AUGUST 15, 2019
Bernie Sanders has taken to
calling out corporate media for their anti-progressive bias, and their feathers
have gotten quite ruffled.
In a campaign event Monday in
New Hampshire, Sanders told the crowd:
We have pointed out over and
over again that Amazon made $10 billion in profits last year. You
know how much they paid in taxes? You got it, zero! Any wonder why the Washington
Post is not one of my great supporters, I wonder why? New York Times not
much better.
The next day, he returned to
the same point:
And then I wonder why the Washington
Post, which is owned by Jeff Bezos, who owns Amazon, doesn’t write particularly
good articles about me. I don’t know why.
The Post‘s executive
editor, Martin Baron, immediately retorted (CNN, 8/12/19)
that Sanders was spouting a “conspiracy theory,” insisting that “Jeff Bezos
allows our newsroom to operate with full independence, as our reporters and
editors can attest.”
Many others in corporate media
were incensed as well. NPR‘s All Things Considered(8/13/19)
accused Sanders of “echoing the president’s language,” and CNN (8/13/19)
ran a segment that likewise accused him of using Trump’s “playbook”; CNN‘s
Poppy Harlow warned ominously, “This seems like a dangerous line, continuous
accusations against the media with no basis in fact or evidence provided.”
FAIR has been following this
issue for quite some time, so we’re happy to offer the evidence CNN and
the Post protest is lacking.
Fifteen of the 16 negative
stories on the Bernie Sanders campaign that the Washington Post ran
over a 16-hour period (FAIR.org, 3/8/16).
We could start with the 16
negative stories the Post ran in 16 hours (FAIR.org, 3/8/16),
and follow that up with the four different Sanders-bashing pieces the paper put
out in seven hours based on a single think tank study (FAIR.org, 5/11/16).
Or you could take the many
occasions on which the Post‘s factchecking team performed impressive
contortions to interpret Sander’s fact-based statements as meriting multiple
“Pinocchios” (e.g., FAIR.org, 1/25/17, 3/20/17).
In particular, we might observe the time the Post “factchecked”
Sanders’ claim that the world’s six wealthiest people are worth as much as half
the global population (FAIR.org, 10/3/17).
It just so happens that one of those six multi-billionaires is Bezos, which
would make an ethical journalist extra careful not to show favoritism.
Instead, after acknowledging
that Sanders was, in fact, correct, the paper’s Nicole Lewis awarded him “three
Pinocchios”—a rating that indicates “significant factual error and/or obvious
contradictions.” This is because, the paper explained, even though the number
comes from a reputable nonpartisan source, Oxfam, which got its data from
Credit Suisse, “It’s hard to make heads or tails of what wealth actually means,
with respect to people’s daily lives around the globe.”
Post factcheckers
returned to defend their owner against the charge that he is extremely wealthy
after Sanders pointed out in a Democratic debate (6/27/19) that “three people
in this country own more wealth than the bottom half of America.” “The numbers
add up,” the Postfact squad (6/28/19)
acknowledged, but it’s “apples to oranges”:
People in the bottom half have
essentially no wealth, as debts cancel out whatever assets they might have. So
the comparison is not especially meaningful.
The Washington Post (1/27/16)
began its rebuttal to Bernie Sanders’ “fiction-filled” campaign: “Here is a
reality check: Wall Street has already undergone a round of reform.”
The Post editorial
page makes no secret of its anti-Sanders position (FAIR.org, 1/28/16, 5/11/16),
nor do some of its prominent opinion columnists, like Dana Milbank (FAIR.org, 2/11/16)
and Fareed Zakaria (FAIR.org, 9/6/16).
But even in the occasional
straight news reporting that manages to acknowledge Sanders’ success, the
paper’s reporters still slip in digs at the candidate, such as a news report by
Karen Tumulty charting Sanders’ strong caucus showing in Iowa in 2016 that told
readers that his showing indicated “Republicans are not the only voters looking
for qualities beyond experience and electability.” (With eight years as
Burlington mayor, 16 years in the House and a Senate tenure that began in 2007,
Sanders has more political experience than most presidential candidates,
whether in 2016 or 2020, and electability, rather obviously, ought to be
determined by voters, not journalists—FAIR.org, 2/2/16.)
And sometimes the digs are
clearly deliberate, as when a Post political correspondent essentially
admitted to trolling the Sanders camp by intentionally choosing a “provocative”
headline—”Bernie Sanders Keeps Saying His Average Donation Is $27, but His Own
Numbers Contradict That”—over a piece that revealed the scandalous deception
that the actual number was $27.89 (FAIR.org, 4/24/16).
There’s an underlying
dismissal of Sanders as a serious candidate, in both the Post‘s
editorializing and its nominally straight reporting, that results in pieces
like the ones saying the large crowds Sanders drew to his 2016 campaign rallies
“don’t matter much” (FAIR.org, 8/20/15),
or the ones accusing him of lacking political “realism” (FAIR.org, 1/30/16).
And there’s a clear antipathy at the paper to many of Sanders’ signature policy
plans, like Medicare for All (FAIR.org, 3/20/19, 6/25/19).
In her CNN segment
about Sanders’ critique, Harlow insisted to one of her guests, Britney Shepard
of Yahoo News, “It’s important to note, the Washington Post has
done really critical reporting of Amazon, too.” Shepard’s response:
Absolutely, and I really want
to underscore something that Kristen said, something you said, too, Poppy, is
that Bernie Sanders and his campaign have not really put forth any facts or
evidence when they’re pressed about what the Washington Post is
doing, and I do think that there’s a concern, and especially a concern as we’re
gearing up in this primary, that Bernie Sanders is going to be compared to
Donald Trump again and again and again and again.
Curiously, the same
journalists so incensed about Sanders’ lack of evidence about the Post‘s
bias failed to offer any of their own about the paper’s “critical reporting”
of Amazon. They’d be hard-pressed to find any. In 2017 FAIR’s Adam Johnson
reviewed a year’s coverage of Amazon in the Post, the Times and
the Wall Street Journal, and found that across 190 stories, only 6% leaned
negative, and none were investigative exposes (FAIR.org, 7/28/17).
Jeff Bezos’ ownership has no
impact on the content of the Washington Post (3/2/17)—honest!
Nearly half (48%) of the Post‘s
coverage was uncritical—meaning it didn’t even adopt the standard journalistic
practice of seeking out critical or contrary third-party voices, instead
reading like an Amazon press release. (My favorite:
“An Exclusive Look at Jeff Bezos’ Plan to Set Up an Amazon-Like Delivery
for ‘Future Human Settlement’ of the Moon,” with a picture looking up at a
Bezos in shades gazing off proudly into the distance.)
But note the Post wasn’t
alone in its fawning coverage. That’s why Sanders called out the Times as
well, and why NPR, CNN and their ilk are so upset. It’s not a
conspiracy theory, because Bezos doesn’t have to tell the Post how to
report to get the kind of coverage he wants. It’s baked into a system in which
journalists with a working-class perspective or critical of the corporate
status quo get weeded out.
As Hill TV (and
former MSNBC) journalist Krystal Ball (8/14/19)
trenchantly responded to the media pushback against Sanders’ critique,
reporters know which stories will endanger their access to the establishment
sources so valued by their employer, and which will earn them praise and
access. Those inclined to pursue those establishment-friendly stories rise up
in the ranks, while most of those with more critical perspectives eventually
move on. So, no, they don’t need Bezos to tell them what to do—their worldview
is neatly aligned with his already.
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