AUGUST 2, 2019
CNN painfully
demonstrated this week why we need independently run presidential debates. With
its ESPN-like introductions to the candidates, and its insistence on
questions that pit candidates against each other, CNN took an
approach to the debates more befitting a football game than an exercise in
democracy.
The CNN hosts
moderated as if they weren’t even listening to what candidates were saying,
inflexibly cutting them off after the inevitably too-short 30-to-60-second time
limit—in order to offer another, often seemingly randomly selected, candidate
the generic prompt, “Your response?” At times, these followed on each other so
many times it was unclear what the candidate was even supposed to respond to,
or why.
CNN started its first
debate (7/30/19)
by challenging Bernie Sanders to respond to an attack on Medicare for All from
Rep. John Delaney.
But worse than the entirely
unhelpful format was the heavy reliance on right-wing assumptions and talking
points to frame the questions. Over the two nights, healthcare dominated the
debates; the first night (7/30/19), CNN‘s
Jake Tapper kicked off the questions with one to Sen. Bernie Sanders:
You support Medicare for All,
which would eventually take private health insurance away from more than 150
million Americans, in exchange for government-sponsored healthcare
for everyone. Congressman Delaney just referred to it as bad policy. And
previously, he has called the idea “political suicide that will just get
President Trump re-elected.” What do you say to Congressman Delaney?
Debate moderators will
typically start with top-polling contenders and challenge them to defend their
positions. Doing so with attacks from a contender polling
below 1%, however, would seem unusual—except that in this case, the
candidate unpopular with the public voiced an opinion very
popular in corporate media.
The second night of the
Detroit debates (7/31/19)
also started out with CNN attacking Medicare for All—this time
forcing Kamala Harris to respond to criticism from Joe Biden.
It was a particularly
noteworthy tactic, given that the next night (7/31/19),
which also started off with healthcare, CNN lobbed the first challenge to
Kamala Harris (polling around fourth place) in the form of an attack on her
version of Medicare for All from the top-polling Biden
campaign—letting the front-runner start off on the offensive.
Tapper queried multiple
candidates the first night about raising taxes on “middle-class Americans” to
pay for Medicare for All, and when the floor came back to Sanders, he rebuked
Tapper: “By the way, the healthcare industry will be advertising tonight, on
this program, with that talking point.”
Tapper quickly cut him off,
but CNN‘s commercial breaks that night, as observers pointed
out, indeed featured healthcare industry ads. In one,
the Partnership for America’s Healthcare Future—an
industry group—ran an ad talking about how Medicare for All or the public
option means “higher taxes or higher premiums; lower-quality care.”
In other words, CNN debate
viewers got industry talking points on healthcare from CNN moderators,
bottom-tier industry-friendly candidates given outsized speaking time, and
industry advertisements.
Meanwhile, on the first
night, CNN asked more non-policy questions (17)—primarily about
whether some Democratic candidates were “moving too far to the left to win the
White House”—than questions about the climate crisis (15). Across both nights,
the 31 non-policy questions overwhelmed questions on important issues like gun
control (11) and women’s rights (7).
The second round of debates
may not have enlightened the public much about the candidates, but they made
one thing clear: We desperately need serious, independently run debates, not
over-the-top industry-friendly spectacles of the sort put on by CNN—and
endorsed and gate-kept by the major parties.
No comments:
Post a Comment