Tag Archives: journolist

Marc Ambinder: ‘Media Is Going to Help the Democratic Party’s National Messaging’

In a September 15 post-primary item at the Atlantic (“An Epic End to the Primaries: What It Means”), politics editor Marc Ambinder presented seven “different ways to look at the primaries of September 14, 2010.” His final item reads as follows (bold is mine): 7. The media is going to help the Democratic Party’s national messaging, which is that the GOP is a party full of Christine O’Donnells, a party that wants to take away your Social Security and your right to masturbate. Well, maybe not that last part, but then again, the implicit message of the party is that the GOP is about to elect a slate of hard social rightists to Congress. The bolded text is an obvious point to anyone with even the most rudimentary powers of observation, but it’s a pretty interesting admission nonetheless. That’s especially true because Ambinder is a bona fide member of the media. Indeed, he’s a  self-admitted Journolist member who despite (or perhaps because) of that involvement has a specific assignment involving covering this fall’s elections. On August 27, CBS announced its 2010 campaign coverage team. Marc Ambinder is on that team (HT Media Bistro ): Chief Political Consultant Marc Ambinder and Political Analyst and Contributor John Dickerson will join a veteran group led by CBS EVENING NEWS Anchor and Managing Editor Katie Couric that includes Chief Washington Correspondent Bob Schieffer, Senior Political Correspondent Jeff Greenfield and Correspondents Wyatt Andrews, Sharyl Attkisson, Jan Crawford, Nancy Cordes, Byron Pitts, Bill Plante, Chip Reid, Dean Reynolds and Political Analyst Dan Bartlett. Anthony Mason will once again help break down and analyze election night results for CBS’s viewers. “This already is one of the most-anticipated midterm elections in a generation, and CBS News is adding exceptional talent to offer our audiences comprehensive coverage in a complex and exciting political environment,” said McManus. “Complementing the award-winning tradition of CBS News with the latest technology, our remarkable team will completely cover all aspects of this pivotal election season.” Other items in Ambinder’s seven-pointer at the Atlantic give further clues as to where he stands: 3. I understand why some Republicans are trying to point out that Democrats are “crazy” too by noting how they re-nominated Rep. Charles Rangel in NY 15 and kicked out reformist mayor Adrian Fenty in Washington. That dog won’t hunt. 6. Expect an uptick in Democratic enthusiasm and expect several significant races to tighten. People tend to make judgments through the lens of the last major event. If Democrats interpret last night to mean that radical Republicans are threatening to take control, they’re going to be more receptive to the basic party message. Of course Ambinder’s entitled to his opinions, but facts on the ground appear to be contradicting them: As to his Point 3, the voters in Rangel’s district may or may not be crazy, but at least you can say that 49% of those who cast ballots voted for someone else . If you want evidence of Democratic “craziness,” how about the fact that Rangel got “endorsements and phone calls to voters” from former president Bill Clinton and pretend-Independent Mike Bloomberg? As to Point 6, maybe an enthusiasm uptick is on the way, but it’s missing so far. Two separate items from the Associated Press, which would surely jump on any hint of the real thing happening, demonstrate that it’s not here yet. The AP’s Mark S. Smith, in a report on President Obama’s Saturday speech to the Congressional Black Caucus, specifically cited “polls showing his party facing a wide ‘enthusiasm gap’ with the GOP,” and pollsters’ warnings “that blacks are among the key Democratic groups who right now seem unlikely to turn out in large numbers in November.” In a Sunday morning submission, the AP’s Julie Hirschfeld Davis noted that “in dozens of competitive districts … enthusiasm for the president is at a low; even some of his strongest backers aren’t motivated to go to the polls.” As if anyone needed further reinforcement, here is a passage from a year-ago post by Jeff Poor at NewsBusters addressing Ambinder’s opinion of Sarah Palin’s qualifications to express an opinion about ObamaCare’s “comparative effectiveness” regime (which was actually enshrined into law as part of the February 2009 stimulus bill nobody read), aka “Death Panels,” in a Wall Street Journal op-ed: One left-leaning pundit has questioned if Palin was qualified to interject herself into the debate. Marc Ambinder wrote on the Atlantic Web site on Sept. 8 (that) the media shouldn’t take her Journal op-ed seriously because she doesn’t have the policy “chops” to take on this issue. “Palin has policy credibility problems. Big ones,” Ambinder wrote. “A few op-eds aren’t going to help her. But if the media treats her as as [sic] a legitimate and influential voice today, she won’t need to do the hard work that will result in her learning more about policy and actually becoming conversant in the issues that she, as a potential presidential candidate, will deal with.” However, the argument could made that Palin, with a baby with Down Syndrome, does have real-life expertise dealing with the American health care system. And her position as governor of Alaska makes her qualified to give insight into the bureaucratization of any part of the public sector, despite Ambinder’s calls to dismiss her as a serious voice in the health care debate. That was a great final point by Jeff. Apparently in Ambinder’s world, personal experience with medical challenges and dealing with the medical care delivery system don’t count. Ah, but serving in policy roles that lead to ghoulish ideas like Zeke the Bleak Emanuel’s “complete lives system,” whose priorities for allocating care include “youngest-first, prognosis, save the most lives, lottery, and instrumental value” (i.e., a death panels regime) — that’s great stuff. Ambinder is indeed correct in his assertion that “The media is going to help the Democratic Party’s national messaging.” It appears pretty likely that he’ll be serving as a willing provider of such assistance, and that his ability to deliver objective commentary as a CBS “Chief Political Consultant” is highly suspect. The presence of folks like Ambinder at CBS goes a long way towards explaining why it seems likely that most viewers will be getting their election news somewhere else during the next seven weeks. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Marc Ambinder: ‘Media Is Going to Help the Democratic Party’s National Messaging’

Attacking ‘Ideologically Slanted’ Journalism, Media Critic Blames Conservatives

A journalist with a political agenda is not necessarily a dishonest one, and a journalist who claims to be objective is not necessarily honest. These are useful facts to bear in mind as media liberals call for Andrew Breitbart’s head. Breitbart posted video of recently-fired USDA official Shirley Sherrod claiming she considered race in allocating federal agriculture funds. The apparent racism was debunked when the entire video surfaced, showing that Sherrod had actually discouraged such actions. “This is what happens” wrote Eric Deggans for the St. Petersburg “when ideologically-focused noise machines are treated like real news outlets.” Conspicuously absent in Deggans’s screed is any mention of the recently-discovered attempt by liberal commentators to maliciously – and falsely, by their own admission – brand their ideological opponents as racists. Also absent: any mention of the litany of instances of dishonest and counter-factual reporting from the purportedly “objective” media. Let’s take those in order. For those completely disconnected from the realm of political journalism, the Daily Caller recently unearthed a 2008 effort by a number of the left’s leading reporters and commentators to bury the Rev. Wright scandal , which almost sank Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. “Pick one of Obama’s conservative critics,” wrote Spencer Ackerman, then a blogger with the Washington Independent, “Fred Barnes, Karl Rove, who cares — and call them racists.” The phrase “who cares” demonstrates that neither Ackerman nor anyone who took his advice cared if the targets of this smear campaign was racist. Malicious intent is self-evident. Why did Deggans completely omit this bit from his piece? He chose to focus only on Breitbart, who, he claims, had no part in editing the video in question nor knowledge that the context of the video contradicted the apparent racism he thought he was exposing. Obviously Breitbart has a significant interest in proclaiming his lack of culpability for dishonest journalistic practices. But no one has provided any evidence contradicting his claims. But the point is that Ackerman and his JournoList cohorts planned on portraying commentators as racist when they knew the opposite to be true. On its face, that is a more condemnable journalistic offense. While this glaring double standard undermines Deggans’s credibility in discussing honest reporting, the numerous examples of similar journalistic malfeasance on Old Media’s part – conveniently omitted from Deggan’s column – undermines the argument itself. Deggans speculates on what the intended impact was of Breitbart’s video: unveiling video so explosive that media outlets are pushed to jump on the story without properly vetting it, amplified through hundreds of like-minded platforms. Mainstream media outlets get sucked into the frenzy by allegations that moving slowly is evidence of liberal bias, while all involved are pressured to shut down the story quickly as possible with a resignation or similar action… Once again, mainstream news outlets have been accused of bias in moving slowly to cover a story trumpeted by ideologically slanted media outlets — the Washington Post’s ombudsman even chided his own newspaper for moving too slowly on the story… But Sherrod’s case shows exactly why fair-minded news outlets should be careful — taking time to make sure these stories trumpeted by media outlets with clear political agendas are examined carefully. It’s time to put the brakes on a runaway media culture open to manipulation and subversion; outlets moving slowly on stories shouldn’t necessarily be penalized. In other words, by Deggans’s account, “ideologically slanted” media outlets, simply by their nature, encourage a lackluster approach to the news by the “fair-minded media outlets,” who are working either to avoid being pre-empted on a story, or to avoid being accused of bias. But then the issue is not the format of the news – who reports it through which medium – but rather the standards of journalism at play. Deggans fails to account for the litany of cases in which traditional – what he calls “fair minded” – media outlets have committed journalistic malpractice strikingly similar to those of which Breitbart stands accused. Just to take two high profile examples, “fair-minded” outlets have leveled very serious false allegations against the last two Republican candidates for president. In 2004, of course, CBS “60 Minutes” anchor Dan Rather’s career ended after the supposedly-groundbreaking documents showing that George W. Bush had failed to follow orders and was excused from basic duties during his stint in the Texas Air National Guard were complete forgeries. Not only were the documents fake, not only did CBS move forward with the report without vetting the story properly, but it was in fact ideologically-driven bloggers – the type Deggans thinks are “hurting America” – who exposed the story as the fraud that it was. Four years later, the New York Times printed a front-page story suggesting that then-GOP presidential candidate John McCain had had an affair with lobbyist Vicki Iseman. There was no evidence whatsoever to back up the claim, but the Times ran it anyway. By the end of the day, when it was clear the story was a sham, the paper was furiously backpedaling and trying to shift the public’s focus away from its shoddy journalistic practices. Before it could, though, the story spread like wildfire – another phenomenon Deggans erroneously attributes uniquely to new media. As Brent Bozell wrote at the time , The mystique of the New York Times remains so great in the media establishment that within hours, the network morning shows all rumbled forward with furrowed brows chanting it was a crisis…for McCain. CBS morning host Harry Smith found a bombshell hedged with a may-have: “This bombshell report that Republican front-runner John McCain may have had a romantic relationship with a lobbyist who was a visitor to his office and traveled with him on a client’s corporate jet.” On ABC, former Clinton sex-denier George Stephanopoulos laughably claimed this could be an earthquake. On a scale of one to ten, with ten being fatal, George guessed this flimsy slime bubble was a “six or a seven…a damaging story, there’s no doubt about that.” On NBC, Tim Russert said the story would “play out today in a very big way.” In sum, “ideologically slanted” journalists are not inherently less honest than Old Media’s “fair minded” reporters, nor are they necessarily more sloppy with their verification. The truth is the truth, regardless of one’s politics. Breitbart’s video was clearly dishonest (whether or not he intended it to be). But let’s not pretend that dishonesty in journalism is confined to the digital right.

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Attacking ‘Ideologically Slanted’ Journalism, Media Critic Blames Conservatives