The profane confrontation between one of Mitt Romney’s press aides and reporters at the end of the presumptive GOP nominee’s difficult overseas trip has brought new attention to the way the 2012 race is being covered in the press—in particular, the media’s embarrassing gaffe obsession and the incentives it provides for campaigns to place ever-greater limitations on access to their candidates in unscripted settings.
This dynamic has been especially pathological for Romney. Politico’s Jonathan Martin best captured how the presumptive GOP nominee’s relationship with the media has devolved into a self-perpetuating cycle of gaffes and access restrictions:
Without anything of substance to say [in Europe] beyond what he’s repeatedly said in the U.S., he created something of a vacuum that he then filled with his own gaffes.
And he made the situation worse by effectively hiding from his traveling press corps for much of his trip, taking three questions at the beginning but then not holding a single other press conference. He conducted a series of TV interviews but offered significantly less access than Obama did on his overseas campaign trip four years ago.
Romney is in the midst of a harmful, self-reinforcing cycle in which he commits a gaffe, grows angry at the press for covering it and punishes them by refusing to take questions because he doesn’t want to be asked about the gaffe.
This has created an almost toxic relationship between Romney and his traveling press corps.
While the gaffe patrol isn’t the only reason that the presidential campaigns are placing such tight limitations on the press, any discussion of those issues should acknowledge the role that the media’s seeming hostility toward Romney is playing in the coverage and in the access restrictions that have been imposed by his campaign. By early 2011, it was apparent that many reporters viewed Romney as inauthentic and were selecting anecdotes to report that were consistent with this narrative. Coverage during the GOP primaries and the ensuing months was often similarly hostile. Fearful of the media focusing on the mistakes of its error-prone candidate, the campaign has locked down Romney so tightly that the traveling press were only granted a total of three questions during the seven-day foreign trip (though Romney did conduct substantive interviews with broadcast and cable networks).
As I’ve noted before, the best comparison for the Romney/media dynamic is the way the press covered Al Gore in the 1999-2000 period. Like Romney, Gore was portrayed as inauthentic by a hostile press corps (which even jeered him at a debate) and burned by “gotcha” coverage during his primary campaign with Bill Bradley. As a result, the Vice President became very cautious and restricted media access later in the primary season. The cycle of hostility and access restrictions continued during the general election, helping to produce some of the worst political journalism in recent memory.
The media’s focus on authenticity and gaffes is helping to fuel a similar dynamic with Romney today. Of course, reporters have every right to be frustrated with the lack of access they are being given to the candidate. But journalists and news organizations are responsible for how they respond to this situation—which has no obvious solution—and should be careful to avoid letting their grievances fuel pathological coverage. The most dramatic example from Romney’s trip overseas was The Washington Post’s Phil Rucker desperately shouting “What about your gaffes?” at Romney, a question that Salon’s Alex Pareene called “maybe the dumbest question I’ve heard” and “a perfect beautiful little 2012 campaign zen koan.”
Beyond the frustration and resentment, an underlying problem is that the demand for gaffe news far exceeds the public’s interest in substantive reporting, especially during a general election in which only 5% of adults are truly undecided. The average news consumer follows presidential politics more like a sports fan than some sort of ideal citizen. Though there’s little evidence that gaffes prompt voters to rethink their loyalties, Romney’s missteps seem like news in this context.
At this point, the media’s relationship with Romney may be irreparable. Still, it’s within reporters’ power to break this destructive cycle. How might they do so? First, while the vast majority of voters have already selected their preferred presidential candidate, there’s still value in substantive coverage that explores the consequences of the candidates’ agendas (for instance, a new analysis of Romney’s tax plan that was widely covered yesterday).
Second, journalists should seek to provide smarter coverage of campaign dynamics. We’ve seen innovations in political coverage from non-traditional outlets like HuffPost Pollster (where I often cross-post) and Sasha Issenberg’s fascinating Victory Lab series for Slate. Rather than churning out an endless series of gaffe reports and commentary, why not incorporate the best aspects of these approaches and develop a new model for horse race journalism? With more types of stories in the mix, the pressure on reporters to manufacture gaffes might lessen.
In the end, the cycle of gaffe coverage and access restrictions produces little but bad journalism and poisoned press/campaign relationships. No one wins—least of all readers.
There were no gaffes during the overseas trip That was a narrative invented by a press corps completely in the tank for Obama. What there was was honesty and courage. In England, he justifyably, based on his extensive experience, expressed entirely reasonable concern about the reports he had heard. This this flew in the face of the hometown flagwaving going on at the time makes it courageous, not a gaffe. In Israel, he sided with our ally and stiff-armed our enemies in the region. Not a gaffe, a recommendation. If Romney had delivered nothing but platitudes, he'd have been criticized for that. He can't win with them, but he will win in November.
#1 Posted by Bill, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 03:33 PM
Oh man, Brendan, there you go again, more false equivalence. Al Gore may have misplayed his relationship with the media, but he was unfairly skewered for things that he said that were TRUE or generally true, such as his role in the creation of the Internet and his and Tipper's relationship helping inspire Love Story. What you refuse to recognize, even though you quote that Politico article accurately explaining how Romney has helped create this narrative, is that Romney continues to say and do things that lead reporters to conclude he's stiff, tin-eared, inauthentic, insensitive, cut off from average people's concerns, not well informed on foreign policy, oriented toward the rich, etc. etc. etc. These reporters are around Romney constantly and as human beings inevitably form personal feelings, attitudes, and beliefs toward the candidate. They don't seem to like what they see, and they are reporting what Romney is saying and doing that leads them to these negative evaluations. Yes, we'd all like to see more substantive policy coverage. I would LOVE to see a closer examination of how Romney's health care proposals would affect the average person (so far only Noam Levey and I have done any kind of close look, as far as I know). But even some high-level Republican and conservative observers are finding Romney problematic,, shall we say, as a candidate. Your harping at media organizations for focusing on Romney's obvious gaffes is getting highly annoying.
#2 Posted by Harris Meyer, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 03:39 PM
Here's the thing, No one is more annoyed with the emphasis on gaffes and gossip about who strapped what to the roof of their car than me.
In spite of the fact his gaffes are revealing of his charecter:
http://digbysblog.blogspot.ca/2012/08/romneygaffe-cant-even-properly-defend.html
It's not like these are the things which should define a leader or his party. If you ask me, one of the reasons why Romney is getting flack from the usually obsequious press is because of the way he does restrict the press and tolerates critical discussion. He comes from the dictatorial board room culture in which he answers to no one, he's the person people answer to. In which case, the press can't play the same game that they normally play with their subjects as defined here in relation to crime:
http://www.cjr.org/feature/cell_coverage.php?page=3
"The flip side of that is that our news media are very interested in using crime to boost their ratings or circulation. To maintain that relationship with the police and prosecutors, you can’t really be critical of the system, because they’re your sources. And that gets very little analysis, much less soul searching or ethical inquiry, by people in the news media."
Exchange a few words like "crime" and "prosecutors" with "politics" and "politicians" and you've got a description of how politico and much of the political press file their bread and butter.
And the problem with Romney is that, unlike McCain (pre-Palin) or Bush who were carrot and stick, he's all stick.
And so he's got the gossip machine focused on him.
Gore, on the other hand, was bashed because the press were drudge addicted and high on the smell of Clinton's bedroom. He was a target from day one and the press focused on him and his 'gaffes' to the exclusion of policy discussion (which bored poor Maureen Dowd) and the qualifications and policies of his opponent (who was good enough to have a beer with, which means he must be good enough to lead tye world's biggest economy).
Which is why I'm annoyed at the coverage of gaffes, because have you seen Romney's policies?
#3 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 04:20 PM
Seriously, have you seen them?
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/dooh-nibor/
http://www.balloon-juice.com/2012/08/02/why-mitt-will-lose-or-your-modern-gop-in-one-line-of-arithmetic/
Catastrophic. (though, as we learned with Bush, being policy-wise catastrophic isn't enough incentive for the press to tone down the gossip a moment and inform the public. Gossip is a seller)
#4 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 04:32 PM
It was funny. I was reviewing a little of how the press covered Gore's Iraq war speech, in which they made him out to seem he was a delusional, dishonest, fire breathing, bearded mountain man who was acting in unprecedented fashion in questioning the sitting president and something came to mind about the press coverage back then, and something came up in that review.
http://dailyhowler.com/dh101702.shtml
"As has been their practice for years, the RNC sent out an “attack memo” claiming that Nasty Old Gore Lied Again. Their memo included an irrelevant quote from Gore in 1991, in which Gore defended Bush’s decision to leave Saddam in power. The fact that Gore also criticized Bush for abandoning the Shiites and Kurds somehow failed to make an appearance in the RNC memo.
So the RNC dissembled about Gore, as the org has been doing for years. And in another familiar pattern, many pundits ran to type the RNC’s claim—including Tim Noah at Slate. For the record, we didn’t criticize Noah at the time. He treated this issue in passing, as part of a much longer effort, and so we focussed on other scribes who made major efforts to push the RNC line."
Oh yeah, the republicans were basically feeding the press for years scandal after scandal which, in the years following the consolidation, monetization, and
downsizingstreamlining of the news, meant that the RNC was basically taking the work off reporters shoulders asvast right wing conspiraciespartisan networks took over the task of investigative reporting. Hell, the congress was spending millions of dollars vetting a Christmas card list so, where there's smoke, there must be fire, right?(Except in the case of Iran/Contra or other similar scandals. There, where there's smoke, there must be 'silence for the good of the country')
So yeah, RNC points, Drudge, Fox stuff was constantly dripping into the press during the Gore campaign:
http://dailyhowler.com/dh112902.shtml
"Gore said that certain orgs (Fox; Rush; the Washington Times) “are, truthfully speaking, part and parcel of the Republican Party.” But he also said this: “Most of the media [has] been slow to recognize the pervasive impact of this fifth column in their ranks—that is, day after day, injecting the daily Republican talking points into the definition of what’s objective as stated by the news media as a whole.”...
Do Republican talking points rule today’s media? The phenomenon was quite apparent all through Campaign 2000."
Cont..
#5 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 10:14 PM
So yeah, are the accusations and maltreatment of Romney all the result of DNC talking points taken uncritically and used to spear the Republican candidate? Are they as separated from fact as the accusations that traveled down from talk radio onto the tv set on a regular basis because of "Cokie's Law"? (Look it up)
And WHY is nobody talking about the policies?
Well, while the lazy press was letting the partisan mucksters do their dirty dirty work so that the press could gossip some more about it, there were policies to discuss. From that same Somerby link above:
"Why does Krugman stand alone in the press? That has long been a crucial question; let’s frame it as we’ve done in the past. In September 2000, Krugman devoted three separate columns to a key point. Candidate Bush was grossly misstating his own budget plan.. Although Krugman had explained the matter three times, the pundit corps didn’t say Boo about it. Instead, troubled pundits searched their souls about that school desk down in Florida."
He sites this old profile of Krugman:
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2001/0212.confessore.html
"[I]f dismantling the facade of lies around, say, Bush's tax cut is so easy to do--and makes you the most talked-about newspaper writer in the country--why don't any other reporters or columnists do it themselves? Because doing so would violate some of the informal, but strict, rules under which Washington journalists operate. Reporters usually don't call a spade a spade, unless the lie is small or something personal. When it comes to big policy disagreements, most reporters prefer a he-said, she-said approach--and any policy with a white paper or press release behind it is presumed to be plausible and sincere, no matter how farfetched or deceptive it may be.
Similarly, among pundits of the broad center-left, it's considered gauche to criticize the right too persistently, no matter the merits of one's argument. The only worse sin is to defend a politician too persistently; then you become not a bore, but a disgrace to the profession and its independence--even if you're correct."
When we take the substance and research out of political reporting, all you've got left is ill informed gossip spoon fed by the people most connected at the parties. And those people are republican.
As Josh Marshall wrote:
"In Washington there's a formal government and a para-government. The formal government itself has all sorts of different layers to it -- the current crop of political appointees, the career employees, etc. But for the moment, let's put everyone who draws a paycheck from the United States government to one side and focus on everyone else.
Who are we talking about? The journalists. The lobbyists. The people who work in the think tanks and quasi-think tanks where purported policy experts work. The employees of the majority activist groups on both sides of the political spectrum. The list could go on and on. But this gives a basic flavor of who we're talking about...
We're coming off of, or at least we've had a period of (because who knows about the future) thirty plus years of conservative dominance of Washington."
And what did that result in? Stuff like this.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/23/AR2007032301450.html
"The Washington conventional wisdom machine always defines "fairness" as a carefully calibrated point exactly between the positions of the two parties, no matter how outrageous one of the positions might be."
The problem is this cycle of conservative radicals, a press that prefers trivial and 'balanced' over accurate, and democrats who are too afraid not to be weak.
#6 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 2 Aug 2012 at 10:48 PM
The people who run things wanted Bush to win, and they want Obama to win. They know the right-wing economic agenda has a better chance of continuing under Obama (who loves that agenda) than under a Republican, whose policies Democrats will suddenly recognize as destructive.
As Glen Ford said, Obama is the more effective evil.
#7 Posted by Avedon, CJR on Fri 3 Aug 2012 at 09:44 AM
"As Glen Ford said, Obama is the more effective evil."
You have a point, but it needs to be qualified. Remember, Nader voters were saying the same thing about Gore and look at how that turned out.
People are sensitized to right wing policies and consequences when these idiots are in charge, and it's true that the left fights harder against a right wing in power, but all that sensitivity and fight has to mean something to those in charge in order to be effective.
We saw that it doesn't. The republicans erect free speech zones and label anyone vocal enough to be heard a traitor. The media mainly refuses to cover the facts (downing street memos?) and protests (2003 anti-war movement) or when it does cover them it's with a tone of ridicule. OWS outside of MSNBC was not taken seriously and when the baton's started cracking on people's heads, nobody seemed to care much.
Popular dissent doesn't matter unless it is taken seriously and it won't be taken seriously unless a Koch brother is backing it and doing its pr or it gives the press reason to fear.
Republicans do not fear civil movements. And if a civil movement gets the the wrong people jittery the movement will find itself in the crosshairs of an even more expanded security state.
You've got to understand, republicans are not interested in long term electoral victories, they know what they want is unpopular. They are interested in opportunities to entrench agenda victories. Every opportunity they get to take an inch, they will find a way to turn it into a meter.
They got an inch with the 2000 Nader campaign. Don't give them the opportunity to take more.
#8 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Fri 3 Aug 2012 at 01:09 PM
Gaffe - n. When a politician inadvertently speaks honestly, resulting in embarrassment for the Statist establishment.
#9 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Fri 3 Aug 2012 at 02:47 PM
"They know the right-wing economic agenda has a better chance of continuing under Obama (who loves that agenda) than under a Republican"
I just want to follow up on that point. There is a good chance that when Obama and the lame duck congress get back into session, they will find it in their hearts to enact the grand bargain and cut social security benefits through raising the eligibility, reducing the payouts, and means testing the program. As anyone has gone through may posts in the last 4 years can tell you, Obama has been a conservative guy who sacrifices the strength of liberal positions for the sake of conservative compromise over and over again. You cannot say he didn't know the conservatives would not compromise, because they were plainly nuts, so when he "compromised" it was because he was putting forth the proposals he really believed in while letting 'those darn conservatives' take the blame for making him do conservative things. When democrats had the majorities, he used conservative democrats for the same purpose.
So I'm not saying support Obama in all things and ignore Obama's glaring weaknesses, in fact When he tries these 'Shucks, the conservatives mare me' tactics with the entitlements so that Bowles Simpson, or some other David Walker conspired BS proposal gets pushed, you are gojng to have to fight him.
But, against this opposition, you can't play games during elections. Republicans are awful choices and many democrats are slightly less awful.
So in primaries and in public support the democrats worth supporting:
http://www.esquire.com/_mobile/blogs/politics/Luke_Russert_Deadline_Hero
Because, in the end, these will be the people who will fight for the things we believe and fight the opposition for what they are - an anti-opportunity, anti-society, anti-family, anti-middle class political movement bent on giving further riches to the rich by wringing it from the middle class:
http://digbysblog.blogspot.ca/2012/08/scott-brown-maintains-big-lie-and-big.html
And they have the money, infrastructure, and now the legal right to saturate anonymously the public discussion. The window of opportunity to beat this back is closing. Now isn't the time to ask whether Obama is the lesser or more effective evil, now is the time to seek out the people who will be the greater good. Elizabeth Warren is one of those people who can change the discussion and redeem the current politics. Feingold was another at one time and, because of Obama's fiascos with the public option and the lobbyist written health care bill, democrats stayed home and Feingold went down.
When parties fail you, you've got to build something better, not let it fall apart. Republicans manage this over and over, so where are the democrats?
#10 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sat 4 Aug 2012 at 04:35 AM
"There were no gaffes during the overseas trip That was a narrative invented by a press corps completely in the tank for Obama."
That's ridiculous. When something you've said provokes the British PM and the Mayor of London to publicly insult you, on camera, you've committed a gaffe. That's not something the press can make up.
#11 Posted by StanWright, CJR on Tue 7 Aug 2012 at 01:28 AM
Here's the thing: If Romney were to say something substantive, reporters might cover that, but he doesn't so they cover the gaffes instead.
#12 Posted by nitpicker, CJR on Tue 7 Aug 2012 at 08:56 AM