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We now know who the Democratic nominee “is gonna’ be,” declared NBC’s Washington bureau chief Tim Russert the night of May 6 as results became clear. The cover of Time magazine showcased a beaming Barack Obama with the headline: “And The Winner* Is…” Many press accounts described the Illinois Senator’s return to Capitol Hill late last week as a “victory lap.”
In a campaign with more twists than a Twilight Zone episode, the media all but officially pronounced Obama the Democratic nominee last week after he emerged with a big win in North Carolina and a near-tie in Indiana. There are only a handful of Democratic primary contests left. And the consensus was that Hillary Clinton needed a stronger showing on May 6 to change the increasingly insurmountable-looking pledged delegate math and/or the superdelegates who have been steadily migrating to Obama.
Ironically, in the week that calls for her to drop out grew louder, Clinton generated her highest level of coverage this year. According to PEJ’s Campaign Coverage Index, she was a significant or dominant factor in 70% of the campaign stories from May 5-11. Obama was a close second, at 67%. But at only 12%, Republican John McCain ended up with his lowest level of coverage in 2008.
One other narrative also began to suggest itself last week in the coverage. Even though McCain has been virtually relegated to the role of bystander as the Democrats battled on, that may soon change. Late last week, coverage began to focus on Obama’s pivot away from his race with Clinton toward a campaign against the presumptive GOP nominee. That was a theme of a May 11 New York Times story noting that “Senators John McCain and Barack Obama are already drawing up strategies for taking each other on in the general election, focusing on the same groups — including independent voters and Latinos — and about a dozen states where they think the contest is likely to be decided this fall, campaign aides said.”

But the May 6 primaries changed the story line. Even if the so-called split decision in Indiana and North Carolina was expected, many pundits and journalists concluded that Clinton’s path to the nomination had gone from daunting to nearly impossible. Part of this involved expectations. Some analysts had begun to wonder if Obama might be losing momentum and altitude. But his large margin in North Carolina and neck-and-neck finish in Indiana—which ran counter to what many late polls suggested—reinforced the sense that nothing fundamental had changed in the dynamic of a race he has led since February. Another factor in the media narrative was simply evaluating the numbers projecting forward. A key moment occurred when analysts such as NBC’s Chuck Todd concluded that even if Clinton were given the disputed totals in Michigan and Florida, she would still be behind in delegates and popular votes.
Looking more closely at the coverage last week, the single biggest component, at 9% of all the campaign stories studied, dealt with calls for Clinton to end her campaign. When you add that together with the superdelegate deliberations (7% of the coverage), the divided Democrats theme (4%), and continued questions about the fate of the Michigan and Florida delegations (2%), more than one in five campaign stories last week still highlighted the Democrats’ as-yet unhealed divisions.
Overall, campaign coverage last week accounted for 46% of the newshole, as measured by PEJ’s News Coverage Index for May 5-11. That made it the biggest single week of election coverage since March 3-9, the week of the Ohio and Texas votes. In what is now a familiar pattern, cable news devoted the most attention (75% of the airtime studied) to the race with radio coming next at 56%. The campaign was the top story in four media sectors, but online, at 29%, it finished a close second behind the deadly Myanmar cyclone (31%).
The Campaign Coverage index is an addition to PEJ’s NCI report, which tracks what stories the media covered in the previous week. The CCI offers a greater level of detail of the campaign coverage. That includes the percentage of stories in which a candidate played a significant role (as a subject of between 25% and 50% of the story) or a main newsmaker role (making up at least 50% of the story). The Index also identifies the key narratives in the reporting and the “Line of the Week,” a statement from a journalist or source that in our researchers’ estimation seems either to capture the story or is particularly colorful. PEJ’s News Coverage Index will not disappear. It will come at the bottom of the CCI.
The week of the North Carolina and Indiana showdowns began with the media highlighting a Clinton message that seemed successful in Ohio and Pennsylvania, one honed by public displays of whiskey drinking and public embraces of guns and hunting. “She has repackaged herself as a working-class hero,” said ABC’s Jake Tapper on that network’s election eve May 5 newscast. “Meet the new populist Hillary Clinton,” he added. “In this narrative, Obama is the elitist [and] the goal of course, is to win over the support of white, working class voters.”
One element of Clinton’s populist approach, her call for a gas-tax holiday that was vocally opposed by Obama, came in for serious criticism from economists and the media. And in the May 6 post-mortems, some analysts wondered if she had hurt herself politically with what columnist Charles Krauthammer called “a cheap gimmick.”
After the votes had been counted, the media verdict was almost unanimous. “Is it Over?” asked NBC Today host Matt Lauer as he opened his May 7 show. Sitting next to him, Tim Russert delivered the answer, saying “I cannot find an objective Democrat who does not think this race is over.”
That night’s CBS newscast began focusing on exit strategies for Clinton, with correspondent Jim Axelrod reporting that “several top advisers are suggesting that she stay in through West Virginia, Kentucky, Oregon and then, in two weeks, gracefully bow out.” In a companion piece, Jeff Greenfield wondered about the kind of “inducements that might persuade Clinton to step aside”—including offers ranging from paying off campaign debt to a major convention speaking role.
As the week wore on, with no sign of any major change of heart on the part of her campaign, the Clinton narrative began to emphasize her desire to keep fighting—at least for now. “Clinton says she’s still in it” was the headline on the May 8 Philadelphia Enquire story reporting that she may have raised $1 million at a fundraiser the previous evening.
But at the same time, coverage of Obama indicated that he was beginning to move past the primary fight toward a November contest with McCain. One dustup that made headlines occurred when Obama accused McCain during a CNN interview of “losing his bearings.” The McCain camp fired back, saying that Obama—by using the phrase “losing his bearings”—was trying to make an issue of the candidate’s age. The Obama camp responded by blasting McCain for a strategy of “distract and attack.” This exchange, covered on the May 9 edition of Brit Hume’s Fox News Channel show, seemed to be ushering in a new post-primary phase in which Obama and McCain would be the main combatants and Clinton the bystander.
And now, in the rest of the week’s news:
Although the campaign dominated coverage last week, the tragic Myanmar cyclone that has taken tens of thousands of lives finished second, at 15% of the newshole measured by the Project’s News Coverage Index for May 5-11. Next came stories about the troubled U.S. economy (5%), the issue of immigration (2%) and rising gas and oil prices (2%).
That made Myanmar one of the biggest non-campaign stories of the year so far. Only the Eliot Spitzer scandal (23% of the newshole), the Pope’s visit to the U.S. (16%) and two weeks of economic news (19% and 16%) attracted more attention than the Myanmar natural disaster when it came to coverage of something other than the 2008 election.
Mark Jurkowitz, PEJ
Media Exposure by Candidate
|
|
Main Newsmaker | Significant Presence | Total Percent of Campaign Stories |
| Hillary Clinton (D)
|
58.5% | 11.5% | 70.0% |
| Barack Obama (D) | 50.7 | 16.2 | 66.9 |
| John McCain (R) |
8.8 | 2.9 | 11.7 |
| Bill Clinton |
1.0 | 1.5 | 2.5 |
| John Edwards | 0.4 | 0.2 | 0.6 |
| Ron Paul (R) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total Number of Campaign Stories = 477 | |||
Top Overall Stories of the Week
|
Rank |
Story |
Percent of Newshole |
|
1 |
2008 Campaign |
46% |
|
2 |
Myanmar Cyclone |
15 |
|
3 |
U.S. Economy |
5 |
|
4 |
Immigration |
2 |
|
5 |
Gas/Oil Prices |
2 |
|
6 |
Micorsoft Bids for Yahoo |
1 |
|
7 |
Events in Iraq |
1 |
|
8 |
Russia |
1 |
|
9 |
Israel Turns 60 |
1 |
|
10 |
Iraq Homefront |
1 |
Click here to see the top ten stories for each media sector.
Click here to see the methodology for the Campaign Coverage Index
Popularity: 1% [?]
The pro-Obama biased media have interfered in, undermined, and subverted the Democratic presidential nomination process. The pro-Obama biased media continue to sabotage Sen.Clinton’s presidential campaign with impunity.
Obama does not have the requisite number of delegates for the nomination; he has no presumptive lock on the nomination. At the conclusion of the primaries when all states have voted, the superdelegates must use their independent judgment to select the best qualified presidential candidate; “delegate math” is irrelevant to the function of the superdelegates.
The presidential nomination process is still in progress with several states to vote. Sen. Clinton is the best qualified candidate to win the general election; and she continues to campaign strongly for the future of America.
With “the media hear the fat lady humming,” if Obama swipes the nomination from Sen Clinton, he will crash and burn in November. I will definitely vote McCain like other Hillary Clinton supporters. The Democratic Party will be a train wreck of “eggheads and African Americans.”
“OBAMA BACKERS MAKE THEIR THREAT” - Executive Intelligence Review - “Those who are attempting to shut down the Clinton campaign and control this Presidential election have no allegiance to (the) Democratic Party, or to the United States.”
At first, the main stream media was all for Clinton … now they are on board for Obama … the election is not over but we know that once loved John McCain is yesterdays news since the main stream media loves a lefty!
I guess Hillary got exactly what she wanted then: to be the center of the universe. At what price?
Does anyone really believe that if she wins this primary by throwing mud, by trickery, by slight-of-hand, by backroom deals, she will get the support of the Democrats and Independents? What an insult to us. We all have to pick the leader who will best lead our country, regardless of the party.
Democrats who will not vote Republican probably won’t vote at all. To us, this is not a matter of political treason. This is a matter of electing the candidate who will best sort his/her way through a maze of “intelligence” and factual data, make judgment calls that may not be well received (”no gas tax holiday”) and still put the voters first. This is not what Clinton is doing.
Clinton knows what happens to the Democratic party when the race gets drawn out this way, in the manner she has chosen. If she’s not the G.E. candidate of choice in WV,will she go to WV and tell the voters to support Obama? And after all has been said and done, do you really believe anyone but the VERY brave West Virginians who came out to vote for Obama will actually support him in November? Every last Democrat could vote Democrat in the G.E. and still not get a Democrat into office because of her.
I’m one of 40 million+ Independents, member of a huge segment of this country’s voters, and I am voting for Obama. If Hillary claws and nags and pushes her way (I wouldn’t put her above litigation) into the nomination, I am not sure what I am going to do in November. I will probably stay at home and cry.
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