Several months ago, I saw an interesting story on MSNBC. A new study had found that since 1994 the percentage of Democrats and Republicans who disapprove of the other party each rose from only about 15% to more than 50%. This is a staggering increase in polarization over the past 25 years.
The anchor struggled to come up with a reason, seemingly oblivious to the obvious – MSNBC and Fox News both debuted in 1996.
MSNBC and Fox News viewers are presented with opposite realities on a daily basis, alternate universes if you will. Websites, such as The Huffington Post on the left and Breitbart News on the right (or alt right), are often even more extreme. The problem is, a lot of people see them not just as legitimate sources of news, but often as their only source of news. No wonder the two parties and their constituents dislike one another more than ever. Rather than seeking real, objective, fact-based news, many search out only places that validate their own biases.
I suggest that no matter what your political leaning, you switch back and forth between MSNBC and Fox News for an hour or so. If your head doesn’t explode, you’ll be shocked at the two different versions of reality they present. But you’ll start to understand why the country is so divided on so many issues.
News Bias is Not Fake News – There is a difference, of course, between biased news and fake news (i.e., making something up). MSNBC and Fox News are biased in both the way they present and analyze the news. This mostly has to do with what they select to report, how much time they spend on a given story, what they choose to highlight, how they edit interviews and videos, who they get for their panel discussions, and how the anchors question guests.
CNN is generally seen as biased (if you are right leaning) or more neutral (if you are left leaning). Although since President Trump and his staffers began labeling CNN as “fake news,” the network has adopted a notably more strident anti-Trump tone – understandable but unfortunate. While its anchors can claim to be more non-partisan overall than its competitors, their panels often have three or four anti-Trumpers to every Trump supporter – hardly unbiased. And when they bring someone on to discuss something President Trump did or said, it is typically someone from the Obama administration or someone the network (and its viewers) know is ardently anti-Trump. So, CNN has perhaps more unbiased anchors and reporters, but hardly an unbiased broadcast.
CNN anchors, are, in fact, far more neutral than those on MSNBC or Fox News, most of whom clearly advocate for a specific point of view. It’s hard, for example, to imagine more biased reporters than MSNBC’s Katy Tur, Stephanie Ruhle, Ali Velshi, Nicole Wallace, Chris Jansing, or Andrea Mitchell.
Unless, of course, you turn to Fox News and see Bret Baier, Bill Hemmer, Sandra Smith, Jon Scott, Dana Perino, and Harris Faulkner. MSNBC’s Kristen Welker and Chuck Todd at least try to appear less biased, while Fox News’s Shepard Smith might be the least biased reporter on cable news. On CNN, some of their anchors, most notably Jim Sciutto and Jake Tapper, can’t hide their disdain for President Trump and his administration.
One problem with CNN is that while they pretend to be neutral, they mistake false equivalency for fairness. There are numerous examples I can give, but here’s one that stood out for me. A while back, CNN ran a segment that some guy claimed to have evidence of massive voter fraud. The network repeatedly pointed out that there was no evidence to support his claim, and he was not willing to provide any. Then the anchor says they’re going to talk to this guy anyway and let viewers decide. I’m sure that people who were just tuning in thought there was credible evidence of massive voter fraud. This type of thing is a major reason why so many people believe alternative facts (i.e., lies). Cable news networks too often present them as just another point of view. Every subject does not have two sides.
Here are some examples of bias. Not long ago, Special Prosecutor Mueller’s court filings linked the President to campaign finance violations. The following banners appeared on two cable news networks: MSNBC – “Federal Prosecutors Are Alleging That The President Committed a Felony.” Fox News – Critics: New Mueller Court Filings Offer No Revelations on Questions of Collusion. Recently a federal judge denied the President’s plan to ban asylum bids for migrants. CNN ran a banner that said, “Judge rules against Trump’s asylum plan.” At the same time, Fox News ran a banner that said, “Obama appointee rules against Trump’s asylum plan.” Both are true, but the implications are quite different. When the deal was finally reached to re-open the government, a banner on Fox News read, “Trump: We are proud we reached a deal to re-open the government,” while on CNN the banner read, “Trump caves, announces deal to re-open government for 3 weeks.” And, of course, when discussing migrants or migrant caravans, MSNBC and CNN most often show women and children, while Fox News tends to show more videos of young (potentially violent) men. While unquestionably biased reporting, none of this crosses the line over to fake news – they simply cherry pick whom to quote and what images to show.
Fake news is not a new concept. Liberals have referred to Fox News as “faux news” on social media for years. President Obama and the folks in his administration wouldn’t even appear on Fox News or its Sunday morning shows during his first term because they believed it was simply an arm of the Republican party. Since the other networks basically agreed, this never received the type of press coverage and scrutiny we’re seeing now (as President Trump only grants interviews to Fox News). Although in 2010, when President Obama’s Justice Department implicated Fox News reporter, James Rosen, as a possible co-conspirator under the Espionage Act of 1917 (and gained access to his phone calls and emails), major news organizations were loudly outraged. But it wasn’t until candidate Trump had a public feud with Fox News’s Megan Kelley, that most anchors at CNN or MSNBC would even refer to a Fox News reporter or anchor as a “journalist.”
When President Trump’s advisor, Kelly Ann Conway, coined the phrase “alternative facts” when being interviewed by NBC’s Chuck Todd, few people who had been following the news throughout the election season should have been surprised. Numerous Trump and Clinton surrogates would be invited onto all the cable news networks on a daily basis. They would lie right to the anchor’s faces and almost never be called out on it (and then be invited back the next day). The anchor’s response would invariably be something like, “OK, that’s what she says, let’s see what someone with the exact opposite point of view has to say.”
Given that these surrogates lied to reporters with impunity for a year-and-a-half leading up to the election, why wouldn’t they think they could get away with continuing to do the same thing after the election? Why wouldn’t they continue to think that the facts don’t really matter to the news media (or to the voters who elected them)?
All “News” Outlets are not Equal (or, Buzzfeed ain’t The New York Times) – One of the biggest problems with cable news is that they tend to create false equivalencies among more and less credible news sources. CNN will often have panels that include a reporter from The New York Times and one from The Daily Beast. MSNBC will often include someone from the Times or Washington Post, along with reporters from Mother Jones or The Huffington Post. Fox News will have a panel with a reporter from The Wall Street Journal and someone from The Washington Times. This tends to create false equivalencies between news outlets with dramatically different levels of credibility, not only among viewers, but among the news channels that present these panel discussions themselves. How else to explain how quickly most news outlets were willing to accept Buzzfeed’s report that President Trump directly instructed Michael Cohen to lie to Congress (despite no one else being able to independently verify the story)?
CNN, et. al., will, of course, try to defend themselves by explaining that before each analysis of how devastating this was to President Trump, they added the phrase, “If true…” These are what the advertising industry used to call “weasel words,” words or phrases inserted into a commercial so you can say something that legally can’t be said, but which you knew most people wouldn’t notice (such as “this product helps make you look younger”).
They Just Report What People Say (the problem with anonymous sources) – In the movie, Absence of Malice, there is a scene where Paul Newman confronts newspaper reporter Sally Field, after she reports a false rumor that he is under investigation for murder. The story was planted by an assistant D.A. who wanted to put pressure on him for information on his mobster family. Since she gives Paul Newman’s character a chance to deny the story, she believes she is being objective and just doing her job. But he admonishes her, “You don’t write the truth, you just write what people say…Where did the story come from? Knowledgeable sources you said. Now who is that? Somebody’s trying to get to me. Somebody with no face and no name. You’re the gofer. You listen to them, report what they say, and then help them hide…”
This movie came out 30 years ago, at a time when daily newspapers and evening TV broadcasts were basically the only sources of news. But it is just as relevant today. Anonymous sources are obviously essential for the effective operation of a free press. Without them, the public would never have known about Watergate and many other important stories over the years.
The problem is that 20 or 30 years ago, anonymous sources were trusted more. It was assumed, and reinforced by such popular movies as All the President’s Men, that sources were extensively vetted, and not used unless multiple independent sources provided the same information. Today, half the country doesn’t believe much of what they see on Fox News, and the other half doesn’t believe much of what they see on MSNBC. Each side has good reasons for feeling as they do. One has been virulently anti-Trump (and before that, pro-Obama and anti-Bush), while the other has been pro-Trump (at least since the election) and fanatically anti-Clinton or anything to do with Democrats. Each network’s primetime opinion hosts constantly bash the other as fake news. Each network finds panelists, analysts, and experts that almost exclusively follow that network’s point of view. When one occasionally expresses an opposing point of view, the hosts typically argue with them. So why would either network’s viewers believe they wouldn’t use anonymous sources who are likewise biased? CNN has somewhat more credibility among the independent minded, but not among conservatives or conservative media.
Lack of a free press, of course, leads to tyranny. As succinctly and definitively stated by Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, in the 1971 decision allowing The New York Times and Washington Post to publish the Pentagon Papers, “Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose the deception in government. And paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people…”
When anonymous sources are used to comment on less significant matters, however, is it appropriate? I was watching CNN recently and learned that President Trump (according to multiple sources) was watching television all morning and “seething” and “ranting” over press coverage of the Mueller investigation. What does that even mean? At what point does someone go from annoyed to angry to seething and ranting? Did multiple sources independently use those words? Or is CNN, in its desire to embarrass the President, using words more likely to do just that?
Some find the current press obsession with reporting behind-the-scenes goings on at the White House disturbing, primarily because of the almost total reliance on un-named sources. There is obviously some discontent within the White House on how the Trump administration is operating, so the question of how accurate these leaks are does have some validity. The problem is that reporters quote these sources and present the information as fact. After all, how can multiple sources all be wrong. But when anyone from the White House publicly denies the report, they are presented as putting a spin on the story, if not outright lying. When CNN, for example, says they have confirmed a Washington Post story, have they validated that the reporting is actually true, or do they simply have the same sources telling them the same thing? It’s easy to take things out of context, particularly if you have an agenda (whether conscious or unconscious).
A few months ago, CNN and MSNBC quoted The New York Times, which had no fewer than four sources “with first-hand knowledge” tell them that President Trump ordered the White House lawyer to fire Special Prosecutor Mueller last June. According to this report, the White House lawyer refused and threatened to quit, so the President backed down. CNN and MSNBC each said that they independently confirmed the story. They’ve spent several hours reporting this as fact. I switched over to Fox News, and lo and behold its White House reporter said despite what the other networks were reporting, his sources said this never happened. The anchor then said, “Well the President calls it fake news, so let’s move on to something else.” I tend not to give much credence to either Fox News or MSNBC, but when The New York Times and Washington Post say the same thing, I tend to believe it (they seem to vet their sources much more fully than any cable news network). CNN, on the other hand, is often just sloppy. I switched back to CNN to hear an anchor arguing with a Trump surrogate saying that even Fox News confirmed the story – again, Fox News all morning had been saying the story was not true.
At the end of “Absence of Malice,”, Sally Field’s reporter is ironically the center of a news story about Paul Newman’s character being falsely accused. She gives a quote to a young reporter at her own newspaper who asks, “That’s true isn’t it?” She responds, “No, but it’s accurate.” We should all consider what that means.
I find it ironic that cable news networks continually deride President Trump for watching a lot of cable news, as though that makes him uninformed, misinformed, or mal-adjusted. But I guess they know their product.