At this point, the evidence on the Internal Revenue Service scandal is clear. Contrary to the initial hype, there is no credible evidence of White House involvement in targeting conservative groups or even evidence that Tea Party or other conservative groups were targeted exclusively. It turns out that the keyword lists used by the IRS to target groups applying for tax-exempt status for additional scrutiny also included terms like “Occupy” and “Progressive” as well as “occupied territories” and “open source software.”
Nonetheless, the scandal could have serious consequences for the IRS. As The New Republic’s Alec MacGillis argued this week, Peggy Noonan’s comparisons to Watergate may be hyperbolic but the reputational damage to the agency that she describes could be real.
The problem is what we might call the “scandal attention cycle.” George Washington University political scientist Danny Hayes has described how the “issue attention cycle” results in a surge in news coverage of a new issue like gun control followed by a fairly rapid decline, which received increased attention after the Sandy Hook massacre but ultimately trailed off, following a similar trajectory to previous high-profile shootings. A similar pattern often occurs for scandal—there’s a surge in initial interest as reporters rush to embrace the scandal narrative, but the press quickly loses interest after the most sensational charges are not substantiated. The problem is that it often takes time for the full set of facts to come out. By that time, the story is old news and the more complex or ambiguous details that often emerge are buried or ignored.
The coverage trajectory of the IRS scandal is a case in point. For each calendar week since the scandal began, I counted the number of total and front-page articles on the controversy that appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Politico, which are arguably the three most important sources of national political news and often set the agenda for coverage by other press outlets. (See the note on measurement below for details on the methods I used.) The results are plotted in the figure below, which include annotations of major disclosures in the case.

The story started with an unexpected apology from Lois Lerner, the head of the IRS division that handles applications for tax-exempt status, on Friday, May 11. As concern grew, the story exploded in its second calendar week, which was dominated by high-profile coverage across the national media: The New York Times published nine stories, including five on the front page; The Washington Post published 16, including eight on A1; and Politico ran an incredible 66, including 12 that appeared at the top of its home page. But as contradictory facts emerged in June and early July, they had already lost interest, publishing a fraction of the stories that ran during the initial weeks of the scandal.
The trajectory is even clearer if we look at each publication individually in the figures below, which differentiate between the total number of stories published per week and those that appeared on the front page:



With the notable exception of an A1 New York Times story in early July by Jonathan Weisman on “the more complicated picture now emerging” in the case, all three publications gave much less coverage to the story once the facts were known—and, in particular, much less front-page coverage. This bar graph summarizes how much of the coverage appeared in the first three calendar weeks of the scandal (for context, Weisman’s piece about the targeting of open source and pro-Palestinian groups—the last development annotated on the graphs above—was published on July 5, almost two months after the scandal broke):

With so little prominent coverage after the full facts of the case became clear, is it any wonder that members of the public might still be confused?
Correction: Due to a computer coding error, the graphs of New York Times coverage that originally appeared in this story were incorrect. They have been replaced with corrected versions. Thanks to reader Steve Kass for noting the error.

It seems that you are brushing over what I believe are credible reports that the targeting of tea party and other conservative groups occurred with higher frequency and severity than the targeting of progressive etc groups.
Has your close reading of the newspaper given you any insight into that?
If there was an effort by high IRS officials (eg Lois Lerner or the IRS General Counsel) to screw over tea party groups, wouldn't it have been obvious to them that they had better include at least a *few* liberal groups?
It looks to me like the press dumped this story largely because they don't like doing anything that hurts Obama. Initially they could hardly avoid covering it, but as soon as any thin pretext for dismissing it appeared, they ran away.
And you are basically spinning for them by not grapping seriously with the topic.
#1 Posted by Jason, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 03:28 PM
Something is wrong with the graphs.
The NYT graph shows one-and-two-thirds A-section stories in the week June 9-15 and one-and-a-third in the week June 16-22. Story counts can't be fractions.
It looks like data points were inappropriately connected across weeks without data. Unfortunately, Excel will blindly do this for you if you choose a line graph.
What are the actual NYT article counts for those two weeks? If they were zero (a strong possibility, since it appears no data was present for those weeks), the actual picture of news coverage is slightly different than portrayed.
A line graph without data-point markers isn't a good choice here. The data is discrete (there is nothing "in between" consecutive weeks where the height of the line connecting the dots makes sense), so a bar chart is a better choice.
#2 Posted by Steve Kass, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 05:50 PM
It seems your timeline highlights have overlooked a few recent ones.
The chief counsel’s office for the Internal Revenue Service, headed by a political appointee of President Obama, helped develop the agency’s problematic guidelines for reviewing “tea party” cases, according to a top IRS attorney. In interviews with congressional investigators, IRS lawyer Carter Hull said his superiors told him that the chief counsel’s office, led by William Wilkins, would need to review some of the first applications the agency screened for additional scrutiny because of potential political activity.
The journalistic community made its mind up on this once they could cobble together a semi-coherent talking point that there was no way anyone from the administration could have anything to do with this. Minds made up, talking points accepted ... time to circle the wagons. Hell, this very publication has spent the past 3 months wetting its panties anytime someone attempts to dig a little too deep into this topic.
Come on, you personally know how this works. Apply what happened to you at the American Prospect to the newsrooms of the NY Times, Wapo and Politico. Liberals really dont take well to their own oxes being gored by the media machine they have built.
#3 Posted by Mike H, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 06:01 PM
the evidence on the Internal Revenue Service scandal is clear
How can the evidence be clear when so much of the evidence is missing? Lois Lerner refused to testify under oath. I believe that the IRS General Counsel and some other IRS personnel have also not testified under oath.. The only investigation is being conducted by the Obama Administration. The Obama Administration is investigating itself, with a seeming lack of diligence. E.g. I have read that the investigators haven't even interviewed the conservative groups that believe they were discriminated against. A great amount of IRS material subpoena'd by the Darrel Issa hasn't been provided.
We can't be "clear" about what all this missing information would tell us without looking at this information..
#4 Posted by David in Cal, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 07:32 PM
That sucking sound you hear is Brendan on his knees for the Obama administration.
This "article" is ridiculous. Let's see the IRS chief visits the White House 157 times, during the Bush Administration for a comparable period the IRS Chief visits.... 1 time.
Also, not a single progressive organization was kept from gaining tax exempt status, yet tea party and conservative groups were stone walled for 2 years.
But nothing to see here, no real scandal, keep moving on sheep.
#5 Posted by Dan in DC, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 07:49 PM
Thanks to Steve for noting the error in the NYT data - there was a bug in my Stata code. It has been corrected above.
#6 Posted by Brendan Nyhan, CJR on Thu 1 Aug 2013 at 09:22 PM
Unfortunately, the competition factor was not mentioned in the article, as each media example is not working in a story vacuum.
If the leadership of a media unit is reactive to competition, then a herd mentality takes control. Unfortunately for Nixon, the Washington Post continued coverage of the Watergate break in and kept the herd from running off the cliff.
#7 Posted by nacrandell, CJR on Fri 2 Aug 2013 at 03:47 PM
A survey of leftist publications by a liberal professor at a liberal university has determined there is no scandal with the IRS targeting of conservatives.
Well, isn't that surprising?
On second thought, no. It isn't surprising at all.
#8 Posted by Patrick Nolan, CJR on Fri 2 Aug 2013 at 05:22 PM