I’m sure it came as something of a surprise to viewers on Tuesday night, but Tim Russert, DC bureau chief for NBC News, proposed something fairly radical in relation to the establishment media’s coverage of the presidential campaign this year.
MATTHEWS: What about John McCain perhaps being attended by his bad angels? Some time in October deciding that he has to win this campaign in the worst way. Isn’t there a tremendous opportunity against a guy named Barack Hussein Obama to run a very tough negative campaign and win, perhaps not in a happy country, but just win it in the worst way. Isn’t that opportunity just sitting there for him?
RUSSERT: Well, I think you heard Senator Obama talk about wedge issues of patriotism and religion, trying to put that down as a marker. I’ve heard Mike Murphy, a former McCain adviser, saying that he thinks that Senator McCain should not be criticizing Senator Obama as much as he has, but be much more optimistic and not be seen or perceived as angry. But I don’t think that’s the kind of campaign Senator McCain wants to run. There may be some so-called independent groups, 527s, who might take a different tack.
But in an interesting way, based on our previous conversation, it’s a role I think the media can play, in really trying to keep pushing this back to this big debate on big issues and not get caught up in a lot of this minor skirmishing that goes on and videotape that gets released where we just run wild with it and sit back and say, what happened? Why did we not cover some of these big differences like Iraq, like Iran, like negotiating around the world, like health care? There’s profound differences between McCain and Obama in health care. [emphasis added]
Hmm. So, Tim Russert is suggesting that there may be serious policy discussions in the midst of a presidential debate and the media should, you know, cover them. Maybe even let voters know the differences between the candidates on these “big issues.”
Why didn’t we think of that?
I’d just add, by way of a tangent, that the same election-night coverage with Chris Matthews and Tim Russert featured this rather striking exchange about John McCain complaining about the media. (In trying to appeal to Clinton supporters, McCain said, “Pundits and party elders have declared that Senator Obama will be my opponent.”)
MATTHEWS: [McCain is] now separating Barack Obama from what he sees as the media, by knocking party leaders and pundits, for having declared — I mean, this is real politics isn’t it.
RUSSERT: Yeah, he’s embracing her and the campaign against the press. Against the media. Against the Washington procrasta–absolutely.
MATTHEWS: What is his beef with the media, I’d like to know that. I mean, after 10 years of covering this guy, I have yet to see anybody lay a glove on him.
RUSSERT: Well, he used to call it his base.
(both start laughing)
MATTHEWS: What’s the beef, John?
(both laugh some more)
If only these two didn’t think it was quite so funny that McCain considers the media establishment his base….