What We're Up Against

For those of us who support Hillary Clinton, it's something we at first dismissed, then perhaps feared was true, and now realize can no longer be denied.

In this campaign, the refs are crooked.

For whatever reason, the press as a whole is implacably hostile towards Hillary Clinton. Their coverage of her campaign is relentlessly negative, and reporters are openly rooting for her downfall. Attacks on her are given full voice while any response is criticized as going negative. In terms of political coverage, it is a mugging on par with that administered to Al Gore in 2000.

Is this merely sour grapes from a supporter? No. In a field in which objectivity and balance are paramount virtues, even independent critics of the press acknowledge that something is seriously wrong. To list only a few examples (some of these have been brought up before, but I felt it was helpful to collect them together):

Craig Crawford, Jan. 26:

You know, I have sat down here in Florida for the last month. And I have watched the coverage, and I really think the evidence-free bias against the Clintons in the media borders on mental illness. I mean, I think when Dr. Phil gets done with Britney [Spears], he ought to go to Washington and stage an intervention at the National Press Club. I mean, we've gotten into a situation where if you try to be fair to the Clintons, if you try to be objective, if you try to say, "Well, where's the evidence of racism in the Clinton campaign?" you're accused of being a naïve shill for the Clintons. I mean, I think if somebody came out today and said that Bill Clinton -- if the town drunk in Columbia [South Carolina] came out and said, "Bill Clinton last night was poisoning the drinking water in Obama precincts," the media would say, "Ah, there goes Clinton again. You can't trust him.

Eric Boehlert, Jan. 15, on how the press botched New Hampshire:

The truth is the press didn't want to acknowledge the ground was shifting because it liked the erroneous storyline that the Clinton campaign was imploding. (Paging Matt Drudge.) The press was practically celebrating it on the eve of the New Hampshire vote. That's a result of the open contempt many journalists express for Clinton and her campaign.

Quoting the New York Observer:

Reporters sandwiched together in the scrum studied their BlackBerrys and rolled their eyes. One whispered to another sarcastically, "Can you feel the excitement?" Another asked: "Can you please pour some Drano in my mouth?" They began taking bets on who in the audience would fall asleep first. Former CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer said to the rest of the pack: "This event is taking so long we could all grow beards by the end of it."

Quoting the New Republic:

I was at a dinner tonight with various political reporters who are up here to cover the happenings, and it was pretty funny how giddy/relieved they were at the prospect of a McCain-Obama general election campaign, as opposed to, say, a Romney-Clinton one. Suddenly, the next 11 months of their lives look a whole lot more enjoyable.

E.J. Dionne, Jan. 25

The press is tougher on Hillary Clinton than it is on Barack Obama; the old, irrational Clinton hatred is alive and well in certain parts of the media; Hillary Clinton gets hit harder when she criticizes Obama than Obama does when he goes after her.

Dana Milbank, Dec. 31, being interviewed by Howard Kurtz:

MILBANK: The press will savage her no matter what, pretty much.

KURTZ: If she wins [Iowa]?

MILBANK: Well, obviously if she wins by any great margin -- the press with Hillary Clinton, it's a poisonous relationship. And I visited the various campaigns out there. It's a mutual sort of disregard. And they really have their knives out for her, there's no question about it out there. So --

KURTZ: And to what extent do you think that is affecting the coverage of Senator Clinton?

MILBANK: I think it unquestionably is. And I think Obama gets significantly better coverage than Hillary Clinton does, and given an equal performance he'll come out better for it.

KURTZ: Is this because journalists like Obama better than Hillary or --

MILBANK: It's more that they dislike Hillary Clinton. There is a long history there, her antagonism towards the press. It's returned in spades. And it is a venomous relationship that I see out there.

Ben Smith, Jan. 2:

Hillary stepped onto the parked press bus in Indianola for about 90 seconds to deliver bagels and coffee, and I'm not sure what this says about Clinton and the press -- the chill, I think, comes from both sides -- but it was a strange moment. She expressed her sympathies that we're away from our families and "significant others," tried a joke at the expense of her press secretary, and paused. Nobody even shouted a question, whether because of the surprise, the assumption that she wouldn't actually answer, or the sheer desire to end the encounter.

One reporter compared the awkwardness to running unexpectedly into an ex-girlfriend.

"Maybe we should go outside and warm up," said another, as Clinton exited into the freezing air.

Howard Kurtz, Dec. 19

Some reporters confess that they are enjoying Clinton's slippage, if only because it enlivens what had become a predictable narrative of her cruising to victory. The prospect of a newcomer knocking off a former first lady is one heck of a story.

Quoting Mark Halperin:

She's just held to a different standard in every respect. The press rooted for Obama to go negative, and when he did he was applauded. When she does it, it's treated as this huge violation of propriety... the press's flaws -- wild swings, accentuating the negative -- are magnified 50 times when it comes to her. It's not a level playing field.

Your typical reporter has a thinly disguised preference that Barack Obama be the nominee. The narrative of him beating her is better than her beating him, in part because she's a Clinton and in part because he's a young African American... There's no one rooting for her to come back.

What do we conclude from this?

The press has it in for Hillary Clinton. Not only that, they know it, and they don't care. It makes her job and our hopes for her success much harder.

But do we give up? Do we give in and start buying into their narrative? Maybe Hillary Clinton is as bad as they say? Hell no. Hillary Clinton is a fighter, and she'll fight the media every step of the way. We all know that we're not entitled to the nomination or the presidency. We may not get there because the country prefers a different voice and different ideas. But we're not going to sit idly by and fail because the media has lost any sense of professionalism.

At this point let me just quote from the end of Bob Woodward's book, The Agenda:

They had done much since the day in August 1991 when she awoke with the realization that he would run and win. In the spring of 1994, they were out publicly talking about the successes--the economic plan, trade agreements, other legislation, and health care, which was still to come. In private, they talked about the pressures and attacks. So on one hand, it was better than ever; on the other, worse than ever.

"We're going to keep on going," he said to her one day. "They're never going to stop us."

[To Obama supporters: This is meant as a defense of Hillary Clinton and a criticism of the media. It is not meant to be an attack on Barack Obama, nor is it meant to imply that he is in any way responsible for the tone of the press coverage of Hillary Clinton.]



Display:


Great substantive diary....... (none / 0)

I am making myself literally sick watching these media pundits bash Hillary non-stop.  It seems like nobody is calling them on it.  I dont know what we have to do to call them on it.  I signed a petition for Working Assets about Maureen Dowd, and I sent a letter to MSNBC about Chris Matthews. But the scope of Hillary Hate in the media is so much broader than those two obvious characters.  

If Bill Clinton calls them on it,  they accuse him of lashing out.  Is there any voice of sanity left in this political cycle???  Has it always been the press that decides elections, and I just have not seen it?    


Another proud Hillary Clinton supporter for Obama
by Sandy1938 on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 05:37:55 AM EST

Re: Great substantive diary....... (none / 0)

The big problem is not people like Dowd and Tweety--while obnoxious, they're understood as giving their own opinion.

The real problem is the treatment coming from the people who are supposed to be objective.


by OrangeFur on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 05:52:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Great substantive diary....... (none / 0)

they decided 2000 or at least they tried hard.  What they are doing to Senator Clinton now is exactly what they did to Gore in 2000.  They outright lied and they did it because they didn't want Gore to just cruise to victory.
The media is so bad that it warrants some sort of legislative intervention to keep them from continuing to steal elections from the people.

ABO... Anybody but Obama. I LIKE the democratic party.

by MollieBradford on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:17:21 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

You seem to be giving substance to BTD's argument that a candidate who receives positive spin in the media has a tactical advantage.  What you fail to consider is the considerable evidence that the tight control, and manipulation, which Hillary's campaign attempted to impose on the media in the first ten or twelve months of her campaign may have been a bad tactical approach in the long run.  Too late to regret it now.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 06:05:45 AM EST

So in order to receive accurate and fair (none / 0)

coverage, the candidates are required to kiss big media's ass????????   What a sorry state of affairs!


Another proud Hillary Clinton supporter for Obama
by Sandy1938 on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 06:12:29 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: So in order to receive accurate and fair (none / 0)

There is plenty of middle ground between the kind of media management Hillary's campaign has attempted and 'kissing the media's ass.'  Don't forget that Obama has frozen Fox out from the time of the madrassa smear coverage.  Yet his media relationship seems sound.  There's more than one way to skin a cat.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:08:35 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

This is a problem more deep than the Clintons. It has been done to every Dem and WILL happen to Obama. If he gets the nomination, expect to hear about Rezko 24/7 slumlords, waffling indecisive and his muslim relatives.


No longer a Democrat, now proudly an independent voter!
by Ga6thDem on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 06:54:24 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Haven't we heard about these things already?  Hillary's campaign is doing a magnificent job of preparing Obama for the general election.  I'm grateful he lost New Hampshire in retrospect.  If he wins the nomination he will be well prepared for the next event.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:10:36 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

No it hasn't been 24/7 on the news. Some of it has been touched upon like Rezko but the muslim relatives has not.


No longer a Democrat, now proudly an independent voter!
by Ga6thDem on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:29:49 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Muslim relatives?  It's all in his book.  Give Hillary time, if the race tightens heading into Super Tuesday I'm sure we will hear all about it.  Don't tell me it hasn't been up on www.hillaryis44.com yet.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:35:08 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

This is the great fallacy with you guys. You think since it's in his book that it doesn't matter.

I'm sure the GOP 527's will have ads with his brother coming out of the mosque. Hillary has been easy on him.


No longer a Democrat, now proudly an independent voter!
by Ga6thDem on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:46:05 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

You must mean his half-brother.  In what universe does having Muslim relatives disqualify one from the presidency of the US anyhow?  You do realise his mother was a white Protestant from Kansas?  That he was raised by his maternal grandparents when he wasn't living with her, in Hawaii.  To many voters his lineage is considered an asset and quite in keeping with the American Dream, not to mention a compelling story in it's own right.

Heck, I find it more disturbing that Hillary was raised a Republican, frankly.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:51:04 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Do you realize the amount of anti Muslim hysteria there is in this country? Any association with Muslims, much less having muslim relatives is a BIG problem. Maybe in the future it won't matter but it does at this point in time.


No longer a Democrat, now proudly an independent voter!
by Ga6thDem on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:16:14 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Things change, at least we can rely on progressive Democrats to push-back against these prejudices.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:49:09 AM EST
[ Parent ]

live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

The problem with relying on media spin is that they are fickle and pack-driven. Obama's strategy is to be the media candidate, but as McCain learned in 2000 you need the voters first.

There was no way Clinton would be a media favorite, so charming them was never an option. Instead she adopted the Bush 2000 strategy, tight media control, which has made it possible for her to control the media narrative more often than not. Whether it is a bad approach in the long run remains to be seen.


by souvarine on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 06:56:40 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

I agree with you about her choice of strategy but that probably goes a long way toward explaining the current situation.  I am no fan of the media myself and consider them fickle, reckless, sensational and untrustworthy.  There is a larger issue, a narrative if you will, about each campaign and in this respect I believe Obama, who hasn't always been liberal in his media access either, has managed the challenge just that little bit better.

It is just a tactical issue, really.  But part of the skill-set which is necessary to gain election.  In this case I think Obama has simply had better instincts, advice and media policy.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:05:48 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

You are actually trying to give the obama campaign credit for the irrational coverage.

Thats just laughable.

The guy hardly grants them access and they still foam at the mouth at him.

It has nothing to do what the campaign is doing because they apparently aren't doing much.

I'll say its more of a function of the hatred for the clintons that has driven the irrational coverage.

If John Mccain was going against Obama , because he actually does grant them access to his bathroom.

So please lets dispense of trying to give credit to Obama's campaign , you might want to go to the howard kurtzs article in the front page of the washington post right now to see how his campaign handles the media.

They probably see him as a useful tool to try and move the clinton's out of the way .  


Educated in a small town Taught to fear Jesus in a small town Used to daydream in that small town Another born romantic that's me.
by lori on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:20:08 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

Well, then hatred of the Clintons is a tactical disadvantage that should have figured in her campaign's strategy.  I've been watching all along and it cuts both ways, but there were a fair few articles around July and August complaining about tightly scripted media moments and attempted pressure regarding certain stories which certainly didn't help her prospects and were indicative of a media management issue.

Haven't we been saying all along that her negatives were a problem?


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:24:03 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

She is in a no win situation , so I don't know what strategy other than maybe whispering sweet nothings to these pundits.

I like how she handles it , she doesn't pay them no mind and thats how it should be.

When she prevails it makes it all the more sweeter.

Haven't we been saying all along that her negatives were a problem?

- What does that have to the with the media coverage.


Educated in a small town Taught to fear Jesus in a small town Used to daydream in that small town Another born romantic that's me.
by lori on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:32:15 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: live by the media, die by the media (none / 0)

What doesn't it have to do with the media coverage?  The media are ratings driven and coldly ruthless panderers.  Ask yourself what sells newspapers or cable TV?  Then follow them there.

Still you would have to admit it is an essential skill of a campaign to manage this process, in fact a crucial one.  If she had had a lock on the nomination her strategy would have probably succeeded, now with a real contest on her hands she can regret her assumptions at leisure but you're right, there is not much she an do about it now.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:39:31 AM EST
[ Parent ]

backlash against the media (none / 0)

If she had negatives among Democrats that would be something to be addressed, if she had particularly high negatives (for a well known Democrat) among voters overall that would have to be addressed, but she doesn't.

High negatives from the media are a tactical asset among voters. Reporters are the least trusted people in this country, Obama's fawning coverage is one of the factors that feeds the voters sense that he is not ready to be president. Given a choice between Hillary Clinton and the media voters know who stands with them.


by souvarine on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 08:04:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

That's an interesting contrarian argument.  I tend to agree with you in principle but not in practice.  For those of us who parse the news it makes sense but I still think that a large chunk of the electorate relies on the media, especially regional newspapers and television.  I always check AP and Reuters to see what is going out on the wires to the regional media before browsing the bourgeois NYT and Washington Post.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 08:10:19 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

Your perception of the media's power hinges on your opinion of the American electorate. But the evidence is clear, polls show people deeply distrust the media and elections like the New Hampshire primary show how little impact media has. People trust local news somewhat more, but even that trust has eroded in the past decade. People may watch or read national news sources, but they are pretty sophisticated media consumers. They correct for media biases.

The funny thing is that the liberal blogosphere was built on the claim that the media is out of touch with the American people. Early online sites like Media Whores Online, the Daily Howler and Atrios, and online movements like MoveOn, grew the liberal online audience in reaction to the 'so-called liberal media'. Watching putative Democrats look to the media for validation is very jarring.


by souvarine on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 08:49:52 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

I have faith in the electorate and believe that they can discern when they are being conned, still a lot of people read or watch the news every day.  How do you explain that so many people thought that there were WMD's in Iraq or a link between Sadam Hussein and al-Qaeda, for example?  I knew that was a crock of sh*t and I wasn't alone.  Yet...


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:08:35 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

People believed that there were WMD's in Iraq and a link between Sadam Hussein and al-Qaeda because they did not expect their President to lie to them. I doubted, based on the evidence, that Iraq had any serious WMD program but I had a hard time believing that the Bush administration would be stupid enough to invade a country based on a completely false claim.


by souvarine on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:33:35 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

I didn't, but then again I remember the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.  And Watergate and the Iran-Contra affair.  You're making a case for the wisdom of the electorate on the one hand and their gullibility on the other.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:52:13 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: backlash against the media (none / 0)

I do believe the electorate is relatively wise, but that is not the case I am making. I am claiming that the electorate does not trust the media, and that Clinton can use the media's anti-Democratic bias to her advantage.


by souvarine on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 11:33:14 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

What you fail to consider is the considerable evidence that the tight control, and manipulation, which Hillary's campaign attempted to impose on the media in the first ten or twelve months of her campaign may have been a bad tactical approach in the long run.

- It isn't like Obama is inviting the press into his living room either.

I have never seen a candidate receive such glowing coverage from the press since the start of the campaign the way obama has.

It is to Clinton's credit that her numbers hasn't since collapsed with the negative crap , thats how strong a candidate she is.

If Obama received just a little of the type of coverage she gets , he would be out of it by now.


Educated in a small town Taught to fear Jesus in a small town Used to daydream in that small town Another born romantic that's me.
by lori on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:13:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

You guys have been pointing out Obama's liabilities for many long months.  This just happens to be one of his strengths, what's the problem?  Thank goodness there is a Democrat who can have this effect with the media, may it serve us well in the general election.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:27:45 AM EST
[ Parent ]

do you have any proof of your (none / 0)

bullshit assertions?
All candidates try to spin the media.  That is not what the adults are talking about here.

ABO... Anybody but Obama. I LIKE the democratic party.

by MollieBradford on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:18:55 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: do you have any proof of your (none / 0)

Gee you have a gentle manner, Mollie.  What do you want?  Links to articles complaining about the lack of access and attempts to control stories on the part of Hillary's campaign?  They're available if that is what you are demanding.  I assume you would just dismiss them if provided but I will if you like.  You might try asking without actually being condescending or abusive, however.


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:57:23 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Well, they're not alone.  Trying to control the destiny of the country, I mean.  Seems a pretty popular pastime.  Why do you think the media favours Obama then?  Because he's black it seems you are suggesting.  Didn't do Jesse Jackson all that much good.  Hillary is a woman, why isn't that working for her by the same reasoning?


by Shaun Appleby on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 10:00:13 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

I agree- we need some sort of media backlash movement to hammer home our point, but then again, I'm not sure how effective they are- if they were, she'd be gone long ago.  The "forces of evil" are bearing down hard on us- we have to have hope.  Hillary is still the favorite to win.

I always said she should more open with the media, but Edwards did everything to accomodate them and be nice to them, making himself totally available and yet they still didn't do him any favors for all of it- and blacked him out totally during crucial times.


by reasonwarrior on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 07:14:32 AM EST

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

I am about to start a blog about how much MSNBC sucks.  I encourage someone to do one on the campaign coverage on CNN. I thought it was good until saturday when the whole thing was about race race race.


ABO... Anybody but Obama. I LIKE the democratic party.

by MollieBradford on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 09:38:23 AM EST

I actually think a lot of people get it. (none / 0)

There's a broad recognition the media is loaded against her because in a lot of cases it's so blatant. A friend of mine, a Republican, calls NBC the not bloody Clinton network. Americans do have a bit of a sixth sense of when piling on is gong on. They had it during the whole impeachment thing. It makes many Clinton partisans mad and even more determined to turn out in my judgement. FL is going to be a really good guide to what has happened to the respective coalitions despite what all the Florida doesn't count crowd say. It's going to be huge turnout by the look of it and in many ways the intensity level with little or no campaigning isn't going to much different in most super Tuesday states.


by ottovbvs on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 10:14:52 AM EST

Re: What We're Up Against (none / 0)

Once again, I am not saying who I endorse, but when CNN called it for Obama literally one second after the polls closed in South Carolina, I shot them an e-mail about bias.

Now, the evidence from their exit polls was probably clear.  Several other news organizations had done likewise, but if you listen to how Wolf talked about it and compare this call against Clinton's in New Hampshire, I think there's some bias.  It took CNN about five minutes or so after AP called New Hampshire to concede the fact, but when Obama wins and wins big, they called it and practically danced around with it.

The biggest tragedy of all though in media bias is that while Obama gets an undue amount of praise and Clinton gets nothing but attacks, Edwards sits out in the cold.  No matter who wins this primary, they will enter the general election with some disadvantage that could have been prevented if the media would just do their actual job.

If Obama wins, he enters as the untested golden child up against the Republicans, who will not hesitate to attack viciously and perhaps even more so than Clinton ever did or could.

If Clinton wins, she enters with the media deadset against her and the Republican machine needs to do little except let the media go after her.

If Edwards wins, his name recognition will be ridiculously low verses the eventual Republican (I'm currently thinking it's going to be McCain).  

We lose anyway you cut it.


by ejintx on Mon Jan 28, 2008 at 12:48:16 PM EST


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