The drive to downplay differences between Obama, McCain — redux

Following up on an item from last month, Paul Krugman had an interesting item in early June on the media’s coverage of the presidential campaign as the dominant story shifts from a heated primary race to the general election. When the focus was on Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, it was in the media’s interest to exaggerate differences between two candidates who agree on almost everything. With the focus shifting to Obama and John McCain, it should make the media’s job easier — there are, as Krugman noted, “stark differences on issues between the candidates.”

There’s no way to argue that Obama and McCain — a classic story of contrasts — offer similar ideas and solutions. Krugman noted that eight years ago, news outlets ran far too many stories downplaying the differences between Bush and Al Gore — stories that look comically ridiculous in hindsight — and wondered whether journalists might try a similar tack this year.

It seems unlikely, doesn’t it? Obama and McCain are so different — personally, ideologically, professionally, temperamentally — the media just can’t screw this up.

But they’re going to try. The LAT has a front-page item today downplaying the enormous differences between the two major-party candidates.

For Amy Rick, the 2008 presidential election is a win-win situation. Both Barack Obama and John McCain support an expansion of stem-cell research that she has battled for in vain under President Bush.

“Both are very solid,” said Rick, president of the Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research. “We are definitely looking forward with optimism to a change in policy in 2009.”

John Isaacs, an arms control advocate, feels the same way, because both candidates have made nuclear nonproliferation a priority. “We’ll have major progress on nuclear issues no matter who is elected,” said Isaacs, executive director of the Council for a Livable World.

Stem-cell research and nuclear weapons are just two examples of a surprising but little-noticed aspect of the 2008 campaign: Democrat Obama and Republican McCain agree on a range of issues that have divided the parties under Bush.

On immigration, faith-based social services, expanded government wiretapping, global warming and more, Obama and McCain have arrived at similar stances — even as they have spent weeks trying to amplify the differences between them on other issues, such as healthcare and taxes…. Even on Iraq, a signature issue for both candidates, McCain and Obama have edged toward each other.

First, much of this is factually wrong. Second, I can’t imagine why news outlets are trying to downplay the differences between these candidates in the first place.

The LAT points to Obama and McCain agreeing on immigration. That’s half true — both have supported legislation on comprehensive reform, which included a pathway to citizenship. What the Times neglects to mention, though, is that McCain abandoned (then re-embraced, then abandoned again, then re-embraced again) Obama’s position during the Republican primaries. At this point, it’s hard to know for sure if Obama and McCain agree or not, since no one can know for sure which position McCain will support on any given day.

On faith-based policy, both Obama and McCain agree on the broad notion of contracting with religious ministries, but that’s a small part of a much larger story. How the two would implement such a policy is actually a study in contrasts — Obama wants to keep safeguards in place to protect taxpayers, faith-based groups, and the rights of beneficiaries. McCain, however, wants to follow the Bush model. This isn’t an area of agreement; it’s an area of disagreement.

On government wiretapping, Obama made a mistake by voting for the FISA “compromise,” but he and McCain differed on telecom immunity, and more importantly, Obama wants to re-open the issue next year; McCain doesn’t.

On global warming, both Obama and McCain agree that climate change is serious, but Obama has an ambitious policy to combat the trend. McCain’s rhetoric, meanwhile, doesn’t meet reality.

And for crying out loud, to suggest that these two are similar on Iraq is ridiculous. McCain believes an indefinite U.S. military presence in Iraq is the solution; Obama believes an indefinite U.S. military presence in Iraq is the problem. One wants to withdraw; one wants to stay. One likes the status quo; one rejects it. One opposed this war from the outset; one has supported it from the outset and recently said he’d do it all over again.

The LAT noted that both candidates “favor combating global warming with a ‘cap and trade’ system,” without mentioning that McCain’s model wouldn’t actually include a “cap.” The article said both candidates advocate “stepped-up negotiations with Russia,” without mentioning that McCain’s model would also reportedly include antagonizing Russia by trying to kick it out of the G8. The article said “both embrace the idea of continuing Bush’s faith-based initiative,” despite the fact that this is demonstrably false.

But what’s especially striking is the media trend in general. This misguided LAT piece follows an equally flawed LAT editorial, and a Bloomberg News article, both of which made the same mistake.

Voters have a choice between two very different candidates, offering two very different agendas, at a critical time. Why would media outlets intentionally paper over these differences? Shouldn’t journalists be doing the exact opposite? Doesn’t conflict sell better?

The media will play the two candidates as extremely similar, because to emphasize their differences is to give a greater portion of the electorate an opportunity to see McCain as nothing more than a Bush “mini-me.”

And we all know just how much the vast majority of these people want to really work for a living. Elect McCain, and they’ll not only have the bulk of their work done for them by the GOP—but they’ll get to go to all of those wonderful barbecue parties—because we all know that barbecue is so much more important than telling the truth….

  • Both are world-class imperialists. Both sat by and watched the GOP/Dems destroy the 4th Amendment to our Constitution.

    Differences: McCain is a pig-headed vile senile old fart, while Obama is young, educated, smart, funny and thoughtful and is a man who acts Presidential.

  • When it looks down-trodden for the wealthy among us because a candidate may wish to better equalize funding sources for the public coffers with tax reform, just paint both candidates as winners, with one being a bit too exotic for good’ol American fortitude. After all each candidate shares so many similarities – they are both Americans, they are both senators, they are both men, they both dress in suits and ties, they both care about the issues, they both are running for president!

    Monied interests are glomming the two candidates together to get their guy elected. See, the only difference these interests want the American voter to think about come the firstTuesday in November is that their candidate is white and the other one is black. They are banking on racial prejudice to win in ’08. -Kevo

  • Those who understand the MSM is a conservative organ understand that whatever dictates coverage in one instance can flip on a dime to keep the MSM on the side of whatever narrative best helps the Republican Party.

    It’s not McCain’s POW experience, or Bush’s down hominess. It’s that witting or unwittingly, they are all GOP fax machines.

  • Kevo makes sense.

    Obama is the candidate of color. McCain is the candidate of no color. That’s the whitest dude I’ve seen outside of Albino Bob down at the roller rink. He looks like he’s camouflaged for desert warfare.

    CB I bet you could write an editorial for the LA Times or at least a letter to the editor called, “McCain and Obama Are Different.”

  • Steve:
    However can you say this? Haven’t you been reading the comments in your own blog? Don’t you realize that, with his FISA vote Obama has shown himself no better than McCain or Bush? Don’t you realize that there is no longer any reason to send him money, that it REALLY won’t make any difference, that they have equally little respect for the Constitution? If the people here maintain that there is no meaningful difference between the two, why do you still insist that we should care which one gets elected, that the other 99% of the issues actually matter? Why should you be surprised that the MSM seems them as growing closer, when the people here have already decided they are Siamese twins?

    Don’t you listen to the people — some of whom found no bar to the VP in Jim Webb’s support of the truly horrible Protect America Act that every Democratic Presidential Candidate opposed — who have decided that we have already been totally sold out?

    /snark off

  • It looks like Steve and I were writing essentially the same thing at the same time. My post on this topic, which contains additional examples of where McCain is no centrist:

    http://liberalvaluesblog.com/?p=3512

    (which I just added to add one of the links in the above post to further increase the number of examples of how McCain is further away from either Obama’s views or the center than the media makes it appear).

  • I think rather than looking for conflict, reporters are looking for the “angle”. If they were scientists they’d be in trouble because they only look for data that reinforces their hypotheses. No matter how it has to be parsed.

    CB you just don’t understand the pressure political reporters are under. Sometimes they have produce up to two pieces a week! Oh wait you do that in two hours. Never mind.

  • …downplaying the enormous differences between the two major-party candidates. (emphasis added)

    The LA Times piece is emphasizing a problem with our two-party system, not a problem with the candidates per se.

    Everybody knows that in our political system, the left and the right go wide while trying to settle on a nominee. Then come the general election, where they veer towards the center. The LA times piece is supporting that phenomenon.

    The trouble with most partisans–as demonstrated by the tone of this post–is that they think left-versus-right is the natural state of political discourse. They think the only thing wrong with American is that the [insert Democrats or Republicans here] are in charge.

    If there is one thing we have learned in the past ten years is that of the ruinous failure of our two-party system. Political representation does not have to get squeezed through a donkey’s ass or a Elephant’s ass to be legitimate.

    A lot of people are tired of the two-party squeeze and so am I.

  • Besides the fact that the LAT article is a total rightwing headfake, one only needs to look at the people around the candidates to see how each one intends to govern.

    McCain: Lobbyists and neocons no different than the ones pulling Bush’s strings already.

    Obama: None of the above.

    That’s all that really counts. McCain has no idea what he’s saying and if put in office will leave the whole job to whoever feels like taking over. Obama will be much, much different because he can still think and feel. So there you go.

  • The news entertainment is out to generate advertisement dollars. Horse races generate more cash flow than landslides. So McCain’s positions can’t be so unpopular as to turn the voters off–even though they are.

  • It really is sad that none of the presidential candidates, is truly working for the American people and likely to sign into law a new AMNESTY. On the most traumatic issue facing the American woman, or men in November is illegal immigration. Neither presidential cannot be trusted, because they are both pandering to the special interest lobby. The war is on the home front, not in ‘NATION BUILDING’ in Iraq, with a cost that is astronomical. However expenditures for the illegal immigration would quickly catch up with the war funding if AMERICANS don’t fight the propagating occupation.

    Every Hispanic needs to know this effects them as well as other legal nationalities, because they will also feel the lose of jobs and their families future.Not to many politicians have come to the rescue of the hard hit citizens, because they are out to be re-elected. That means appeasing big business donors for their campaign contributions.

    Uncensored facts at NUMBERSUSA

  • On immigration, faith-based social services, expanded government wiretapping, global warming and more, Obama and McCain have arrived at similar stances — even as they have spent weeks trying to amplify the differences between them on other issues, such as healthcare and taxes…. Even on Iraq, a signature issue for both candidates, McCain and Obama have edged toward each other.

    Both candidates are carbon-based life forms and though the embalming fluid in John McCain’s blood affects his aerobic metabolism, both are basically oxygen breathers.

    Both candidates are bipedal (no jeff, that doesn’t mean they like both young boys and young girls) and both are bilaterally symmetrical.

    Both candidates function though electrical energy flowing across neural synapses, though Barack Obama’s synaptic firings are more numerous and less random.

    Both candidates value their wife’s contribution to their political careers. Obama’s wife advises him and raises his children. John McCain’s wife subsidizes him in the lifestyle to which he has become accustomed and changes his adult diapers.

    Yup. barely a hair’s difference between the two. So we may as well vote for the white guy, just to be safe.

  • First, much of this is factually wrong. Second, I can’t imagine why news outlets are trying to downplay the differences between these candidates in the first place.

    Oh come on, I am getting a bit tired of this Pollyanna attitude.

    Of course fascist pigs like Sam Zell – owner of the LA Times and Chicago Tribune – want to play down the differences. That way the Democrats and independents who are afraid of voting for Obama but dislike Bush can think that not voting for Obama “won’t be that bad.”

    All you have to do is apply Atrios’ “simple answers to simple questions” theory to this stuff.

    They do it because they’re The Enemy. It’s the job of The Enemy to confuse their opponents.

  • On issues-only polls (where issues aren’t identified as conservative or liberal), Americans consistently favor liberal policies. So, the only way conservatives can even get in the game is to disguise how truly radical and out-of-the-mainstream their agenda is. Hence, all the distractions like “family values” and gay marriage and similar fabrications.

    The LAT is doing the same thing: downplaying how radical McCain really is by minimizing the differences. If the public understood where the two candidates really stood, Obama might well win in the greatest landslide in American history.

  • I’ve got to say, CB, that I hope your tongue was planted firmly in your cheek when you wrote this post. The Corporate Media is not interested in any sort of true analyis of the facts. They have a narrative and are looking for examples to support that narrative. Anything else would require harder work and deeper thought on their parts. The rationales for the narrative may differ (keeping the horse race close so the advertising $ flow freely and continuously OR giving cover to voters who just can’t bring themselves to elect a non-white person as their president as part of the effort to ensure the election of the candidate most favorable to the monied interests), but the narrative is the desired end. The narrative is that which translates into the most profit for the Corporate Media. The means to the desired end can include the blurring of the true difference in the qualities and policies of the candidates – if that serves the narrative. Let’s see if it all cannot be boiled down to the guy who spent years as a POW in the service of his country vs the elitest Ivy Leaguer who does not really “feel” what it truly means to be an American? (Both, BTW, support stem-cell research).

    The Corporate Media is not all about the conflict. It is all about the constructed narrative. Sometimes conflict serves the narrative (not necessarily conflict between the candidates but maybe conflict among supporters), sometimes the notion of similarity serves it (so the decision can be based on some pre-determined “who-would-you-rather-have-a-beer-with, dip-shit concept). The Corporate Media has no respect for the intelligence of its clientele. It consistently seaches for and plays to the lowest common denominator of the preferred narrative.

    I agree with the suggestion above that you submit an op-ed rebuttal to the assertions of the LAT articles. The longer the narrative goes unanswered, the greather the liklihood it will take root.

  • TuiMel has it as far as he or she goes, but I think that’s not quite far enough. Yes, they’re lazy; yes, they want examples to support their narrative; yes, they want the ad dollars that come with a close race; yes, they support giving cover to racist voters, but the narrative isn’t the desired end. Simply, the corporate media wants McCain elected (and, as TuiMel says, knows its largest profits rest on that happening) and knows the best hope of making that happen is downplaying the stark differences.

    I really don’t think it’s going to be enough this year.

  • That’s fun Slappy, thanks! (Officially clogging the internets tubes by the distinguished gentleman from Alaska) I think that Paul #12 has the explanation correct. You can’t make “news” without breaking two eggs.

  • how do you get people to like mccain more?

    discredit the comparison to bush (who people are more than sick of) and push the false equivalencies with obama (whose appeal takes almost as many forms as people, which is something many like to sneer at and regard as “bad,” but think about it. lots of people like peanut butter and jelly sandwiches but some people like the peanut butter part best, others like the jelly, some people are fixated on the bread, none of which creates a problem with or for the sandwich, why should it create a problem for obama?).

    it’s only the middle of july, folks. they have to keep the puppet upright until (a) they think of something or (b) the november election.

    they’ve got plenty of controversy going — look at the shrieking going on in the left blogosphere over the serial (and completely predictable) outrages whose sole raison d’etre is to … drumroll … get the negative attention they seek (they use it as evidence that they’re “right”).

    in spite a not insignificant amount of ghastly ignorance displayed in comments and posts i read here and there around the intertubes, i take heart at “small” things — the carpetbagger, for a start — and the sound the crowd made when obama made the “we don’t need a second dr. phil” remark (go back and listen to it if you don’t know what i mean). that crowd got it. and the sound you hear is their expression of delight that obama gets it.

  • Hard to forget how GWB hijacked the carbon issue in 2000; I may be a slow learner, but once learned, the lessons stick.

  • Can’t imagine why the corporate media would try to disguise the corporate McBush politician after Bush’s fall from grace? Maybe they don’t want people to realize he is just another pig in a poke? Maybe that is why they do not talk bout all his inadequacies, misstatements, and inaccuracies?

    Almost before anything else we need to do is reregulate/demonopolize the media and bring the fairness doctrine back to our news. If the people don’t know what in the hell is going on how can they make an informed choice at the ballot box? OY OY OY

  • By keeping the illusion of a competitive, close “race” (playing the race card, again) alive, the candidates will spend more on advertising, and the media they purchase ads from will benefit greatly. The reporters keeping this illusion alive are more likely to keep their jobs, and those who don’t will join the unwashed masses of unemployed…many probably posting here and on other “liberal/progressive” blogs, hoping that those of us who have realized the bias of the CSM(Corporate Slanted Media) will make our voices heard above the din of obfuscation and denial of Truth.

    I am committed to Oneness through Justice and Transformation

    peace,
    st john

  • Every time I get told that because a Democrat did some piddly thing, Republicans and Democrats are the same.

    I want to hit them with a clue by four and skip the clue part ’cause I’m always showing them why they’re wrong.

  • The purposes of making them look them same is to create the “Lesser of Two Evils” syndrome. Well, we might as well keep the evil we know and BINGO Four More Years of McBush!
    They are also praying that the independents will abandon Obama for Third Party Candidates.
    And Lets not forget the Hillary Followers who claim they can’t see a difference between Obama and McBush and so are voting for McBush in Spite. Even though Hillary has told them Not To Do That. The less they can see the difference the more likely they will do something stoopid like that.
    Confusion only helps McBush.

  • msm @ 14 beat me to my snark-punch, from setup right down to the punchline.

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