Columns
Norman Solomon
Media Tips for the Next Recall
October 10, 2003
Now that California’s electorate has rewarded a dramatic recall
effort, some sequels are likely elsewhere in the near future. It’s a
good bet that political operatives in many states will try to learn
from this fall’s Golden State extravaganza.
Media strategists were key to the recall drive that ended in
triumph for Arnold Schwarzenegger’s savvy corporate backers. So, as a
public service, here are some tips for any partisans who want a shot at
spinning their way into recall history:
* Do your best to capitalize on smoldering resentments. Don’t
bother to illuminate much about the actual underlying causes of social
discontent. Try to use citizen outrage as bait to attract the support
of talk-show hosts, pundits, ambitious politicians and well-heeled
contributors.
Spark plugs for the California recall were happy to vilify Gray
Davis as a crafty charlatan and/or incompetent cold fish. The governor
made such caricatures easy; he raked in lots of sizeable checks from
vested interests and engaged in budgetary sleight of hand. But instead
of confronting his deference to energy firms that functioned as rip-off
artists -- or denouncing his refusal to back tax hikes for large
corporations and wealthy individuals -- the recall’s conservative
boosters preferred to blame Davis for too much spending and not enough
solicitude to big business.
* Try to throw a manipulative harness on sincere concerns among
voters. Keep the media messages simple and simplistic.
In California, an anti-tax drumbeat -- with lots of media
reverb -- went a long way toward drowning out voices that called for a
major shift to progressive taxation. Little news coverage and scant
paid advertising explained that such a shift could mean higher taxes
for the rich and large companies but lower taxes for everyone else.
* If a luminary on the campaign team goes “off message” with a
genuinely sensible observation, put a sock in it, pronto.
Early in the short campaign, a much-ballyhooed economic adviser
for Schwarzenegger made improperly logical comments. Warren Buffett
pointed out that Proposition 13, California’s venerable property-tax
limitation law, “doesn’t make sense.” The fabled financier noted that
he was paying $2,264 for a year’s worth of property taxes on a Southern
California home valued at $4 million. But a press secretary for the
actor-turned-politician rushed to proclaim that “Mr. Buffett doesn’t
speak for Mr. Schwarzenegger” and hastened to add that the candidate
“has supported Prop. 13 for 25 years.”
* Do your best to generate a steady stream of media messages that
obscure complexities of underlying power relations while providing
plenty of buzz phrases and images that mostly serve as triggers for
pre-existing assumptions.
Sound-bite platitudes and Schwarzenegger’s muscle-bound celeb
candidacy were well-suited to what passed for news on television, where
even “in depth” stories were usually the word-length equivalent of a
few short paragraphs. While newspapers provided some notably serious
reporting, for the most part the TV news zone was predictably agog with
glitz and sizzle.
* Personalize to dodge basic issues.
In California, for well over a century, oligopolies of land
holdings have throttled the state. Yet when recall promoters claimed to
be speaking truth about power, they zeroed in on the corporate front
man in the governor’s office rather than confront (or even acknowledge)
the dominance of real estate interests: from urban concrete labyrinths
and suburban developments to the vast tracts of rural acreage owned by
multi-multimillionaires and agribusiness.
* Cloak a candidate eager to serve elites in the garb of a
populist champion.
Schwarzenegger’s plain-speaking cliches supplied media window
dressing for an economic mind-set amounting to a dream come true for
upper-class combatants in the class wars.
* Whenever possible, conflate entertainment fantasies with social
realities, even while claiming to always know the difference.
After decades as a media creature of entertainment, this fall
Arnold Schwarzenegger easily made the transition to being a media
creature of politics. His victory will encourage other mind-numbing
celebrities to further blur the distinctions between arrogant stories
and rational government policies.
___________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-author of “Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t
Tell You.” For an excerpt and other information, go to:
www.contextbooks.com/new.html#target
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Norman Solomon
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