Looks like I was a bit premature suggesting that the Overton window was moving at the New York Times.
We've already established that New York Times and the considerable segment of the establishment press that follows its lead would rather not talk about Donald Trump at all, so it's not that surprising to see his name omitted from the front page of Monday's paper and largely absent from the website.
Instead, the big stories are a deep dive into Tim Walz's relationship with China and a borderline nonstory about African-American men supporting Kamala Harris. Both are the sort of articles you would expect to see on the proverbial slow news day, which is strange since the weekend was rather eventful on the political front.
There is certainly more say about Trump's press conference and its aftermath, including the fact that he threatened to sue the New York Times for pointing out one of his fabrications. Surely the GOP nominee for president averaging over two and a half misstatements, exaggerations and outright lies per minute is newsworthy.
A team of NPR reporters and editors reviewed the transcript of his news conference and found at least 162 misstatements, exaggerations and outright lies in 64 minutes.https://t.co/Gggb27b2se
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) August 12, 2024
162/64 = 2.53 misstatements, exaggerations and outright lies each and every minute. https://t.co/veWk8LmTVP
— Kai Ryssdal (@kairyssdal) August 12, 2024
Then there are radical, offensive, and just plain crazy statements Trump made over the weekend. Normally, a candidate suggesting that he would abolish Fed independence would make the front page.
Americans are really sleeping on this but Trump's desire to end the independence of the Fed from politicians is one of his most dangerous ideas. This is how you get the kind of economic problems Argentina's populist politicians have made them suffer under for decades. https://t.co/ca8PDIZ4Ww
— Alex גדעון בן װעלװל (@JewishWonk) August 8, 2024
So Kamala Harris says she's committed to Fed independence after Trump and Vance attack it. Any praise for Harris from center-right think-tankers and commentators? Nah. Just as you'd not know from them that Biden-Harris economic policy has been pretty responsible and successful.
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) August 12, 2024
Trump literally is running on increasing general inflation, removing Fed independence, and increasing housing costs. He’s an economic disaster in the waiting. https://t.co/OCJ7bYH42U
— William Meservy (@WilliamMeservy) August 10, 2024
Of course, in terms of shock value, that pails next to the accusation that the Harris campaign with the apparent cooperation of dozens in the press mounted a massive conspiracy to fake a rally attended by thousands of supporters. This one was so unhinged that even Nicholas Kristof suggested it was time to start discussing Trump's mental health.
I think the major networks should run these when they happen as "a statement from the Republican candidate," because that's what they are. If Harris tweeted something like this, it would lead every network, broadcast or cable. This is newsworthy. But the refs have been worked :( https://t.co/ra6Zh8c5h0
— Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) August 11, 2024
It’s time to revive the conversation about whether a major-party candidate is too old to run for president and is losing his grasp of reality. pic.twitter.com/jITQ4ClVGb
— Nicholas Kristof (@NickKristof) August 12, 2024
Video and on-the-ground reporters say that Kamala Harris had 15,000 people at her rally in Detroit. But on this Mar-a-Lago toilet, they’re investigating a different theory: AI.
— New York Times Pitchbot (@DougJBalloon) August 11, 2024
The weekend also saw major breaking news about project 2025. How was that not more important than the mystery of black men supporting Harris?
Watch 14 hours of the Project 2025 "Presidential Administration Academy" training videos here: https://t.co/JOGCpmCkGn https://t.co/huMOLTiVXs
— ProPublica (@propublica) August 11, 2024
Among the many Project 2025 training materials for Republicans revealed by ProPublica is this video instructing how to evade public records and transparency laws through meetings rather than emails.
— Matthew Sheffield (@mattsheffield) August 11, 2024
They need secrecy for their extreme agenda. https://t.co/RzJz7i3Zmb pic.twitter.com/YiAcAb73IT
And there was a hacking scandal:
HOLY HELL YOU FUCKING MORONS!!!
— emptywheel (money order) (@emptywheel) August 10, 2024
Trump used Brand Woodward--an absolutely crucial team on Trump's criminal defense--to do their VP vetting.
If they got OTHER docs from Woodward, Trump could be wildly exposed--& it would explain why Trump didn't tell FBI.https://t.co/yAPUG33yZJ pic.twitter.com/n2TIxTNeg0
As @emptywheel highlighted, the @WashingtonPost reported Trump didn’t tell the @FBI about this hack: https://t.co/2QMAfNaWl8
— Alex Howard (@digiphile) August 11, 2024
She argues that this compromise may be worse than it looks at first read:
“Trump has not firewalled his campaign from a criminal case involving the most…
Three staffers on the Biden-Harris campaign received spear phishing emails that were designed to appear legitimate but could give an intruder access to the recipients’ communications
— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) August 12, 2024
So far, investigators have not found that those attempts succeeded https://t.co/60G7BEYCRK
Washington Post and POLITICO sitting on a trove of Trump campaign docs while also not taking advantage of a presser to ask about a $10m bribe of Trump in 2016 by Egypt that was quashed by Trump's A.G. is a series of Ls for the notion of a free press holding power accountable.
— Matt Ortega (@MattOrtega) August 11, 2024
This is key. If the Times et al plan to cover hacked Trump emails differently from hacked Clinton emails, fine. But then they owe the public a detailed mea culpa for their conduct in 2016, including transparency over how and when they decided they were wrong. https://t.co/CHygn85qVE
— Brian Beutler (@brianbeutler) August 11, 2024
There is hypocrisy and then there is the Trump campaign complaining about journalists reporting on hacked campaign emails https://t.co/yWDH0MZlP3 pic.twitter.com/Dis8Cp2YtP
— Michael A. Cohen (NOT TRUMP’S FORMER FIXER) (@speechboy71) August 11, 2024
Perhaps the biggest news of the campaign was Trump's "quiet quitting."
And remember, that appearance was in Montana. You'd have to go all the way back to Atlanta to find him campaigning in a swing state.Reporter: You have not had a public campaign event for nearly a week… Why haven’t you been campaigning?
— Acyn (@Acyn) August 8, 2024
Trump: What a stupid question. Because I'm leading by a lot and I'm letting their convention go through. I’m campaigning a lot. I’m doing tremendous amounts… pic.twitter.com/9WH7w0UpVs
Trump is quiet quitting his own campaign https://t.co/Wpt6r60ujH
— Mary Anna Mancuso (@mancusomaryanna) August 7, 2024
Is Donald Trump 'quiet quitting'? Here’s what his 'meltdown at Mar-a-Lago' reveals https://t.co/98hc19MF4k
— AlterNet (@AlterNet) August 8, 2024
Trump is quiet quitting to try and relate to Millennials https://t.co/xR8RHUfilz
— TDot Resident (@TDotResident) August 8, 2024
Is there any precedent for a non-incumbent candidate, slightly behind in the polls and badly outfunded, deciding to scale back campaigning to a trickle? Trump's "explanation" was two transparent lies with a nonsensical statement in the middle. Assuming "letting their convention go through" means minimal campaign appearances, what strategic reason could he have in mind?
Even the far right cable channel the Blaze was talking about this.
From July 1-August 10 of 2016, Trump held 22 rallies.
— Steve Deace (@SteveDeaceShow) August 12, 2024
During that same time frame in 2024 he has held 8.
Not, however, the New York Times.
The NYT has never shown any reluctance to speculate in the absence of facts, and all too often present those speculations as facts. This continues to make up a large part of discussion of Biden and Harris. How can they not do the same when faced with far more bizarre behaviors and credibility-straining explanations of this suspension of conventional campaigning? Is he not physically up to the strain of more than one appearance a week? Is he afraid of dwindling crowds and embarrassing comparisons to Harris? Are his handlers trying to keep him from doing damage? Is his history of stiffing cities for the bill catching up with him? Does anyone have any other ideas?
I continue to think that most NYT reporters, and much NYT management, very much wants the Democrats to win the election.
ReplyDeleteI wonder whether part of the coverage problems you discuss above is that political journalists spend a lot of time on twitter and other online spaces that are filled with partisans on both sides. If you go to such spaces, you see Democrats saying that Trump is lying, speaking incoherently, supporting radical policies, etc., and then you see Republicans saying that Trump is being picked on by the media and that Harris is an empty suit, etc. When a NYT journalist see this . . . it's not that the journalist will try for "balance," exactly, but I think it does influence how they think.
When people talk about the influence of social media on election campaigns, the usual way it's framed is that some number of voters are seeing a message on Facebook or Twitter or whatever, and that might swing their vote. But I suspect there's another mechanism, maybe more important, which is that political journalists are so online that they end up chasing stories from all directions and not getting anywhere.
It's kind of like . . . what if I had subscriptions to Psychological Science, PNAS, NPR's science team, and the writings of Gladwell and the Freakonomics team? Then I'd be seeing tons and tons of stuff, much of it interesting, some of it true, some of it completely bogus. The mix of what I see would, to some extent, drive what I'd talk about.
Andrew
Andrew,
DeleteI suspect most of the reporters are growing increasingly angry with the direction of the coverage just as the rank and file were with the Tom Cotton editorial. Hell, even Kristof is complaining (though tactfully not calling out his employer by name).
Editors make the assignments, decide what goes on the front page, and write the headlines. The NYT is known for taking this to this next level compared to papers like the LA Times where reporters historically have much more input.
The actual reporting we're seeing is generally fine once you get past the bad headlines, the buried ledes and the A13 below the fold placement. With the exception of a few good soldier stars who can be counted on to follow the company line (Ezra Klein, Nate Cohn, Frank Bruni, Ross Douthat), the journalistic sins we've been seeing all seem to come from editors and their bosses.
Mark
Mark:
DeleteI still think the "too online" thing is part of the story. Reporters log on to twitter and they think it's the public square. The twitter feed is full of partisan content. So when a reporter goes on twitter and is deluged with posts saying that Trump is a hero and he crushed it with the Musk interview, well . . . it's not that the reporter will forget that Trump told a lot of lies in the interview and wasn't called out on them, but the reporter might still feel some need, not to balance the story exactly but to recognize the other side. Social media serve the function of amplifying extreme views, and I think it's hard for reporters to read social media and not be influenced by the mix of posts being pushed on them. It would be as if, every day on the way to work--and for many of the working hours--the reporter is driving through a neighborhood that's full of "Kamala is a Communist" lawn signs. It's gotta have some effect.
Andrew
Andrew,
Deleteyou can certainly make a good case for social media having the effects you describe in general, but I don't think they fit this case were a couple of reasons.
First, with a handful of previously discussed exceptions, this does not seem to be a reporter level problem. Even Haberman and Swan, except for some beat sweetening, do a pretty good job going where the story takes them. The problem here is editors, and we know from reliable first-hand sources that the New York Times is an exceptionally top-down, narrative driven paper.
Which brings me to my second point, the egregious examples are disproportionately coming from the NYT. I can't think of any reason why social media would have this much more of an impact on that paper than on the Washington Post or the LA Times.
The explanation I keep coming back to is that the paper of record is probably more influenced by institutional culture than is any other comparable news organization, and that culture has been having trouble coping with changes in the Republican Party since the Gingrich era and was pretty much completely broken by the rise of Donald Trump.
Mark