) at
990,000 miles per hour
This large congregation of galaxies is moving toward the "Great Attractor"(in the Hydra-Centaurus direction), with respect to the faintly glowing embers of the 15 billion yr old "big bang", called the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)
several million miles per hour
Our net velocity is approximately 2,000,000 miles per hour (450 miles per second, which is 0.2% of the speed of light)
So WoW, that's a real measure of "our progress"!
Too bad that it is mostly in circles, and
contributes to the illusion that humans are going somewhere (other than extinct)
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
Even though journalists might be obsessed with poll numbers, let's recognize that the candidates are too. And most of their stances on issues are based, not on their personal convictions, but the impact it will have on their polling numbers.
Obama versus Clinton versus Plutocracy
Joel S. Hirschhorn
Here comes another inconvenient truth. Despite all the attention to Oprah for Obama and the pundit blabbering about the Democratic primary horse race the outcome has been predetermined. What people do not want to know is that power elites control what the Democratic ticket will be. When the primaries end the winner will be the reigning plutocracy.
Rich and powerful elites want Hillary Clinton in the White House if the Democrats get their turn in the rigged two-party system. Just one big problem: The establishment plutocracy wants her more than most Americans trust or like her. No matter how much she spends and no matter how many big name endorsements she gets, her phoniness and arrogance prevail. She would be America's irritating Panderer-in-Chief. What to do?
For power elites the answer is crystal clear. Obama is too young and inexperienced and less trustworthy for the elites, meaning he is less corrupted by big money than Hillary. But he is perfect to offset Hillary's negatives. A majority of voters can succumb to months of slick advertising promoting the first woman president and first black vice-president and future president. And eight years as vice president will train Obama to be an obedient Washington insider.
Though Republicans will still mount a vicious attack on Clinton, Obama will moderate those efforts. Hillary can be the annoying bad cop that people fear and hate, while he is the good guy that people like and believe. And make no mistake: what friction exists between the two will be quickly replaced by their ambition. Obama will tell his supporters (and Oprah hers) to back the compromise ticket and he will negotiate a sweet deal to gain big influence as vice president like Cheney has had. Then we can all prey (delude ourselves) that he might curb Clinton's tendencies to use military force rather than diplomacy, and create more terrible trade agreements and wasteful federal programs. Obama might even fight the assault on the middle class and rising economic inequality. Might.
U.S. News & World Report's Paul Bedard made these points in 2006 about a Clinton-Obama ticket: "Some Republican advisers to the White House and leading 2008 hopefuls Sen. John McCain and Rudy Giuliani see the ticket as an easy winner built on the enthusiasm it would generate in Democratic circles. Their theory is that Clinton would stand a good chance to pick up the states that Sen. John Kerry won in 2004. While not enough to win the election on her own, the addition of Obama would help push closely divided states like Ohio over into the Democratic column, thereby giving the Clinton-Obama ticket the White House. …Obama could help soften Clinton's image and bring more African-American voters to the ticket as well as independents seeking real and symbolic change." Exactly.
In April 2007 The New York Times political blog raised the same possibility and there were hundreds of wide-ranging comments. Though many expressed negativity about Clinton, many others showed enthusiasm for a Clinton-Obama ticket, as shown by the following five comments:
Clinton/Obama would be an unbeatable ticket. She has the experience as both a senator and she knows the foreign nations as her work as First Lady, remember Bill's campaign slogan "Two for the price of one." with Bill back in the White House, her as Pres, could surely let Obama earn his stripes and after 8 years will become what could be America's first black president.
I too would love to see a Hillary-Obama ticket. I believe Obama would settle for a VP position because he is young, has served only 2 years as a US senator, and has a long career ahead of him.
If the Dems are smart, and I hope they are, the ticket will be Clinton-Obama and it will be unbeatable in 2008 and again in 2012. Then in 2016 and 20020 Obama will be top dog on the ticket thus providing sixteen years of a Democratic presidency.
Hey, Clinton/Obama is pretty powerful sounding! I'm all for it! You folks who have been programmed to hate Hillary need to get over it already. She is one smart woman who has more than enough experience in the white house and she will make one hell of a prez! Obama will learn a lot from president Clinton and will be ready to lead our great nation in 2016 or 17!
Obama and Hillary on the same ticket would be terrific. With these 2 candidates the country could become a democratic society for 16 years!
In sum, whenever you hear more chatter about the tight Democratic primary race take a breath. Get back in touch with your cynicism. Talk about change is for campaigns; protecting the status quo is for winners. Plutocrats know who they want and what voters can be conned into voting for. Despite primaries the ultimate outcome has already been determined by the faceless fat-cat plutocrats running and ruining our nation. Think Big Oil, Big Insurance, Big Pharma, Big Business, Big Law and Lobbying Firms, and Big Wall Street Money. They can pump in the money and endorsements to make Clinton the winner and the corporate mainstream media will assist.
Note that rigged-election-master Fidel Castro called the Clinton-Obama ticket "invincible." And, as to a winning Clinton-Obama ticket, smarmy Fox News analyst Dick Morris said "I'm leaving the country if this happens." Hopefully more Fox News liars and idiots would do likewise. Does that possibility justify voting for that first-ever ticket? No. The better moral and patriotic decision is to not participate in the two-party criminal conspiracy we call our political system and not vote for any Democrat or Republican for federal office. Those supporting Clinton's rivals eventually will see this truth.
[Contact the author through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.]
re We Are The 801 3:46pm
nailed it in one. there IS no substantial difference among the corporate-approved candidates, so the media (also mega-corps) raise the hoopla level to the threshhold of pain, profiting handsomely thereby. "the track is getting muddier, but here comes edwards closing on the outside by a hair."
(sarcasm alert) if every year is an "election year" and every campaign lasts a year, doesn't that mean we have more democracy than anybody else?
The diabolical troika of corporate-scale fundraising; slick, expensive tv buys (which of course are paid for by the fundraising and are loved by corporate media); and polls/punditry define the structure of presidential campaigning as we currently know it.
Poll numbers justify the configuration of candidates' respective fundraising. It's corporate symbiosis. I think that's how it works (to some degree at least).
The right wing is so well organized that a total revolution would only play into their hands. They have way more guns than we do!!! We would loose even more time!! Only a change at base level with participation.. Civil disobedience with well prepared people who support the common issues as defined thru participation and compromises... transitions... and many of them are needed to create a dynamic in the favor of the issues. Poverty, education, health, and we will find more in common with each other and demand new approaches and solution.It is time for the revolution of the mind..overcome even the old "revolutionary" myth of picking up arms. No more weapons... Power is in the people and of the people. Be part of it..educate..participate!!! Don't give in or up!!!That would be the fulfillment of the right wing and their wishes. In our history many have fought, from Spartacus and the first known successful slave uprising,to the Abolitionists, magna carta, the little concessions that were given to us not out of sympathy by the wealthy and powerful, but because we fought all thru history for sometimes very little.Most revolutions were betrayed, sold out or otherwise corrupted because the people could not support them with their minds. Matter and immediate need seem to over-ride those initial emotional impulses..French Revolution..October Revolution..But we as people got some concessions out of that long struggle and it must continue.
Corproate America has already decided that HRC is the next president, and their vote is the only one that counts. All of this media show is just that, a show, to make gullible Americans think that they have a choice.
The U.S. is already a fascist state in all but name. Only a total revolution overthrowing teh government (and teh corporations that run it) can change that now.
Thou the sameness is discouraging sometimes, it will be and is essential to work out the small baby steps ahead of us. Only participation, especially on your local levels, is necessary, because the laws already on the books and the new ones following, will make it a terrorist act to do other wise. No call to arms, but a call to a long term commitment in favor of participation. Make the issues the focus not the daily propaganda. Elect your own!!! On local levels, learn from the right wing. They show up all the time. I never see anybody else, unless there is a short term campaign issue and media attention. Daily grind of politix is your basic accounting, combined with those who represent, or pretend to represent, struggling with the fact that taxes and income are less, i.e. lower taxes, and those who continually show up are the arms lobby, oil companies and the like. They divide the money according to their priorities. Who this next President will be is a very short term. Think local- act global!!!!!
Well, when all the cadidates are more or less the same, what difference does it make? What substance is there?
Its not like we've got that much of a difference between the "major" candiates on the so-called "left" and the "right" in the US. So what else is there to focus on but polls and statistics.
Did someone say some are ignoring substance? As in, Congressman Dr. Ron Paul?
"It is unthinkable that despite the lack of any evidence of a threat, some are still charging headstrong into yet another war in the Middle East when what we ought to be doing is coming home from Iraq, coming home from Korea, coming home from Germany, and defending our own soil. We do not need to be interfering in the internal affairs of other countries and waging war when honest trade, friendship, and diplomacy are the true paths to peace and prosperity."
Let's ignore all the other candidates and pay attention to the one with substance, integrity and conviction. Dr. Ron Paul for President - he's delivered over 4,000 babies, you know...
Yes, the poll-driven horse-race focus is a problem, especially among TV journalists. One further example: I believe the entire first hour of the MSNBC Democratic debate was devoted to horse-race questions. (BTW, Brian Williams gets my vote as the absolute worst debate questioner -- ever.)
The other problem is the Iowa Caucus process itself. Whatever happened to one person, one vote -- and a secret ballot, too?
I firmly believe the Democrats need to allow other states to go first. And Democrats also need to replace the undemocratic Caucus process with a simple secret ballot.
OK, so Obama is up and Hillary is down, and Huckabee is storming ahead. I've done enough journalism to know that one of the first questions you need to ask about that is "WHY?" Of course, then things get hard, and who can be bothered?
The trouble is that the polls only tell you the who and the what.
I don't think that this article takes the idea of these polls far enough. I think that they are much more malicious.
He is right, polls don't do anything, excepts influence votes. They establishment puts the candidates they want people to vote for in the top of the polls, and relegate candidates like Kucinich to 1% or so, so that people that may actually vote for him feel like it would be a waste.
I don't think we can have any meaningful political change in this country until we seriously examine all the ways in which the media is meddling with politics and influencing citizens votes.
Survey findings are the cheapest possible news, and the news-mongers mine them to exhaustion. It's something they can do instead of covering events and issues, which is time-consuming and expensive.
What would we do if we were not reading worthless polls and watching all the blab about them on TV? We might have to find something to do that was productive, such as writing opinions on everything in CD posts.
One thing that Hart fails to mention was the last minute murder-suicide pact that Gephardt supposedly had with Kerry to take out Dean. Gephardt put out some last minute salacious TV ads showing Dean's face morphing into bin Laden's. That wiped out Gephardt's chances too, when it came out he was behind the ad, but it also took out Dean. Of course, after that defeat (and the judicious use of a directed mic to raise Dean's scream above the din of the volunteers) Dean's campaign was essentially over - even though Dean had the foresight to make Iraq and universal healthcare his top issues in 2004.
What a different world it could have been...
"should examine a candidate's public record and full life . . .
No, not his" full life" and let's get religion out of this and get on with POLICIES! Foreign and domestic.
I don't see what personal other information the public needs, in a country based on separation of church and state, than to know the candidate qualifies, has no criminal record, and is mentally and physically fit + his public record too if he has already served in the government or it relates to his candidacy.
Who cares if the polls mean anything? Polling is a lucrative business.