Media Coverage Doesn't Cut It

Jeff Cohen

June 01, 2007

Jeff Cohen is a media critic, former TV pundit and author of Cable News Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate Media. He was communications director of the Kucinich for President Campaign in 2003, and currently consults with  Progressive Democrats of America.

Give me a break about John Edwards’ pricey haircut, mansion, lecture fees and the rest. The focus on these topics tells us two things about corporate media. One we’ve long known—that they elevate personal stuff above issues. The other is now becoming clear—that they have a special animosity toward Edwards.  

Is it hypocritical for the former Senator to base a presidential campaign on alleviating poverty while building himself a sprawling mansion? Perhaps. But isn’t that preferable to all the millionaire candidates who neither talk nor care about the poor? Elite media seem more comfortable with millionaire politicians who identify with their class—and half of all U.S. senators are millionaires. 

I’m growing quite suspicious about the media barrage against Edwards, who got his wealth as a trial lawyer suing hospitals and corporations. Among “top-tier” presidential candidates, Edwards is alone in convincingly criticizing corporate-drafted trade treaties and talking about workers’ rights and the poor and higher taxes on the rich. He’s the candidate who set up a university research center on poverty. Of the front-runners in presidential polls, he’s pushing the hardest to withdraw from Iraq.  

Given a national media elite that worships “free trade” and disparages Democrats for catering to “extremists” like MoveOn.org on Iraq withdrawal, the media’s rather obsessive focus on Edwards’ alleged hypocrisy should probably not surprise us. Nor should it surprise us that we’ve been shown aerial pictures of Edwards’ mansion in North Carolina, but not of the mansions of the other well-off candidates. 

Or that a snob like Brit Hume of FOX News is chortling: “What Would Jesus Do With John Edwards’ Mansion?” Or that we’ve heard so much about Edwards’ connection to one Wall Street firm, but relatively little about the fact that other candidates, including Democrats, are so heavily funded by Wall Street interests. Or that Juan Williams and NPR this weekend teed off on Edwards for saying he’s “so concerned about poverty” while pocketing hedge fund profits and $55,000 for a lecture at University of California Davis. NPR emphasized that the Davis fee was for a “speech on poverty”—but didn’t mention that Davis paid other politicians the same or more for lectures, or that Rudy Giuliani gets many times as much for speeches. 

You see, those other pols aren’t hypocrites: They don’t lecture about poverty.

What’s really behind the media animus toward Edwards is his “all-out courting of the liberal left-wing base” (ABC News) or his “looking for some steam from the left” (CNN).

One of the wise men of mainstream punditry, Stuart Rothenberg, said it clearest in a Roll Call column complaining of Edwards’ “class warfare message” and his “seeming insatiable desire to run to the left”; the column pointed fingers of blame at Edwards’ progressive campaign co-chair David Bonior, consultant Joe Trippi, groups like Democrats.com and Democracy for America and a bring-our-troops-home message “imitating either Jimmy Stewart or Cindy Sheehan.”  

Leave it to FOX’s Bill O’Reilly to take the mainstream current over the cliff—bellowing Tuesday that Edwards has “sold his soul to the far left ... MoveOn’s running him ... His support on the Internet is coming from the far left, which is telling him what to do.”

What seems to worry pundits—whether centrist or rightist—is that Edwards is leading in polls in Iowa, where the first caucuses vote next January. 

Indeed, current media coverage of Edwards bears an eerie resemblance to the reporting on the Democratic frontrunner four years ago, Howard Dean. If Edwards is still ahead as the Iowa balloting nears, coverage could get even nastier. The media barrage against Dean in the weeks before Iowa—“too far left” and “unelectable” with a high “unfavorable” rating—helped defeat him.

Today, elite media appear to be doing their best to raise Edwards’ unfavorable rating. But the independent media and the Netroots are four years stronger—and have more clout vis-a-vis corporate media—than during Dean’s rise and fall. It will be interesting to see if independent media and websites that do focus heavily on candidates’ positions have any positive impact on allegedly “mainstream” media. For now, much of the mainstream is more obsessed with the cost of a haircut than the cost of persistent childhood poverty to our society—estimated to be a $500 billion yearly loss to our economy. They show more interest in the expansion of a candidate’s living quarters than the expansion of wealth and income gaps, now record-breaking, between rich and poor in our country.

In a report on poverty in the May issue of The American Prospect, analyst Mark Greenberg notes that various sectors of society have been speaking out about poverty—from mayors to faith groups to TV’s “American Idol,” which raised funds for poor children on two shows. It would be great—21 months after Hurricane Katrina put a global spotlight on American poverty—to see our national press corps and news networks devote as much energy to issues of race, class and poverty as to sniggering over one candidate’s personal wealth and alleged hypocrisy.
 
I’m not holding my breath.