Will this week mark the beginning of a new phase in the way that Fox News is perceived by the rest of the media, and perhaps ultimately the public too? As surprising as that sounds, it seems plausible.
Politico’s Ben Smith reported yesterday that News Corporation, Fox’s parent company, had donated $1 million to the Chamber of Commerce, the business lobby that’s shaping up as the single most important outside backer of Republican candidates this election cycle. That news came on the heels of another $1 million contribution by News Corp., this one to the Republican Governors Association.
Until now, the rest of the media has largely treated Fox News as one of its own. When the issue of Fox’s ideological agenda has periodically come to the surface—generally when the Obama White House has decided to make an issue of it—other reporters, particularly those in the Washington press corps, have tended to come to Fox’s defense. They’ve pointed out that Major Garrett, until August the network’s White House correspondent, is fair, and that it’s unseemly and (the biggest dodge of all) politically unwise, for the White House to go after the press. And mainstream print outlets like The New York Times, The Washington Post, and the Associated Press still can’t bring themselves to flatly refer to Fox’s ideological agenda, instead relying on versions of the tried-and-true “critics say,” formulation.
But in giving $2 million to GOP-affiliated groups this cycle, Fox has largely dropped the pretense (and yes, other companies, like GE, that own big media outlets have made political contributions before, but not on anything like this scale.)*
So will the rest of the media now feel emboldened to do the same?
The early indicators are encouraging. Even before news of the donation to the Chamber surfaced, the Los Angeles Times’s James Rainey—a columnist rather than a straight reporter, admittedly—wrote Wednesday of a “new order” in which “Fox’s supposed news personalities—not just its prime-time opinion makers—routinely pound away at conservative talking points.” And Politico’s Smith, pivoting off Rainey, called on reporters to cover Fox “as the political actors they often are,” adding: “reporters don’t have to take Fox at its word on its own ‘balance’ any more than we have to take a politician at his word.”
Whether the rest of the media follows Smith’s advice is perhaps the key question going forward. Wringing one’s hands at the decline of “objective” journalism misses the point, because Fox can and will continue to do what it wants. What’s important, if only for the sake of simple accuracy, is simply that Fox comes to be seen for what it is. And it’s at least possible that this week’s news will start to make that happen.
UPDATE, 2:20 PM: This sentence article originally suggested that Fox had given money directly to the Republican party. The text has been changed.

That's it Zachary, put that George Soros money to work! I'm sure he's proud of you.
#1 Posted by JLD, CJR on Fri 1 Oct 2010 at 08:30 PM
George Soros money goes to things that do not financially benefit George Soros. Can't say the same thing about Newscorp.
George Soros admits his agenda. Does anyone really believe Fox News is, "Fair and Balanced"?
#2 Posted by Ron R, CJR on Fri 1 Oct 2010 at 09:08 PM
This is not about "Conservative" vs. "Liberal."
This is about a free America of Sovereign Citizens fighting with their First Amendment rights, against those who wish to murder it.
This is a soft war imposed by globalists and Marxists, upon America.
I am glad for Fox News or anyone else who fights for America.
#3 Posted by Arlen Williams, CJR on Sat 2 Oct 2010 at 12:56 PM
Oooh, the boogerbears are coming out from under the bed now. George Soros, oooooh. Globalists and Marxists, eeeeek! Notice that no one is attempting to claim that Fox News is anything except a propaganda mill for the right. In fact, the conservatives tend to celebrate it, and "defend" it by hurling the usual insults and smears at its critics: "You're funded by Soros!!" (as if there aren't a score of billionaires contributing their fortunes to right-wing causes, each one giving more than Soros ever dreamed of giving), "You're a globalist and a Marxist" (can you even define what those terms mean, or are they just Beck- and Limbaugh-sourced scare terms?).
So, it's okay for the right to have its own Pravda, churning out far-right propaganda and contributing millions to its candidates. Is that the consensus? Leave out the insults and the scare words, conservatives, and answer up.
#4 Posted by Michael Tuck, CJR on Sat 2 Oct 2010 at 06:52 PM
General Electric makes campaign donations. GE owns NBC. NBC's offshoot is the left-wing MSNBC, recently all-but-anointed as the administration's news conduit by the President of the United States himself. I'm quite willing to concede Fox's rightward tilt - although Murdoch himself is not as predictabel as George Soros in his political stances. Are Michael and the others, possibly innocent of the kind of judgement that, by the standards applied to Fox, convicts most other news outfits of bias, too, willing to concede that Fox is not alone and unique in bringing an ideological world-view (urban, 'liberal', etc.) to their reporting? ABC, with Stephenopoulos, Sawyer (winner, Poynter reports, of one of this year's 'Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Awards'), Chris Cuomo strongly setting the editorial agenda? NBC, sharing working reporters and editors with unapologetically Democratic-leaning MSNBC?
The latest Gallup survey on this topic, mysterioulsy unreported by CJR, shows consumers by a 48-15 margin find 'the media' tilts 'too liberal' vs. 'too conservative'. Only Democrats expressed satisfaction. Newscorps contributes money to the GOP; other media groups donate their resources for free, as consumers have concluded.
#5 Posted by Mark Richard, CJR on Mon 4 Oct 2010 at 12:19 PM