"All of these examples
are no accident," said campaign speechwriter David Sirota. "But
here's some news: We're not being erased. We're going to win."
Tuesday, November 05, 2019
Sen. Bernie Sanders'
presidential campaign alleged Monday
that corporate media outlets are intentionally ignoring—and attempting to
undermine—the Vermont senator's significant gains in recent polls with "cartoonishly
inaccurate" reporting and headlines.
"In the last week, a wave
of polls has emerged showing a genuine, full-on Bernie surge—but you might not
know that if you tuned into cable TV or read the headlines from the national
press corps," Sanders speechwriter David Sirota wrote in
the campaign's Bern Notice newsletter. "In fact, you might not even know
Bernie is running for president."
Sirota highlighted what he
described as a widening "divide between The Actual Polls and The Media's
Manufactured Narrative."
The polls, Sirota noted, show
Sanders is leading in
New Hampshire, in second place and gaining momentum (pdf)
in Iowa, in second
place and surging in the key battleground state of Michigan, and the
only 2020 Democrat leading President
Donald Trump in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
"Despite all this data,
many in the national press corps continued to both inaccurately report the
polling results—and also pretend Bernie doesn't exist," wrote Sirota, who
pointed to several flagrant examples that he said are part of a pattern of
media outlets attempting to "ignore and derail" the Sanders
campaign's momentum.
"In a report about
its own poll showing Bernie in first place in New Hampshire," Sirota
wrote. "CNN put an inaccurate graphic up showing Bernie in second
place."
The Intercept's Ryan Grim
highlighted the error on Twitter:
Sirota also cited a report by
the New York Times claiming that South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete
Buttigieg "eclipsed" Sanders—despite the poll the
story was based showing Sanders in second place ahead of Buttigieg.
On other occasions, corporate
media outlets like CNN and the Times have simply left
Sanders out of the conversation—a phenomenon the Sanders campaign has described
as the "Bernie Blackout."
Journalist Ken Klippenstein
noted the phenomenon on Monday in response to the Times poll that
showed Warren and Sanders—given the margin of error—statistically tied. The
newspaper's push notification tellingly left Sanders' name out entirely.
Last week, Grim
highlighted CNN's decision not to give Sanders the headline for its latest
Iowa state poll even though he came out on top:
As the patchwork of evidence
mounts, critical observers of the corporate media's treatment of Sanders have
now made efforts to compile examples of the behavior:
"All of these examples
are no accident," Sirota tweeted late
Monday. "This is a deliberate attempt to erase Bernie Sanders. But here's
some news: We're not being erased. We're going to win."
The Sanders team has not been
shy about calling out unfair corporate media coverage of the Vermont senator's
2020 presidential campaign. In July, as Common Dreams reported,
the campaign fired back at MSNBC after several hosts and contributors
to the Comcast-owned network launched a series of fact-free attacks on Sanders.
The Vermont senator in August
also called
out what he described as biased coverage of the campaign by the Washington
Post, owned by world's richest man and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.
"We've said from the
start that we will have to take on virtually the entire media establishment in
this campaign, and so far that has proven to be true," Sanders tweeted at
the time. "Ok. Fine. We are ready."
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