The Media Made This F**king Monster: How Phony Objectivity Helped Create Donald Trump

(Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron/AP/John Minchillo)
(Credit: Reuters/​Gary Cameron/​AP/​John Minchillo)

As the élite media casts about for ways to under­stand and explain the rise of Donald Trump, they may find out­size his­tor­i­cal prece­dents (as Politico did when it asked 13 his­to­ri­ans to name “the clos­est antecedent to Trump”), or cite Richard Hofstadter’s “Paranoid Style” (as the New Yorker, CNN and Salon did — even while TNR’s Jeet Heerwarned against Hofstadter’s influ­en­tial mis­read­ing of pop­ulism to explain him), or sim­ply scratch their heads in won­der. But if the media — espe­cial­ly the dom­i­nant élite media — real­ly wants to know who’s respon­si­ble for Trump’s rise, one place they should start look­ing is right in their bath­room mir­rors. I know, I know. Trump is a clown­ish fig­ure far removed from the sort of seri­ous­ness they strive to cul­ti­vate. Surely they can’t be blamed for him, right?

Wrong. Here’s why: As Congress returns, there’s a loom­ing threat of yet anoth­er gov­ern­ment shut­down. Once unthink­able, then dis­as­trous when Gingrich intro­duced them, shut­down threats have become a part of nor­mal pol­i­tics in the Obama era, thanks in large part to “bal­anced” jour­nal­ism, which has helped to reframe them as nor­mal, if per­haps a lit­tle bit risky — and there­fore, a bit tit­il­lat­ing. With a large part of the GOP buy­ing into this fan­ta­sy view of how pol­i­tics works, they were at first con­tent to vent their hatred pri­mar­i­ly on President Obama and con­gres­sion­al Democrats, but now their anger has widened to the entire polit­i­cal class — which is actu­al­ly well deserved, in a way. But it’s not just the GOP politi­cians who egged them on who are to blame — the “bal­anced” media played a star­ring role as well.

Shutdowns are not the only aspect of this sto­ry — there’s the dra­mat­ic increase in the use of the fil­i­buster, for exam­ple — but they are arguably the most extreme form that destruc­tive obstruc­tion­ism can take. They are also one of the most dra­mat­ic — and vir­tu­al­ly unprece­dent­ed pri­or to the 1990s. They also involve a kind of psy­cho­log­i­cal regres­sion, back to a more imma­ture state. After all, the essen­tial nature of the shut­down is a refusal to engage in nor­mal give-and-take, the sort of thing most of us learn in kinder­garten, if not before. As one indi­ca­tion of this, poll­sters even took to ask­ing the pub­lic who was act­ing more adult or more like a “spoiled child.” When the whole polit­i­cal sys­tem gets pulled for years in the direc­tion of gov­ern­ment-by-tem­per-tantrum — and the media treats it as per­fect­ly nor­mal — it real­ly should not be so sur­pris­ing when an intem­per­ate blowhard like Trump sud­den­ly shows up to steal the show.

The “bal­anced” media has pro­mot­ed this dys­func­tion around gov­ern­ment shut­downs in at least three dis­tinct ways: First, the media presents the shut­down shorn of his­tor­i­cal con­text, with no indi­ca­tion of how rad­i­cal, nov­el or one-sided it is, or of how it relates to a broad­er range of relat­ed rad­i­cal and nov­el right-wing strate­gies, or to the dra­mat­ic under­ly­ing right­ward shift of the GOP in Congress (House/​Senate) since 1980. This has the effect of dra­mat­i­cal­ly reduc­ing the cost of intro­duc­ing new, desta­bi­liz­ing and down­right destruc­tive polit­i­cal strategies.

Second, the media adopts a “bal­anced” approach to report­ing on the prospects of a shut­down, and the shut­down itself. It seeks to place blame on both sides (see, for exam­ple the Media Matters research report, “What The Media’s False Equivalence Misses About the Government Shutdown Threat“), regard­less of how inac­cu­rate this is. This false­ly bal­anced report­ing works in favor of the absolute worst actors — always giv­ing them the “ben­e­fit of the doubt,” and against those who are most pub­lic-mind­ed, adopt­ing a stance of jad­ed cyn­i­cism, regard­less of whether they’ve done any­thing to deserve it. Third, the media “bal­ances” any resid­ual neg­a­tiv­i­ty that the shut­down per­pe­tra­tors might be left with sto­ries intend­ed to cast the oth­er par­ty — the Democrats – in an equal­ly bad light. The media’s months-long obses­sion over prob­lems with the Obamacare web­site filled this func­tion perfectly.

Although it began even ear­li­er, shut­down talk began to flower imme­di­ate­ly after the 2010 midterms, and ramped up through a series of threats, and near-shut­downs over the next two-plus years (see detailed time­line here), until Republicans final­ly did shut the gov­ern­ment down for two weeks in October 2013, over a doomed attempt to defund Obamacare before it could go into effect. The pub­lic reac­tion was extreme­ly neg­a­tive, even though the media’s “bal­anced” cov­er­age strove to give Obama and the Democrats an equal amount of blame (some rel­e­vant head­lineshere). At the time, I wrote a sto­ry iden­ti­fy­ing “nine dis­tinct bod­ies of evi­dence”con­tra­dict­ing the “both sides did it” narrative:

(1) The long­stand­ing GOP fix­a­tion on shut­ting down the government.

(2) The GOP’s cre­ation of the shut­down cri­sis by block­ing the bud­get rec­on­cil­i­a­tion process.

(3) The emer­gence and evo­lu­tion of the inco­her­ent Ted Cruz/​Tea Party plan to force a shut­down over ‘Obamacare’.

(4) The record of promi­nent Republican politi­cians and oth­ers who repeat­ed­ly warned against forc­ing a gov­ern­ment shutdown.

(5) The con­trary his­tor­i­cal record of some Republicans down­play­ing the sever­i­ty of the shutdown.

(6) The record of dras­tic Democratic bud­get con­ces­sions embod­ied in the “clean con­tin­u­ing res­o­lu­tion” which House Republicans rejected.

(7) The polling evi­dence that only GOP base vot­ers are opposed to polit­i­cal com­pro­mise — and are indif­fer­ent to crisis.

(8) Evidence that GOP base intran­si­gence dri­ves policy.

(9) The frame­work of American leg­isla­tive history.

There were sto­ries here and there in the press touch­ing on all of the above, but because of the ide­o­log­i­cal­ly dri­ven com­mit­ment to “bal­ance,” they were kept iso­lat­ed and atom­ized, nev­er con­sol­i­dat­ed into a coher­ent pic­ture of what was actu­al­ly going on at the time. And for good rea­son: the GOP want­ed a shut­down, and the pub­lic over­whelm­ing­ly did not.

Going into the shut­down, a Quinnipiac poll released on Oct. 1 found American vot­ers reject­ing it by more than a 3 – 1 land­slide: 72 – 22 per­cent. While Gallup had record­ed a very mod­est peak of con­gres­sion­al approval for the year at 19 per­cent in ear­ly September, before the shut­down dra­ma began, it dropped to 11 per­cent in ear­ly October in the mid­dle of the shut­down, and 9 per­cent in ear­ly November—the low­est lev­el ever record­ed by Gallup in 39 years of polling the measure.

Even with the intense ger­ry­man­der­ing that the GOP has imple­ment­ed after the 2010 midterms, there was some seri­ous talk that they could lose con­trol of the House in the 2014 midterms as a result. But imme­di­ate­ly after the shut­down end­ed, atten­tion shift­ed to severe prob­lems with the Obamacare web­site, and with­in a few weeks, the media man­aged to “bal­ance” things out so thor­ough­ly that few can even recall how bad­ly dam­aged the GOP was as a result of the shutdown.

To rem­e­dy that, let’s turn to a Huffington Post sto­ry, “Meet The 37 House Republicans Who Could Lose Their Jobs for Shutting Down the Government,” which offers a win­dow onto how the nation respond­ed that has been entire­ly erased from pub­lic mem­o­ry. It’s worth quot­ing at some length:

Numerous polls have shown that a major­i­ty of Americans assign a larg­er share of blame for the shut­down to con­gres­sion­al Republicans, who tried to tie gov­ern­ment fund­ing pro­vi­sions to defund­ing the Affordable Care Act….

Fifty-four per­cent of Americans now oppose Republican con­trol of the House, accord­ing to a CNN-ORC poll released on Monday. And a series of pollscom­mis­sioned by pro­gres­sive advo­ca­cy group Moveon​.org and con­duct­ed by Public Policy Polling released in batch­es over the last sev­er­al days indi­cate Democrats may have enough momen­tum to take back the House.

Democrats only need to lock up 17 addi­tion­al seats in the November 2014 midterm elec­tions to secure a House major­i­ty. The new polls show the recent gov­ern­ment shut­down may cause as many as 37 Republicans to lose their House seats next year.

PPP poll­sters sur­veyed 61 Republican-held con­gres­sion­al dis­tricts around the coun­try from Oct. 1 through Oct. 18. They con­clud­ed that “Democrats not only have an oppor­tu­ni­ty to take back the House of Representatives next year, but that they could win a siz­able major­i­ty if vot­er anger over the shut­down car­ries into 2014.”

According to a PPP memo released on Monday:

Republicans will like­ly find this third round of sur­veys to be the most alarm­ing yet, giv­en that the new results show sub­stan­tial Republican vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty in many dis­tricts that were not even sup­posed to be close. Incumbent Republicans trail gener­ic Democrats in 15 of the 25 dis­tricts we most recent­ly sur­veyed. This means gener­ic Democrats lead in 37 of 61 dis­tricts polled since the begin­ning of the gov­ern­ment shutdown.

In short, the GOP had severe­ly dam­aged itself, and stood a very real chance of los­ing con­trol of the House in the 2014 midterms. The shut­down strat­e­gy had proved itself to be a dis­as­ter. It should have thor­ough­ly dis­cred­it­ed all who had argued for it, and all the think­ing that led to it. That’s the clear les­son that should have been drawn. But then the “bal­anced” media got to work, and all the the above was swift­ly negat­ed — not just for­got­ten — by media’s “bal­anced” shift of atten­tion to the prob­lems with the Obamacare website.

To be clear, those prob­lems were absolute­ly real — but they were also clear­ly tech­ni­cal prob­lems, rather than prob­lems of pol­i­cy or polit­i­cal phi­los­o­phy. The polit­i­cal media, how­ev­er, treat­ed the GOP’s gov­ern­ment shut­down and the Obama administration’s web­site prob­lems as vir­tu­al mir­ror images of one anoth­er — an act of nar­ra­tive cre­ation that became a self-ful­fill­ing prophe­cy. The short-term result of that was that it pro­tect­ed the GOP from suf­fer­ing any con­se­quences for the shut­down. In the 2014 midterms, this meant not only hold­ing the House, but tak­ing over the Senate as well.

Karma, how­ev­er, is a bitch. The long-term results are now show­ing up in the form of the Trump campaign’s dom­i­nance, and the crum­bling of more “main­stream” “respon­si­ble” con­ser­v­a­tives — not just Jeb Bush, but the entire suite of gov­er­nors and ex-gov­er­nors, who’ve aver­aged a total of just 27 per­cent in the last five polls tracked at Huffington Post, com­pared to 50 per­cent for Trump, Carson and Fiorina, the three can­di­dates who’ve nev­er held office before. If the GOP elec­torate has large­ly reject­ed expe­ri­enced politi­cians in favor of these three — and Trump most of all — then a very good part of the rea­son is that they’ve repeat­ed­ly been promised suc­cess through con­fronta­tion, force of will and puri­ty of inten­tion, and they’ve been repeat­ed­ly frus­trat­ed instead.

The par­ty itself and its var­i­ous allies are part­ly to blame for this, of course. In the time­line linked to above, Think Progress noted:

In November of 2010, GOP lead­ers infor­mal­ly polled the incom­ing fresh­man and were sur­prised to dis­cov­er that “all but four of them said they would vote against rais­ing the ceil­ing, under any cir­cum­stances.” This response was the result of what the Washington Post described as a “nat­ur­al out­growth of a years-long effort” by GOP recruiters to build a new major­i­ty with uncom­pro­mis­ing anti-tax, anti-spend­ing can­di­dates and it effec­tive­ly ham­strung Republican lead­ers from accept­ing any kind of bud­getary com­pro­mise from the Obama administration.

But the media is respon­si­ble as well, with its insis­tence on a false and mis­lead­ing form of “bal­ance,” which gave Republicans an enor­mous edge in the short run, but nev­er enough to actu­al­ly achieve the impos­si­ble goals they had promised their base. The “bal­anced” media nev­er point­ed out the dis­con­nect —in the short run, that would have helped the Democrats, so of course we couldn’t have that. So, instead, this “bal­anced” cov­er­age removed all cost for the GOP’s extrem­ism: They didn’t have to be for any­thing, they could just be against, and not suf­fer any con­se­quence for the pain they caused. But, at the same time, they didn’t accom­plish any of the impos­si­ble things they had promised.

Which is why Donald Trump is so pop­u­lar now. He ben­e­fits both from the base’s unre­al­is­ti­cal­ly raised expec­ta­tions, and from the leadership’s fail­ure to meet them. The “bal­anced” media deserves a good deal of cred­it for both.

They should be forced to take a bow.
Story emanat­ed here : The media made this f**king mon­ster: How pho­ny objec­tiv­i­ty helped cre­ate Donald Trump