| Lazy Big Media Misses on Edwards |
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| Written by Froma Harrop / Creators Syndicate / | |
| Monday, 10 December 2007 | |
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Syndicated columnist Froma Harrop chastizes the media for not covering the presidential campaign of John Edwards.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — What about John Edwards? The big-media
portrays the Democratic race as a death-match between the Clinton machine and
the Obama phenom. Edwards comes off as a plodder in the shadow of two glamour
pusses.
Back in the world of plain people, the story looks somewhat
different. A new Des Moines Register poll shows 28 percent of likely Iowa
Democratic caucus-goers preferring Barack Obama, 25 percent for Hillary Clinton
and 23 percent for Edwards. That sounds like a three-way race to me.
Also consider the caucus rules. Within a caucus site, people
whose candidate gets less than 15 percent of the total can throw their support
to another contender. Edwards leads the Democratic pack as the likely
participants’ second choice, notes a recent Rasmussen poll.
The former senator from North Carolina seems definitely in
the game. So why is the race commonly seen as a two-titan contest? The easy
explanation, that much of the media are lazy, would not be far off. But something
else is going on.
We live in a political culture dominated by celebrity
journalists covering celebrity politicians. Big media want to consort with the
big stars — New York Sen. Clinton (plus Bill) and the charismatic Illinois Sen.
Obama (with Oprah in his entourage).
One recalls Angela Lansbury’s quip when television
executives in Los Angeles canceled her very popular show. “Nobody in this town
watches ‘Murder, She Wrote,’” the actress said. “Only the public watches.”
Delaware Sen. Joe Biden recently hit the nail on the noggin
as he explained why a candidate as experienced as he gets so little attention.
After all, polls show that in a general election, Biden would run even with
leading Republicans Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani.
Democrats, Biden said, have a talented woman and a talented
black, and “they’ve sort of sucked all the oxygen out of the air.” A white man
does not fit into the storyline. That could be Edwards’ problem, as well.
Edwards was all over New Hampshire last week, talking to
average citizens. The people who filled the Bow Town Hall on a slushy Monday
morning were neither rich nor poor, but they definitely felt left out. Edwards’
theme of putting middle-class interests at the center of American policy seemed
to hit home. As Edwards warned the crowd not to “trade corporate Republicans
for corporate Democrats,” people nodded.
“I’d like to hear smaller voices heard, as opposed to the
lobbyists,” Anne Dupre, a 34-year-old mother of two, told me. Dupre is an
independent whose family is “very Republican.”
Also in the audience was Louis Duval, a 67-year-old
technician who has been laid off more than once. In a non-question to Edwards,
he demanded that American consumers dump imported products, “like the tea
party.” An independent, Duval wouldn’t tell me whom he’ll vote for.
In Iowa, Edwards supporter Skip McGill suspects that the
media have used fundraising as the yardstick for a candidate’s viability.
McGill is president of the United Steelworkers Local 105 in Bettendorf, whose
national union has endorsed Edwards.
“They were not looking at what people where thinking and
saying as about bank accounts,” McGill
said. “The other two definitely have money, and I wish it was not about money.”
He says friends on other campaigns have come to his side
after hearing Edwards speak. Edwards has hit all 99 of Iowa’s counties.
“One friend said it in a funny way,” McGill remarked. “He
said, ‘Skip, I drank the Kool-Aid.’”
The big-gun cameras rarely focus on less glamorous
candidates discussing middle-class anxieties in small auditoriums and town
halls. That’s why they don’t watch Edwards the way they do Clinton and Obama.
Only the public watches.
Froma Harrop is a member of the Providence (R.I.) Journal
editorial board and a Creators Syndicate columnist. Trackback(0)
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That could be the other factor?