Free Ride: Inside The Media's Love Affair With McCain

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First Posted: 03-25-08 11:15 AM   |   Updated: 04- 2-08 05:12 AM

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"The press loves McCain," MSNBC's Chris Matthews has declared. "We're his base." This tawdry media love affair with the presumptive GOP nominee is the focus of a new book by two experts in the field -- David Brock and Paul Waldman of the progressive media watchdog Media Matters.

In Free Ride: John McCain and the Media, Brock and Waldman "illuminate how the press falls for McCain's 'straight tak' and how the Arizona senator gets away with inconsistencies and misrepresentations for which the media skewers other politicians." HuffPost discussed the book recently with Waldman (buy a copy of your own here):

HuffPost: Can you explain the thesis of the book, the key points you found after investigating McCain's relationship with the national media?

Waldman: What you find when you examine McCain's treatment by the press is this: The rules are different for John McCain. Other candidates get defined by their biggest weaknesses and the worst thing they ever did; McCain gets defined by his best qualities and the most noble thing he ever did. Other candidates find a press corps that mocks their spin and assumes they're phonies and liars; McCain's spin frames his coverage. (When was the last time you saw a story about McCain that didn't refer to him as a "maverick" or his utterances as "straight talk"?) Other candidates view the press as an adversary, and the coverage they get reflects that relationship; McCain views the press as a partner and friend, and that's how they treat him.

The result is that a whole series of ideas about McCain -- that he's a maverick, that he's a reformer, that he's an ideological moderate -- have become so embedded in the coverage of McCain that journalists no longer even ask whether they're true. And in many cases, these ideas are either completely false or have been wildly exaggerated.

2008-03-25-freeride.jpgMcCain recently hosted a group of journalists for an off-the-record weekend excursion at his ranch. What was going on there? Is that normal?

It's not the first time a politician has gathered reporters at his home for a little R-and-R in an attempt to woo them with his winning personality. But what McCain understands better than anyone in his profession is that nothing is more important than establishing a personal relationship with reporters. As he's found time and time again, when you build up those ties of friendship, they become a resource you can draw on later. So when something pops up that would be enormously problematic or even fatal for another politician, reporters give McCain the benefit of the doubt.

They also display a remarkable ability to take uncomplimentary stories about McCain and turn them to his benefit. The Keating Five scandal? It's now told as a story of redemption: McCain sinned, but then saw the light, and the episode turned him into the reformer he is today. His flip-flopping on the Confederate flag in the 2000 campaign? It just shows how full of character McCain is, because he later admitted that he had changed his position for political reasons. These episodes, and many others, show how McCain can find in his own transgressions the spin that reporters will eat up and use to frame their subsequent discussions of the issue. Because McCain has worked to make them feel they know him and like him, they're open to that spin when he offers it.

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If we were asked to advise reporters on this question, we'd say this: It's OK for you to eat McCain's ribs, but when it comes time to write your stories, you need to make sure the sweet taste of barbeque sauce isn't still lingering in your mouth.

How do progressives counter McCain's wooing of the press without alienating those very same reporters? Has Hillary Clinton's tactic -- of sometimes aggressively calling out unfair coverage -- been successful in your view?

We're sympathetic to reporters on this score -- nobody likes having their work criticized, and reporters often find their work attacked in a very public way. But they have a particularly critical set of obligations to the public. It is no exaggeration to say that the choices they make determine who gets to lead our country. We believe that all politicians should be held to the same standard of scrutiny, regardless of how friendly they are with reporters.

So progressives do have to call out coverage that is inaccurate, misleading, or unfair. It should be done in a way that's respectful, but it has to be done. As progressives, we believe in journalism -- we're not looking simply to replace coverage favorable to conservatives with coverage favorable to progressives. The public is best served by journalism that is as complete as possible and as accurate as possible, and that isn't afraid to tell the truth, even if some people are going to find it unsettling to their side.

In the past, McCain has often been hammered by conservative media figures like Rush Limbaugh. Have you noticed any shift since McCain became the presumptive GOP nominee?

It's hard to imagine that people like Limbaugh won't come around to McCain's side once they are faced with a Democratic nominee they really hate. People like Limbaugh are laboring under the false belief that McCain is some kind of liberal -- an idea we refute at length in the book. And when you ask them why they think that, a common response is, "The media love him, so he must be a liberal." What they don't understand is that the affection for McCain among the press corps has nothing to do with ideology. It has many components, from their approval of campaign finance reform, to their respect for what McCain went through nearly 40 years ago in Vietnam, to the way the story McCain has told about himself -- that he's an anti-establishment rebel -- is pitched right at the way reporters like to think of themselves. But the most important part is the way McCain deals with them on a personal level. In the book we quote Andrew Ferguson, a conservative journalist, who wrote, "I never saw Heifetz play the violin, or Hogan hit a five-iron, or Pavlova do a pirouette. But I've seen John McCain work a reporter. And I knew I was seeing a master at the peak of his form."

Relatedly, Limbaugh points to the New York Times story on McCain's relationship with lobbyist Vicki Iseman as evidence that the "liberal media" has ended its love affair with the Arizona senator. How do you respond?

If anything, that New York Times story proves just the opposite. Think about how it played out. Within just a few hours, the story ceased to be about John McCain, and became a story about The New York Times. As the coverage shifted, the true meat of the story -- what McCain did for Paxson Communications -- died with virtually no follow-up from any news organization. How much have we heard about it since? Yet here was a case in which McCain did almost exactly what got him in trouble in the Keating Five scandal. He got tens of thousands of dollars from this corporation, was flying around the country on its corporate jet, had a good friendship with its lobbyist, and pressured the FCC at the company's behest.

McCain's connections with lobbyists are one of the great underreported stories of this race. His campaign is loaded with them. But that doesn't jibe with the story reporters have been telling about him for years, that he's the special interests' biggest enemy. When it comes to John McCain, reporters don't use new information to update their impressions of who he is. If that new information contradicts the story they've been telling, they ignore it.

What explains McCain's far more contentious relationship with his home state media?

McCain has had an extraordinarily contentious relationship with the Arizona press for most of his career. They've seen him in full -- his strengths, but also his weaknesses, like his volcanic temper, his penchant for vindictiveness, and his thin skin. The picture they paint is much more complex and nuanced than what you find in the national media. And in response, he's made his displeasure with them clear. In 2000, he actually refused to grant a seat on the "Straight Talk Express" to the reporter covering him for the Republic; maybe if her stories were as starry-eyed as what the national media were writing, she would have been invited aboard. But while the national media figures were partying with McCain, she had to rent a car and follow the bus around the campaign trail. And this was the reporter for the largest newspaper in his home state.

Any tips for readers who see outrageous reporting on McCain from mainstream outlets? Is there anything they can do beyond throwing a shoe at the TV?

People should always be willing to talk back to the media -- send them an email, give them a call, let them know that they did something wrong (and of course, if you want them to listen, you have to do it with civility and respect). The next thing people can do is spread the word. Post it to a diary or a comment on one of the blogs you read; get it in front of as wide an audience as possible. Tell your friends and family -- word of mouth really does work. We hope our book will start a conversation about how McCain has been covered and continues to be covered, so that reporters will step back and take a look at how they've been reporting on McCain.

"The press loves McCain," MSNBC's Chris Matthews has declared. "We're his base." This tawdry media love affair with the presumptive GOP nominee is the focus of a new book by two experts in the field -...
"The press loves McCain," MSNBC's Chris Matthews has declared. "We're his base." This tawdry media love affair with the presumptive GOP nominee is the focus of a new book by two experts in the field -...
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- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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Do you honestly think that reporters are easier on McCain than they are on Obama? Up until the Pastor Disaster and the SNL skits, the press was treating Obama like the new messiah.

If the reporters do like McCain, one reason could be that most of his travel time is spent talking to them, on the record, so he can explain things to them in depth, not just in soundbites. He spends FAR more time with the press than either Hillary or Obama do. The press consider Clinton and Obama to be cautious control freaks in comparison, always afraid of straying off-message.

BTW, Waldman's description of the Paxson story is inaccurate. No one has followed up on it because it's old news from 1999 which has already been hashed out. Back in 1999 both the WaPo and NYT reported McCain did NOT apply inappropriate pressure to the FCC, and that he also voted AGAINST Paxson's interests many times in committee. IOW, it was not a story in 1999, and it's not a story now, except to the extent that the NYT made themselves a laughing stock.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 03/25/2008

John McCain can say anything and call it a joke... Ha, ha, ha laughs the MSM. Bomb Iran... al Qaeda and Gen. P. agree on Iraq... Yeah, one is sure helping the other at least in their press clippings. Give us a break!. He hugs enemies like W after South Carolina and turns them into his allies at least in front of the cameras. He's been playing the professional victim card all his life. War hero of torture who can't decide if he condones it or not anymore. Straight talk is far from any real truth telling. Americans can't stomach the truth and the press won't give it to them. It just makes everyone look bad and we have to think about our problems. McCain lives on stupid simple platitudes and repeating things enough until the media believes it must be true. He puts the sad puppy look or the smiling teeth on the end of his quips and they eat it up. Sound familiar? He is only a maverick when it comes to standing up against the worst Republican corporate give-aways where he won't get any dirt on himself but those dirty lobbiest will have a front row seat. Hell, most of them are retired politicians anyway. How's he going to save the economy, win the war or fix healthcare? Just get the press to do it for him. They'll think of something.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 03/25/2008
- Moxo I'm a Fan of Moxo 11 fans permalink

Bad news sells newspapers. Good news does not. The last time newspapers made a profit from good news was VE and VJ Day!

John McCain as President guarantees enough bad news to fund every niche of the MSM for the next 100 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 03/25/2008

The national media doesn't report on Saint John McCain, they worship him. They would never dream of being critical for fear of being labled unpatriotic. It's pitiful, really. A typical speech from our next president, circa 2010: "We have to stand up for America, my friends. It's common knowledge that (fill in the blank) is our enemy, so we have to attack now. We all must sacrifice, my friends. That's why I'm sending Overlord Lieberman to threaten (fill in here) as soon as he tells me where it is,my friends."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 03/25/2008
- Moxo I'm a Fan of Moxo 11 fans permalink

Liberman will be picked as Veep - McClain will view that as "Good News"!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 03/25/2008

Keep this post up until....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 03/25/2008

My God i hope this gains some traction

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 03/25/2008
- GerryS I'm a Fan of GerryS 50 fans permalink
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Nicely staged photo, with the halo and rays of lights coming from it. It makes John look rather saintly.
I would't vote for him if he could walk on water, feed the country from a few loaves of bread and a few fish, heal the sick------­----------­----------­-

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 03/25/2008

I can't even count how many times I turned on "Meet the Press" and there was John McCain getting solo time with Tim Russert. Talk about a man-crush!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 03/25/2008
- wayoutleft I'm a Fan of wayoutleft 39 fans permalink
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chris matthews is creepy around mccain- even creepier than he is with nora o'donnell. mccain, on the other hand, patronizes the media with undisguised impatience. i think in the senate he's big with broadcast and telecom issues. there's always a persistent sense of horror around mccain- he embodies it all: the incompetent butchering of viet nam, the rape of iraq, the dead civilians in afghanistan, the torture policy in south america, the dirty deals with totalitarian china, the hideous barbarian olympics walking on the body of tibet, the military sex farms in kabul and okinawa. the whole ugly military disease that the democratic candidates will be wallowing in as mccain huffs and puffs his grim resentful self toward the white house and, after easily terrifying the democratic congress , the levers of all power in america, ready to select his victims.
how is this democratic campaign year going to look once mccain is in the white house? if the democratic party fails before mccain- 40% + will vote for him even though he gives them nothing but war and recession- is there a reason for it to go on?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 03/25/2008

DISPATCHES FROM THE GROUND WAR ...

NEW YORK TIMES COLUMNIST DAVID BROOKS REPORTS ON HILLARY'S "LONG DEFEAT" ...

Hillary Clinton’s presidential prospects continue to dim. The door is closing. Night is coming. The end, however, is not near.

Last week, an important Clinton adviser told Jim VandeHei and Mike Allen (also of Politico) that Clinton had no more than a 10 percent chance of getting the nomination. Now, she’s probably down to a 5 percent chance.

Five percent.

Let’s take a look at what she’s going to put her party through for the sake of that 5 percent chance: The Democratic Party is probably going to have to endure another three months of daily sniping. For another three months, we’ll have the Carvilles likening the Obamaites to Judas and former generals accusing Clintonites of McCarthyism. For three months, we’ll have the daily round of résumé padding and sulfurous conference calls. We’ll have campaign aides blurting “blue dress” and only-becau­se-he’s-bl­ack references as they let slip their private contempt.

For three more months (maybe more!) the campaign will proceed along in its Verdun-like pattern. There will be a steady rifle fire of character assassination from the underlings, interrupted by the occasional firestorm of artillery when the contest touches upon race, gender or patriotism. The policy debates between the two have been long exhausted, so the only way to get the public really engaged is by poking some raw national wound. ...

(S)he is amazing. She possesses the audacity of hopelessness. ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 03/25/2008

And this is a response to the McCain article how? Or just taking any chance possible to fire another shot at Sen. Clinton?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 03/25/2008

What do you expect? He is the Republican front-runner and the media is run by large corporations. Is it really any different from the love affair the media had with Chimp before the 2000 election? Or the love affair they had with Reagan? The media is Republican. McCain is Republican. End of discussion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 03/25/2008
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The media is Republican and New York State has just become a Red State... oh and the Cubs are going to win the World Series.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 03/25/2008
- Wilbur I'm a Fan of Wilbur 25 fans permalink

CBS = Conservative Broadcasting System
NBC = Nothing But Conservatism
ABC = Always Brazenly Conservative
MSNBC = More Salacious Neanderthal Brand (of) Conservatism
FOX = Flatulent Obnoxious Xenophobes

The media is biased toward conservatives. Case closed!

Wilbur

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 03/25/2008
- jstock I'm a Fan of jstock 4 fans permalink

Those in the media who are not Republican - a majority, we are told - are so afraid of being called "liberal," that they bend over backwards to prove to a very VOCAL right wing that they're being "fair." We on the left have the Nation, Mother Jones and some liberal web sites like Huffpo, but the MSM are totally corporate and/or cowed. We all need to complain, loudly and often, to the MSM about the rosy coverage that McCain always gets. If need be, maybe the old reporters who've been covering McCain all these years should be assigned elsewhere, and replaced by new and untainted reporters who haven't drank the McCain Kool-Aid. Otherwise, he gets the equivalent of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of favorable coverage free of charge. We must have fairness in the MSM, or it's nothing but a joke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 03/25/2008

it is really quite sad. He comes across as a tired, angry old man, with little new to say, and some difficulty remembering exactly what he has already said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 03/25/2008
- SCG I'm a Fan of SCG 110 fans permalink
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Really , He could get just as potent coverage, if he just stood in front of photo backdrops. Save alot of campaign travel money, take longer naps.....n­o one would be the wiser.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 03/25/2008

Darn liberal media owned by multi-nationals. I can't believe it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 03/25/2008

Media parent companies drool over 100 years of DEBT!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 03/25/2008
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free ride, errr ok have you been to this web site called the Huffington Post?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 03/25/2008
- iPolitics I'm a Fan of iPolitics 33 fans permalink

HuffPost is not the mainstream media.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 03/25/2008
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But The HuffPost wants to be mainstream?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 03/25/2008
- Nutcase I'm a Fan of Nutcase 49 fans permalink
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How can we tell the difference?

Je pense, donc je suis populiste.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 03/25/2008

Ever hear of TELECOM LOBBYIST????? They give him money, he owes them a debt if elected, they help give a free ride in the media! HELLO!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 03/25/2008
- iPolitics I'm a Fan of iPolitics 33 fans permalink

The media is soft and weak when it comes to McCain. Gives a good quote means good for corporate profits

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 03/25/2008
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