Featured

Media’s message: Don’t blame Democrats for the shutdown

The media’s favorable coverage of Democrats during the record-breaking government shutdown is overwhelmingly one-sided and has shielded them from blame, even though party lawmakers have voted more than a dozen times to block reopening the government, an analysis found. 

Democrats are insisting the shutdown, and all the pain and inconvenience that goes along with it, is the fault of the GOP. Few mainstream news outlets are challenging their claims.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul Friday morning told angry airline passengers who faced canceled flights due to the lapse in federal funding to “thank Trump and Washington Republicans,” and then called on the Republican-led House and Senate and President Trump to “end the GOP shutdown.”

It may sound like gaslighting, because Senate Democrats are holding back the votes needed to pass a measure to fund the government and restart services. 

But many media outlets have largely echoed Ms. Hochul’s point of view, and it’s reflected in polls that show the public largely blames the GOP for the shutdown, despite Democrats’ attempts to force Republicans to expand extra health care subsidies. 

For the past month, ABC, CBS, and NBC, where millions get their news, “have hammered both Congressional Republicans and President Trump with a wall of negative shutdown coverage, while largely shielding Democrats from blame for the now-historic gridlock,” a Media Research Center analysis found.


SEE ALSO: Trump’s struggles to tame high prices send warning signs to GOP


Analysts who watched 67 reports about the government shutdown across the three networks during  October found the vast majority heavily favored the Democratic Party’s spin. 

Just 12 reports — less than 20% of the coverage — informed viewers that Democrats had refused to vote for a stopgap spending bill that would reopen the government. 

Instead, ABC News and the other networks flipped the narrative, defending Democrats for “fighting for an extension” of enhanced Obamacare tax credits and warning that without the subsidies, health care premiums “could go up 169%.”

Dan Schneider, vice president for free speech at the Media Research Center. said the one-sided coverage worsens the public’s growing mistrust of the media. 

“With Senate Democrats exclusively to blame for the longest shutdown in our history, one might hope that the media would try to repair their tattered reputation and shoot straight for once. But instead the evidence shows that the media are far more interested in helping Democrats retake Congress than they are in actually providing objective news to the public,” Mr. Schneider said. 

The subsidies were meant to expire after the pandemic, and Democrats who added them to a massive COVID-19 spending bill could have made them permanent, but didn’t to reduce the cost of the legislation. 

Now Democrats want the GOP-led House and Senate to make the subsidies permanent, at a cost nearly half a trillion dollars over the next decade. Republicans are refusing the party’s demands and said the health care law must be reformed to rein in sky-high costs. 

Few mainstream news outlets are reporting the GOP’s position. Instead, newscasts have pivoted to featuring individuals from around the country who are battling health problems and are now faced with higher premiums if the extra subsidies are not extended.   

“Democrats want to keep Obamacare subsidies so health insurance doesn’t go up for millions, but there is no movement on this,” World News Tonight anchor David Muir reported on Day 15 of the shutdown.

Print news media have also provided Democrats with sympathetic coverage, especially when compared to past government shutdowns that were used as leverage by the GOP.

The New York Times in 2013 ran headlines reminding readers that conservative tea party Republicans were responsible for a government shutdown because they were trying to pass a government funding bill that defunded Obamacare. 

The Times’ latest coverage of the current shutdown focuses on the lapse in funding for food stamps and halted paychecks for air traffic controllers, which has disrupted hundreds of flights. There are no headlines blaming Democrats. 

A Nov. 6 Times article delves into the online coverage of the shutdown, framing it as “a blame game” that Mr. Trump and conservatives are winning on X and Fox News, while Democrats are coming out ahead on left-leaning Bluesky. 

A lengthy Nov. 7 Times article on people struggling to afford groceries due to the lapse in government-funded Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program excludes any mention of Democrats voting against a bill that would reopen the government and replenish SNAP funds. 

The article blames Mr. Trump, who, “because of the government shutdown…sought to stop supplying benefits for November.” 

The piece does not include the Trump administration’s explanation that diverting emergency funds to SNAP would strip money from the nutrition program for women and infants and the school lunch program. 

The New York Times and ABC News did not immediately respond to inquiries from The Washington Times. 

Democrats have capitalized on their favorable coverage, blaming the Trump administration for leaving people hungry and preventing federal workers from getting paid for weeks. Few reporters are questioning their claims.

“They withheld billions in SNAP funding, they weaponized hunger in this country,” House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, Massachusetts Democrat, said. “They are using their hunger as a political weapon, taking food away from people so they can take away their health care, too.”

Ahead of the Nov. 4 elections that gave Democrats sweeping victories, public opinion polls from The Washington Post and NBC News showed voters mostly blamed the GOP for the shutdown, even though Democrats continued to vote against government funding bills.

The election results and the polls are giving Democrats new leverage in the prolonged shutdown fight. Many in the far-left wing of the party are calling on leaders to avoid a compromise with the GOP and keep the government closed until they win funding for the permanent enhanced subsidies and reverse billions of dollars in additional spending reductions that Mr. Trump signed into law in July. 

“The American people understand who is responsible for this crisis,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Washington Democrat and senior leader in the House Progressive Caucus. “So let’s end it by negotiating and getting a deal that preserves health insurance premiums and the ability to cancel all these cuts, to make sure we are actually working for the American people.”

Source link

Related Posts

Load More Posts Loading...No More Posts.