-Caveat Lector-

http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/MediaBiasBasics.html



     ***Media Research Center CyberAlert Special***
               Tuesday August 14, 2001

New MRC Web Resource: "Media Bias Basics"

    The MRC has created a new section of our Web page which compiles in one
place all of the data on reporters' self-reported views, quotes from top
journalists affirming or denying their liberal bias, and the public's
opinion on media bias. Liz Swasey, the MRC's Director of Communications,
gathered the poll numbers from the MRC's archives and created the new Web
page, complete with graphs and charts as well as links to more detailed
information.

    Now when you're trying to remember what percent of Washington reporters
cast their ballot for Clinton in 1992, or how many more members of the
media identify themselves as liberal over conservative, or which way most
journalists view tax cuts or abortion, you'll have one central location to
check to find the answer. Plus, over 20 examples of reporters denying any
liberal bias and about ten of journalists admitting it.

    The categories in the Media Bias Basics pages:

HOW THE MEDIA VOTE

-- Elite Media

-- White House Reporters

-- Washington Bureau Chiefs & Correspondents

-- Newspaper Editors

-- Major Newspaper Reporters


THE MEDIA'S POLITICAL AFFILIATIONS

-- Reporters Disproportionately Identify with Democratic Party

-- Conservative Reporters Few...And Getting Fewer

-- Business Reporters Are Reporters, Too


WORLDS APART: MEDIA AND PUBLIC BELIEFS

-- Massive Majority of Media Hold Strong Liberal Beliefs

-- Public Beliefs Much More Conservative

-- Media and Public Beliefs Differ Dramatically


PUBLIC'S OPINION OF MEDIA COVERAGE

-- Are The Media Biased?

-- Most Americans View Bias As Liberal


JOURNALISTS VIEW COLLEAGUES, SELVES AS BIASED

-- Newspaper Editors Concede Liberal Bias


IN THEIR OWN WORDS: WHAT THE MEDIA SAY ABOUT LIBERAL BIAS

-- Admissions of Liberal Bias

-- Denials of Liberal Bias


To access the page, go to:

http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/MediaBiasBasics.html


    In a Media Reality Check fax report today titled, "The Press Corps:
Liberal, Liberal, Liberal; Every Major Survey Has Found That Most Elite
Journalists Hold Liberal Views and Vote For Democrats," the MRC's Rich
Noyes summarized some of the most illuminating numbers detailed in the
Media Bias Basics section.

    The text of the August 14 Media Reality Check:

Last November, as citizens split their votes almost evenly between Democrat
Al Gore and Republican George W. Bush, Slate magazine polled its staff to
find out how they voted. The results: 85% chose either Gore or the
even-more liberal Green candidate, Ralph Nader. Bush, the nation's narrow
pick, got just four votes from this small slice of the media elite - and no
votes from the 13 staffers with senior editorial positions.

Slate's self-survey is interesting all by itself, but its findings also fit
perfectly with a quarter-century of survey data which show that, when
asked, most journalists say that they are liberal, hold liberal views on
policy issues, and vote for liberals on Election Day.

The Media Research Center has now compiled in one place all of the data on
reporters' self-reported views, quotes from top journalists affirming or
denying their liberal bias, and the public's opinion on media bias. All of
this is posted on the new Media Bias Basics section of our Web site, which
you can access by visiting www.mrc.org and clicking on the blue box on the
home page. A preview of what you'll find:

-- 1964, 1968, 1972 and 1976, at least four-fifths of the media elite voted
Democratic, according to a survey conducted by social scientists S. Robert
Lichter and Stanley Rothman for their book, The Media Elite. Even George
McGovern, the Democrats' 1972 presidential nominee and one of the most
liberal candidates to ever seek the White House, won 81% of journalists'
votes.

--When U.S. News & World Report's Kenneth Walsh polled his fellow White
House reporters about their votes in the five presidential elections from
1976 to 1992, he found 86% of the votes went to Democratic candidates vs.
only 12% for Republicans. As Walsh relayed in his 1996 book, Feeding the
Beast, none of the reporters he questioned voted for Ronald Reagan in 1984,
the year Reagan won a 49-state landslide over Democrat Walter Mondale.

--Bill Clinton was the overwhelming choice of nearly 90% of Washington
bureau chiefs and congressional correspondents surveyed by the Freedom
Forum after the 1992 presidential election. As for Newt Gingrich's 1994
Contract with America, most of these same journalists (59%) dismissed it as
a campaign ploy; only three percent believed the Contract was "a serious
campaign reform proposal."

--In 1996, the American Society of Newspaper Editors surveyed more than
1,000 reporters at newspapers across the country. A wide majority (61%)
identified themselves as "Democrat or liberal" or leaning in that
direction, while barely one in six (15%) used "Republican or conservative"
to describe their views. That closely matched a 1985 Los Angeles Times
survey of 2,700 journalists, which found three times as many
self-identified liberals as conservatives (55% to 17%) in U.S. newsrooms.

--The 1985 L.A. Times survey also showed that most reporters hold
doctrinaire liberal views on most major political, social and economic
issues. Huge majorities said they were for legalized abortion (82%),
against increased defense spending (80%), in favor of more gun control
(78%), and, during those tense days of the Cold War, favored a so-called
"nuclear freeze" which would ban all future nuclear missile deployments
(84%).

Ideally, journalists' liberal views wouldn't contaminate the content of
their news stories, but the world isn't perfect. Since 1987, the Media
Research Center has documented countless instances -- all presented in
detail on the MRC's Web site -- when reporters' liberal thinking has led
them to denigrate conservative policy positions while promoting causes and
ideas associated with the left. Now, visitors to MRC's Web site can review
for themselves 25 years of survey research confirming the liberal beliefs
of most journalists.


    END Reprint of Media Reality Check

================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

   FROM THE DESK OF:

           *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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