Public Eye
February 20, 2007 2:19 PM

What Happens When You Burn The Press

(AP)
The press used to love John McCain. Maybe it wasn't quite an Obama-level infatuation, but in 2000 his "straight talk" had the press corps swooning – at least according to supporters of his then-opponent, George W. Bush, who complained bitterly about the McCain coverage.

McCain charmed journalists in large part by providing them with the kind of access reporters rarely get from serious candidates. In Feb. 2000, ABC News' Linda Douglass said this on "Reliable Sources": "Whenever there is an issue that is somewhat controversial, the reporters will go after McCain on the bus in the morning, and he will take about 20 minutes worth of questions and diffuse the tension."

He was also a good story – the relative outsider who took on the establishment candidate. Here's Bob Schieffer on that same program: "It has all the elements of a good drama. You know, this is the little guy taking on the establishment. This is a candidate that didn't have a lot of money. This is a candidate that said, well, what I'll do is just get out on this bus and drive around and talk to people."

Unfortunately for McCain, things have changed. As Howard Kurtz pointed out in his Web chat today, "[t]here has been a steady drumbeat of stories for months now about McCain abandoning his maverick ways, McCain flip-flopping on the likes of Falwell, McCain hiring political gunslingers he had once denounced, and how McCain's pro-war position is hurting his candidacy." So why has McCain fallen out of the press' good graces? The simplest reason is that the press isn't going to maintain the same narrative about a candidate for a decade. In the interest of a good storyline, they had to turn on McCain at some point. But it's more than that.

In 2000, McCain sold himself as a straight talker who didn't play the double-talk games most politicians are known for. This time around, he's taken the more-traditional approach – reaching out to extremists like Falwell, for example, whom he once called an "agent of intolerance." It made his earlier "straight talk" look like a political ploy, a cynical strategy by a politician who fooled the press into thinking he was different. Bitter about having fallen for McCain back in 2000, journalists are now quick to hammer the candidate for the kind of political maneuvering most politicians can easily get away with.

There is a lesson here for another 2008 candidate: John Edwards. Edwards has been selling himself as the 2008 version of the straight talk politician. He has said he was wrong to vote for the war and stressed his willingness to level with the public. Some media outlets, like the New Republic, have already greeted Edwards' rhetoric with skepticism, but many have mostly taken Edwards at his word. The challenge now for Edwards is to maintain his reputation for straight talk while also doing what it takes to win the presidency – and that's not easy, as McCain's experience has shown. By selling himself as the only honest politician around, he has invited the press' wrath if and when his Falwell moment comes down the pike.
Tags:
john mccain ,
john edwards
Topics:
Mega-Media Trends
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment
by rmf1997 February 22, 2007 12:06 PM EST


What ever happened to the guy that exposed Bernie Kerik for the monster that he is? I think the country owes this guy a thank you for not letting Rudy put a guy like that in homeland security? How could Rudy have put a guy with no high school diploma in a position of authority in the jail system, and let him go into the Police Commissioner spot and then set him up for homeland security? What a Joke!!!! Something really stinks here!! What could Kerik possibly have on Rudy or even the president that nothing happens to this dirt bag? There has to be more!!! There Has to Be More!!!

It's obvious that Kerik and Rudy didn't want this guy Ray talking. What Happened to him? As soon as he exposed him, no one ever heard from him again. Is he even alive? What does Kerik have on Rudy that he would continue to let him get away with these atrocities? What does this guy Ray know that would make them react in this way? Obviously it's not in Rudy's or Kerik's best interest to have him talking. Ray was Kerik's best man at his wedding, he must have known something more that they did not want exposed. What would have happened if this loser Kerik slithered his way into the White House? What irreversible damage could have been done if not for the Patriotic bravery of Ray? This guy Ray did a huge service to this country exposing this monster for what he is. It's pretty obvious that Rudy is the brains of this operation and Kerik is the brawn in this politically corrupt scandal.

Reply to this comment
by ronmwanga February 20, 2007 11:07 PM EST
John McCain is in a new position, somewhere he has never found himself: He is the "Establishment" candidate of the Republican Party. Before now he was as popular on the Republican side of the aisle as a head cold. The legendary Lott-McCain battles in 2001 over campaign finance reform come immediately to mind. But that's all water under the bridge. It is impossible to be a "Reformer" and The Establishment candidate -- beyond rhetorically -- in such a verically hierarchical party as the Republican Party. Bold reform is, by definition, antithetical to Conservatism. Ironically, the opprobium of the MSM will help McCain solidify his bona fides with the Conservative wing of the Republican Party.

John Edwards, by contrast, should care a whiff about the hot air coming from New Republic. Those windbags have been wrong on everything from Charles Murray and Richard hernstein's "The Bell Curve" (They gave the book a "fair" hearing), to Steven Glass (and their disgusting lack of fact-checking) to their support of the Iraq War. TNR is a boutique journal for an influential, but tiny group of Washingtonian Harvard "liberals."

Edwards' constituency is The Nation Magazine, MoveOn, the labor unions and the college campuses. To that crowd, the opprobrium of those tea cnd crumpet eaters at TNR is a badge of honor, not unlike McCain and the MSM.
Reply to this comment
by sanfelz February 20, 2007 6:35 PM EST
Videos of John McCain supporting opposite sides of the same issue are available on both liberal and conservative sites.
Reply to this comment
by mattcat25 February 20, 2007 5:56 PM EST
$Money trumps peace, John McCain was a very attractive candidate for Republican Moderates and Conservative Democrats. But, McCain recently has displayed that he would give-in to the Right Wing Hierarchy and become a shill for Jerry Farwell's (im)moral majority, corporate advantage, and of course Bush's profit engine Iraq war.

The Republicans and McCain are abusing American Families by using the lives of our troops and holding them HOSTAGE in Iraq to extort $Billions of funding diverted to the private sector. This War was created on a lie told by the Bush Administration and appears that will be sustained by the next Republican Presidential Nominee, whom ever that may be.
Reply to this comment

About Public Eye

Description for Public Eye

  • MOST POPULAR