On February 9, 1950, a back-bench Wisconsin senator named Joseph McCarthy delivered an unheralded political speech to a Republican women’s club in West Virginia. McCarthy’s Wheeling remarks included the brief and completely fabricated claim that he had in his hand the names of 205 known Communists in the State Department.
Within 24 hours—with the number of “card-carrying Communists” dancing from 207 to 57 to 81 and no list ever being produced—McCarthy’s charges exploded across America. As Haynes Johnson recounts in his book, The Age of Anxiety, the transmission belt was from the Wheeling Intelligencer to the state Associated Press wire to the national AP to McCarthy press conferences in Denver and Salt Lake City to more wire copy. Without McCarthy offering a shred of evidence, influential newspapers like the Washington Evening Star ran credulous front-page headlines: “McCarthy Charges 57 in State Department Hold Red Party Cards.”
This early failure of the press corps to challenge McCarthy’s guttersnipe tactics was supposed to offer an eternal-flame object lesson in the limitations of stenographic journalism. But the Donald Trump birther circus this week serves as a reminder that these McCarthy era lessons need to be re-taught to every generation.
Tuesday morning’s grotesquely sycophantic CNBC interview of Trump by “Squawk Box” co-anchor Joe Kernen may have been the journalistic nadir of this political season. It was disturbing enough that Kernen never challenged Trump’s incendiary claims that Barack Obama’s “mother was never in the hospital…They can’t find any records that the mother was in the hospital.” (In fact, Obama’s long-form birth certificate shows that he was born in Honolulu’s Kapiolani Hospital). But Kernen also chimed in with his own birther lie, drawn from unnamed “conservative websites,” that Obama had all but admitted that he was born in Kenya during an Illinois campaign debate.
If Trump were in his normal role as self-promoting real-estate vulgarian, political reporters could, in theory, ignore his low-road conspiracy theories. But on the very day that he was denouncing the president’s Hawaiian birth certificate as a sham, Trump was also introducing Romney at a $2 million Las Vegas fundraiser. In addition, the Romney campaign has been soliciting online contributions with a “Dine with The Donald” promotion in which the lucky winner will be flown to New York to share a meal with Romney and Trump.
In 1950, amid the “Red Menace” hysteria, newspaper editors assumed that a United States Senator with a purported list of Communists in the State Department was newsworthy because of his elected office and the probability that he knew something. In Trump’s case, he is newsworthy because he is joined at the hip with the de facto Republican presidential nominee—and, frighteningly enough, could even have a role in a Romney administration.
So we are back to the same question that the AP West Virginia night editor in Charleston, Charles R. Lewis, had to deal with after McCarthy’s Wheeling speech 62 years ago: What do you do if someone newsworthy says something inflammatory and malicious, and not rooted in fact? (Mary Winter adroitly discussed analogous issues in a recent CJR column reviewing coverage of birtherism in a Colorado House race.)
The obvious wrong answer, which is the approach that Lewis followed, was to double-check the accuracy of the quote and then publish devoid of context. In contrast, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer in his own Tuesday interview with Trump deserves plaudits for personally challenging every noxious birther claim and showing on-screen Obama long-form birth certificate. But most political journalists, especially those who are not TV anchors, are unlikely to get access to Trump for a protracted back-and-forth in which outlandish conspiracy theories can be debunked.
So how should birther bedlam and things that go Trump in the night be covered?
Recognizing 21st-century deadline pressures and standard journalistic strictures against editorializing in news columns, I nonetheless found most press coverage of Trump’s charges to be tepid. A New York Times story by Ashley Parker dealt at length with the political ramifications of the Romney-Trump relationship, but merely described claims of a faked birth certificate to be “a long-discredited accusation.” In Politico, a three-page political strategy story by Maggie Haberman and Reid J. Epstein (“Mitt Romney won’t dump Trump”) limited its skepticism about the underlying charges to a 13-word, second-paragraph summary: “Trump is essentially dismissing the legitimacy of the commander-in-chief’s birth certificate.” But that was advocacy journalism compared to an uninflected blog post at CBS.com by Stephanie Condon that only quoted an Obama campaign statement in response to Trump.
The belief that Obama knowingly released from the White House a counterfeit birth certificate is more than, as the Times timorously put it, “a long-discredited accusation.” It also represents more than, as the standard liberal litany has it, evidence that the birther movement is coded racism emphasizing Obama’s other-ness.
What we are dealing with here are claims that the Kenyan-born president of the United States willfully subverted the Constitution for his own ambition. Think of it—that is somewhere between Richard Nixon’s impeachment and treason. That is why the Joe McCarthy analogy (a comparison that I use, at most, once a decade) is so apt. Campaign reporters dealing with the vitriol from Trump and other birthers should ask themselves, “How would I have covered a major 1950s political figure who echoed the John Birch Society’s charges that President Dwight Eisenhower was a knowing agent of the international Communist conspiracy?”
My own answer—and I realize that it could make all future Trump stories clunky—is to overwhelm the reader with evidence why the birther conspiracy theories are factually wrong. A version of this approach was found in a 12-paragraph Los Angeles Times blog post on Trump by Morgan Little that pointedly included two paragraphs detailing how Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett had recently apologized for challenging Obama’s birthplace after receiving official documents from Hawaii. I also understand the impulse that prompted Jeremy Stahl in Slate to call Trump’s theories “batshit,” even though I suspect that this emphatic compound noun is not likely to grace the pages of The New York Times. (Political scientist Brendan Nyhan, who has written for CJR about his research showing that too much repetition of false charges, even to debunk them, can contribute to reader misperception, has further thoughts on effective strategies here).
If only Trump were a trompe l’oeil illusion that you could blink away to return to standard campaign coverage. But his attention-getting endorsement of birther bile is so insidious that campaign reporters must always go beyond Trump-claimed-and-Democrats-responded false equivalence. Some things in politics are simply out of bounds—as Joe McCarthy demonstrated six decades ago.
Why does Andrew Sorkin act as a supine presence while the Kerner - Trump love-fest unfolds on this excerpt? Sorkin is a real journalist whilst the CNBC crew are acting like fugitives from The Weather Channel.
#1 Posted by Mike Robbins, CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 02:12 PM
Lot of ignorance and rewriting of history for an agenda.
While its true that McCarthy "list" never existed in the sense he explained the vastly majority of the people charged with being card carrying commies... were in fact card carrying commies. This was of course proven by documents released by russia post USSR break up. The media ran to the defense of the commies and even to this day when its proven beyond a doubt that they were commies and many were actively helping the USSR the media still defends them AND even worst continues to create this false narrative of a "witch hunt"/“red menace” "hysteria" against what is now well proven communist spies.
"In Trump’s case, he is newsworthy because he is joined at the hip with the de facto Republican presidential nominee—and, frighteningly enough, could even have a role in a Romney administration."
Let me ask... how many stories did you do about bill ayers, rev wright, any of a host of other ppl joined at the hip to obama? Whats that you say... talking about those ppl is wrong? O what a surprise... double standard much?
"It was disturbing enough that Kernen never challenged Trump’s incendiary claims that Barack Obama’s “mother was never in the hospital…They can’t find any records that the mother was in the hospital.”"
Hey retard... he didn't challenge it best he has no proof one way or the other and hawaii is actively blocking access to the proof. Thats why he's a journalist and your retarded. Lets also not forget that snoops.com a "well known" "fact checking" site. Has listed at least 2 different hospitals for obamas birth... obama own sister misstated his birth hospital repeatedly.... along with a whole host of others.
"(In fact, Obama’s long-form birth certificate shows that he was born in Honolulu’s Kapiolani Hospital)."
So lots of issues here. Anyone who is a journalist knows that the long-form birth cert that obama displayed is not an original. This means that anything... let me repeat for the slow retarded ppl... ANYTHING on that birth cert can be legally edited to say ANYTHING. Overall it is meaningless since he could have been born on the moon and filed paperwork to have it changed to hawaii. Once again any journalist doing any basic research into the topic would know this.
"But Kernen also chimed in with his own birther lie, drawn from unnamed “conservative websites,” that Obama had all but admitted that he was born in Kenya during an Illinois campaign debate. "
I note the lack of links for this... also using a well known propaganda site... tsk tsk. So lets look at those "unnamed" "conservative websites". Hmmm AP much?
http://web.archive.org/web/20040627142700/eastandard.net/headlines/news26060403.htm
O thats right according to this "unnamed conservative website" he wasn't born in hawaii... but hey the AP is just a fringe rightwing nutbag group after all. Surely obama's book publish will set the record straight... O WAIT.
"The obvious wrong answer, which is the approach that Lewis followed, was to double-check the accuracy of the quote and then publish devoid of context."
Yup never check for accuracy... instead do as wolf biter did and run your mouth without a thing fact, document or logic to backup your argument.
"by Ashley Parker dealt at length with the political ramifications of the Romney-Trump relationship, but merely described claims of a faked birth certificate to be “a long-discredited accusation.”"
Yeah like that whole the earth is round theory... or maybe like how evil conspiracy violent nutbags threaten with death poor innocent climate scientists. I mean I'm sure if I go back and look i'll find this site drooling over this "well proven fact"... which suddenly after much FOIing and stonewalling became a "not proven fact"
""Chubb on
#2 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 02:57 PM
While I am bored with the entire birther non controversy, I have some thoughts.
If, and please note the IF, the birth certificate is bogus, I suspect any number of share lawyers in the Repubican Party would have challenged it in a federal court of law. I recall reading a report that someone did so, and the case was thrown out. Has this been reported.
If Donald Trumpetup can prove Obama's mother was never in the hospital, he is free to do so. If he has some unique insights making him able to tell where people where on a given date without being present, his services to his country would be welcomed atcertain government offices near Langley, Virginia and Fort Meade, Maryland.
In closing it occurs to me the media isn't forced to cover "The Donald." To my knowledge, he has never been elected president, governor, U.S. Representative, U.S. Senator, Mayor, or to any federal, state, commonwealth, county, or municipal office. He has run several businesses and his mouth.
If any of my facts, as opposed to opinions, are in error, please let me know. I am occassionally in error, but never in doubt.
#3 Posted by David Reno, CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 03:13 PM
"I suspect any number of share lawyers in the Repubican Party would have challenged it in a federal court of law. "
Alot of dems and repub lawyers have challenged it. Which leads to point two.
"I recall reading a report that someone did so, and the case was thrown out. Has this been reported."
The key is thrown out. As one judge famously wrote "the issue has been blogged, twitter, fact-checked to death."
Now of course anyone following the cases should be scared to death that judge is citing twitter as a legal authority. Lets also not forget that all the case have been thrown out due to what called standing. To be read simply "As a US citizen you don't have the right to force the government to obey the US Constitution". This is scary precedent.
As to "If Donald Trumpetup can prove Obama's mother was never in the hospital, he is free to do so. "
Obama hasn't proven he was born in the US. It is not up to trump to prove anything. In order to be president you are required to show proof. Not post editable docs on web pages and say "hey go check out my webpage".
People should try that at the DMV or when they are pulled over "well officer my driving permit in on my webpage and I swear its legit not need to run it through the computer".
Also PS big challenge is going on in FL on this issue.
"Another lawsuit has been filed asking state officials to remove Barack Obama’s name from the 2012 election ballot because he has not documented that he is eligible for the office, but this case in Florida has a twist: It was brought by a Democrat.
The case was filed by Larry Klayman of Freedom Watch USA on behalf of Democrat Michael Voeltz, “a registered member of the Democrat Party"
o larry is not small time they will have alot harder time throwing his case out on technicalities and standing. Any case that gets judged on the merits of the case is losing case for obama. He has to get ever case thrown out on technicalities and standing.
#4 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 03:31 PM
I’m not sure what to say about the McCarthy analogy …. while its true that McCarthy’s list was never publicly released, the list was presented and investigated by the Tydings subcommittee in its “State Department Employee Loyalty Investigation”. At least ten of those individuals have been confirmed to have been working with the KGB: Lauchlin Currie, Harold Glasser, Gerald Graze, Standley Graze, Many Jane Keeney, David Karr, Robert T. Miller, Franz Neumann, William Remington and David Zablodowsky. Its also been established that many other were genuine security risks with them openly belonging to the Communist Party or the Young Communist League, being secret CP members, members of Party run Front Groups or having many close associates with these ties.
Considering that hundreds of government employees (and even journalists like the revered IF Stone) were spying for the Soviets and were recruited to do so by the Communist Party, people who had close associations with the Party or one of its many front groups were naturally deemed security risks. And persons holding an ideological sympathy for a hostile foreign power were tempted to betray by appeals to that ideology often coordinated by the Communist Party in the states.
In matters like these the government has always taken a better safe than sorry approach to national security … just as it should.
After all, had this den of traitorous snakes not been selling the US out, 37,000 US troops would not have died in Korea.
Its almost as if the history of the cold war stopped for progressives 1989 and they ignore the volumes of archival information released by both the Russians and US government in that time. You know what they say, those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it … or in this case write a half assed article based on an ancient and incomplete understanding of that history.
#5 Posted by Mike H, CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 03:45 PM
Professional journalists still insist there were no communist agents? Wow. That would be hilarious if it weren't so sad. Mr. Shapiro, you have some reading — and a major story-correction — to do. Chop chop! Oh, wait... You work for Yahoo! "News" and The New Republic [sic], where socialist monstrosities are routinely concealed or promoted. Never mind. *smh*
#6 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Thu 31 May 2012 at 10:21 PM
Amazing. Not surprising, but still amazing: The idea that Trump and Birthers are not out of bounds is bolstered by the equally inane notion that McCarthy was . . . right!
That there, boys and girls, spells it out completely. A large, loud and perhaps growing minority of politically-active Americans have completely lost their minds.
What tactics remain for sane people of good will when logic and facts have no power, and are instead derided as more communist conspiracy?
#7 Posted by Edward Ericson Jr., CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 11:49 AM
The idea that Trump and Birthers are not out of bounds is bolstered by the equally inane notion that McCarthy was . . . right!
I know it must be difficult to deprogram yourself after a life time spent reading “Many are the Crimes” and “Naming Names” but please, for the children, try.
#8 Posted by Mike H, CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 12:13 PM
You know, while the birther story is taking news real estate, the Florida republicans are re-trying their 1999-2000 electoral strategy of "purge the voters win the election".
And aside from McClatchy:
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/06/01/150799/justice-dept-orders-florida-to.html
and the blogs like think progress, I haven't seen much coverage.
Let's try and move from the kenyan, cherokee, etc.. nothingburgers to the coverage of an issue which will have a direct effect on the elections - their integrity.
#9 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 02:39 PM
"The idea that Trump and Birthers are not out of bounds is bolstered by the equally inane notion that McCarthy was . . . right!"
yes lets not let history or facts get in the way of propaganda.
"Let's try and move from the kenyan, cherokee, etc.. nothingburgers to the coverage of an issue which will have a direct effect on the elections - their integrity."
Yes lets "move on" from "birther" victories where birthers took down warren on the false claim of being a indian... which she used to get a job and steal millions... break many many laws... hmmm exactly as obama is doing.
I mean its not like anyone else in the democrat party is lying about their birther and legacy other then obama... O wait.
and thimbles don't you just hate the fact that yet another democrat lie has been brought down by the FOI request... which you have repeatedly said you hate and should be banned. Sucks to be you. I can only imgine the dirt that would come out if hawaii was forced to obey FOI requests about obama.
#10 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 06:44 PM
Sigh, nutjob aside:
http://www.balloon-juice.com/2012/06/01/ask-an-expert-ask-jeb-bush/
"We bitch about national media and the national political press constantly, but Rick Scott is the governor of a state, that state is Florida, and Florida newspapers are all over this. Because national media are defending private equity or chasing after Donald Trump doesn’t mean Scott’s actions on this aren’t getting attention. It is never a great thing for the governor of a state, any state, to have to deny that he is targeting minority voters and that’s what Scott’s had to do for days now.
We could use the national political press for one thing, though. They could ask Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio what they think about the this. Do they agree that Scott should continue the purge, even with all this evidence that it is an absolute disaster?
One final thing. I am really, really grateful that conservatives have not succeeded (yet!) in gutting the Voting Rights Act. Conservative governors may be the absolute best argument for why we still need it."
Yeah, I don't think the whole Cherokee thing matters much in the face of the other things going on.
#11 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 07:56 PM
Democrats target minority voters all the time and your never whine about it thimbles.
#12 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 08:00 PM
So what's the over-under on how many times CJR is going to roll out the McCarthy analogy between now and the election?
#13 Posted by Tom T., CJR on Fri 1 Jun 2012 at 10:05 PM
Sigh, nut job aside:
The truth is if Elizabeth Warren cannot win this fight because the press and opposition won't talk about the issues and people she has so well represented in the past, if they can't get past this national enquirer gossip bs and people choose to remain focused on the her records five generations ago instead of her record since Clinton, then America does not deserve her. They deserve Scott Brown and the rest of the republican, corporate democrat bastards, because they won't give anyone else a chance.
If Elizabeth Warren cannot win with America's people, that is to America's shame, not hers.
#14 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 12:00 AM
lol thimbles yeah warran committing a felony isn't big news and lying repeatedly... nope no news there.
#15 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 12:05 AM
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/05/george-will-calls-donald-trump-a-bloviating-ignoramus-on-this-week/
wheres CJR on this?
"Trump revived the false claims about Obama’s birthplace on Thursday, citing a discredited story about a literary agency that mistakenly listed that Obama was born in Kenya in a recently discovered catalog of clients that included the president."
What false claim thats exactly what happened...
#16 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 02:51 AM
Nutjob aside:
This is what the election and its coverage should be about:
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/01/elizabeth-warren-interview-wall-street-senate-campaign
"Conventional wisdom has always portrayed Brown's win as a coup for tea partiers irate over Obamacare, but in fact it was a triumph for Wall Street, which poured $450,000 into his coffers days before the election. Those donors recognized that whatever happened to health care reform, Brown would be a swing vote on financial reform—and because his seat was so vulnerable, he'd need to keep coming back for more support. To the dismay of Wall Street watchdogs, Brown bottled up the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill for months. Only after he'd succeeded in gutting key provisions, including a bailout tax on banks and the anti-speculation Volcker rule, did he vote yes. Since then, the Wall Street money has continued pouring in."
Again, if we can't elect the most successful person outside of political office when it comes to wall street reform, a tireless consumer advocate and specialist in contract law (at a time when contracts are being used to extract wealth from municipalities, pensions, and the middle class) and one of the few people who aren't owned by the banks (Marcy Kaptur and Bernie Sanders being the other ones I know of), then the problem isn't with Elizabeth Warren, it's a problem with the mechanics of American democracy.
In a just world, she'd be running for president. Instead we've got unqualified loonballs like Michelle Bachmann who pass through their electoral challenges without a hitch, despite their deep detachments from reality, while one of the most qualified individuals to campaign in the last two decades has to answer "media scrutiny" on questions generations old, because if they focused on the last two decades Scott Brown would have nothing but his Cosmo spread to run on.
If Elizabeth Warren cannot get elected over the tea party playgirl with the dollar sign shaped fig leaves in in Ted Kennedy country, then there is something deeply broken in American politics.
#17 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 01:00 PM
Things we're not talking about while the media discusses Donald Trump and the Cherokee controversies:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/06/01/corporate-profits-at-record-levels-worth-thinking-about.html
"It's right now nudging up to 11 percent. That's an all-time record. Look at how quicly corporate profits rebounded after the collapse--they were above 10 for the first time in history, shot down to 4.5 percent in 2009, and now are back up higher than they ever were. Let that sink in: record corporate profits. So why aren't they hiring? Take it away Felix:
http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2012/06/01/americas-jobs-crisis/
To spell this out: high corporate profits and low levels of job growth are two sides of the same coin. If things were working properly right now, companies would take their excess revenues and use them to hire more people. Instead, they’re basically just letting those excess revenues sit on their balance sheets as cash because they’re scared to invest in themselves. It’s frankly pathetic."
If the political press weren't just a bunch of nepotistic, gossips - too busy with their cocktails and page hits to get a clue - maybe this would be a discussion worth some campaign coverage.
#18 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 01:17 PM
thimbles you supported the bailout so you could push more socialism... and now your angry because your socialist dream never came true... got news for you... socialism never works and never will...
PS those banks wouldn't be making record profits if not for ppl like you thimbles that gave them free money.
#19 Posted by robotech master, CJR on Sat 2 Jun 2012 at 03:14 PM