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Fri Nov 21 2008
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Columns
Norman Solomon
Public wiser than pundits in post-election uproar
November 16, 2000
During the first several days after the election, many of
America's leading pundits were very distressed. Some even appeared to be on
the verge of freaking out as they vented major anxieties: It's upsetting
that we still don't know who the next president will be! The financial
markets could plunge! Other countries won't respect us!
Fortunately, cooler heads -- namely, the public -- prevailed. With
the United States in its second post-election week while complicated legal
proceedings unfolded in Florida, national opinion polls clearly indicated
widespread patience rather than panic. Apparently, most Americans didn't
mind waiting for final ballot tallies and court rulings -- despite all the
agitation from media commentators frenetically projecting their own
attitudes onto the body politic.
From the outset, numerous familiar voices on the cable TV networks
were asserting that a winner should be declared -- in a hurry. On CNN,
patrician news analyst Bill Schneider fretted aloud that the public would
not take kindly to delays. The New York Times swiftly singled him out for
praise in a Nov. 10 editorial that warned against dragging legal issues
from the election into the courts.
"The CNN political commentator William Schneider picked apt
language when he spoke of the 'treacherous path' that would-be leaders
choose when they talk of unraveling the finality of elections," the Times
editorial proclaimed. Such statements from powerful media outlets,
transfixed with "finality" rather than accuracy in counting ballots, were
music to the ears of key Republican operatives like James Baker. A classic
blue-blooded political player, Baker wailed four days later that "the
markets" were concerned "because they don't see any finality here."
On MSNBC, print journalists got lots of time in front of cameras
as they eagerly repeated -- or tried to concoct -- conventional media
wisdom. Typically, Evan Thomas of Newsweek joined with bombastic host Chris
Matthews to beat the drums for preemptive closure. Chiming in was frequent
guest Mike Barnicle of the New York Daily News. (Barnicle used to be a
columnist on the staff of the Boston Globe, but he lost his job at that
newspaper after it turned out that he had fabricated a story under his
byline. So much for high standards of credibility at MSNBC.)
In effect, many commentators kept telling Americans that a quick
count would be much more valuable than an accurate one. Such claims often
had a paternalistic ring: It's better to move on. The country can't handle
this kind of uncertainty.
There were exceptions. Early on, syndicated columnist Mark
Shields, a regular on the influential "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer,"
eloquently urged patience in support of a more complete tally. At the time,
he was in a minority on that PBS program. But as days passed and the public
showed scant signs of imitating the sky-is-falling commentators, the media
climate improved.
A week after the election, when the "NewsHour" aired a roundtable
discussion with columnists from the Washington Post, New York Times,
Chicago Tribune and U.S. News & World Report, the tone was notably more
judicious. The discourse included much recognition of the wisdom of waiting
for the courts and manual recounting to sift the results in Florida.
No matter who finally wins the election, we should ponder why --
during the crucial days right after Nov. 7 -- so many journalists and news
analysts were so disconnected from the public.
Many reporters and commentators who cover the national political
scene reacted to the post-election uncertainties with alarm and dread --
and they strained to prod readers and viewers to follow suit. But most
Americans declined to allow themselves to be stampeded by hyperventilating
members of the punditocracy.
In this case, with the public's wisdom greatly exceeding their
own, many of the country's most prestigious political journalists have felt
compelled to cool their jets. Near the end of an election year with
precious little to cheer about, that's good news.
Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His latest book is The Habits of
Highly Deceptive Media.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Norman Solomon
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"Media crucial as Bush faces 'Legitimacy Gap'" December 17, 2000
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"A dire shortage of pre-inaugural schlock" November 30, 2000
"Finally: A Huge Media Spectacle That Really Matters?" November 23, 2000
"Public wiser than pundits in post-election uproar" November 16, 2000
"Arrogance of TV Networks: Compounding a national crisis" November 9, 2000
"New Democrats: Maybe the jig is up" November 2, 2000
"Resistance to a tightening grip of censorship" October 26, 2000
"The debates: Truth is stranger than science fiction" October 19, 2000
"Media spin remains in sync with Israeli occupation" October 13, 2000
"Our debts to new media technology" October 6, 2000
"Level the playing field: What a media concept!" September 29, 2000
"Dr. Laura gets a TV show-but at what cost?" September 7, 2000
"When watchdogs have a blind spot - for themselves" August 31, 2000
"Paying homage to the Two-Party Media System" August 24, 2000
"The Deception Convention: Don't stop winking about tomorrow" August 17, 2000
"Holy smoke and mirrors: the rise of centrist theocrats" August 10, 2000
"The Pleasantville party floats on a media cloud" August 2, 2000
"Convention hospitality and police brutality" July 24, 2000
"The easy media politics of optimism" July 19, 2000
"And now, an all-new episode of 'Media Jeopardy!'" July 13, 2000
"Nader raises hackles of media establishment" July 6, 2000
"George Orwell's unhappy birthday" June 29, 2000
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