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Jay Rosen

Jay Rosen

Posted: September 5, 2007 01:20 PM

"Would You Guys Like us to Come Without You?"


National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley had a good question for the White House press corps Monday, when the President--surprise!--flew to Iraq. Reporters on the plane wanted to know if they were trailing along for what was essentially a photo op. "Would you guys like us to come without you?" said Hadley.

Good idea!

Of course our palace press would never do that. It would never call Hadley's bluff. Now it's true that nothing is more important to journalists than their reputation for independence; still, the press is not capable of making an independent decision denying the president his spin zone with a dateline in Iraq. When the White House says we're going, they're going.

What individuals in the press can do -- because this is within their rules -- is observe the next day that other individuals, their colleagues, were manipulated into writing phony headlines the previous day. Which is what Howard Kurtz does in Wednesday's Washington Post. (See Falling for the Spin.) We might call this "independence after the fact," made necessary by a refusal to act against an obvious ploy.

No one on that plane thought Bush was going to make any real news in Iraq, and yet they also knew that their bosses weren't about to send them all the way over there and get nothing from it. This made them dependent on what the President decided to say in lieu of making news. So we got misleading announcements about possible troop reductions when, as Kurtz wrote, "a troop reduction is no more likely today than it was yesterday." (Even so, reporters left behind were heard griping about being "out of position.")

Hadley was actually taunting them with, "Would you guys like us to come without you?" If he didn't already know that the press corps was incapable of taking an independent decision, he never would have done that. He would have done what spokeswoman Dana Perino did. "There are some people who might try to deride this trip as a photo opportunity," she said. "We wholeheartedly disagree."

I disagree too. "Photo-op" understates and normalizes it. Bush flew to Iraq on a propaganda mission that required the press to complete the mission for him. But this was all above board in the sense that these moves are ritualized. And that's the truly strange part. Tune into this from the President as they all flew on to Australia aboard Air Force One:

If you look at my comments over the past eight months, it's gone from a security situation in the sense that we're either going to get out and there will be chaos, or more troops. Now the situation has changed where I'm able to speculate on the hypothetical.

Indeed.

* * *

Glenn Greenwald wrote a post at Salon last weekend about the (equally strange) "reverence for Karl Rove" among Washington journalists. He mentions my August 14th entry at PressThink, in which I try to explain how savviness -- "that quality of being shrewd, practical, well-informed, perceptive, ironic, 'with it,' and unsentimental in all things political" -- is the real ideology in Beltway journalism. Rove, I said, "understood and exploited for political gain" this cult of savviness in our press corps.

Glenn's point of departure is a recent column by Gloria Borger of US News that deserves our derision because it is nothing but horse race fluff, and redundant fluff at that. "When Rove speaks, the political class pays attention -- usually with good reason," she writes. Greenwald observes that "nothing Borger says is ever unique or original," which is quite true. Like a lot of pundits who appear on pundit shows, Gloria Borger is an interchangeable part.

"She is merely channelling the deep admiration which her Beltway media colleagues have long harbored for Rove and his underlings," says Greenwald. Admiration seems to him a pretty good explanation for things:

The media virtually never takes seriously any administration lawbreaking and corruption scandals because the people at the center of those scandals are those whom they deeply admire. They do not want political operatives whom they admire to be investigated, let alone prosecuted. They do not subject White House claims to scrutiny because they hear those claims from operatives with whom they identify and for whom they have deep affection. And they adopt GOP-fed narratives and blindly recite them because they are convinced that those who feed them those claims are individuals who possess the greatest insight.

I agree that the people in the press admire Karl Rove and wish they knew as much about politics as they believe he does. But I would recommend to Glenn some other factors that deserve consideration if we're trying to explain the collapse of the press under Bush, Cheney and Rove.

The most important of these is that journalists and their methods were overwhelmed by what the Bush White House did -- by its radicalism. There is simply nothing in the Beltway journalist's rule book about what to do, how to act, when a group of people comes to power willing to go as far as this group has in expanding executive power, eluding oversight, steamrolling critics (even when they are allies) politicizing the government, re-working the Constitution, rolling back the press, making secrecy and opacity standard operating procedure, and repealing the very principle of empiricism in matters of state.

The press tends to behave because it does not know how to act, in the sense of striking out in a new direction when confronted with a new fact pattern. As one observer put it:

From the Kyoto accords to the International Criminal Court, from torture and cruel and unusual treatment of prisoners to rendition of innocent civilians, from illegal domestic surveillance to lies about leaking, from energy ineptitude to denial of global warming, from cherry-picking intelligence to appointing a martinet and a tyrant to run the Defense Department, the Bush administration, in the name of fighting terrorism, has put America on the radical path to ruin.

Unprecedented interpretations of the Constitution that holds the president as commander in chief to be all-powerful and without checks and balances marks the hubris and unparalleled radicalism of this administration.

And that was from one of the administration's own: Lawrence Wilkerson, a Republican, and the former top aide to Colin Powell.

I think "overwhelmed by" explains more than Glenn's "identify with" or "affection for." In my view the press has suffered from not only a failure of nerve under Bush, and a default in leadership, but a dearth of imagination. Most of the people in the capital press -- the correspondents, their editors and bosses -- could not imagine what it was going to take to maintain any sort of dignified watchdog role under Bush the Radical. They never dreamed that their routines could be so ill-matched to the moment. (Wilkerson again on Bush and company: "They are radical. They're not conservative. They've stolen my party and I would like my party back.")

From this point of view, the reason Washington journalists don't "call them on it" (to use a phrase heard a lot in these discussions) is not that they identify with the GOP, or want to maintain their access, or cannot bear to lose their ticket to Washington cocktail parties, or have to obey corporate masters who naturally favor the pro-business Republicans; rather, it's that "calling them on it" in any consistent way would require a dramatic departure from known methods of Washington journalism. It would mean answering Hadley's question, "Would you guys like us to come without you?" in the affirmative.

* * *

The clearest example of this is the awesome phenomenon of Dick Cheney. If the Washington press were serious about about being a watchdog, speaking truth to power, or just covering the people making the key decisions it would have long ago said to itself, "we need to put as much effort into covering the OVP as we do in covering the White House." (OVP is Office of Vice President.)

Of course it never happened -- except in retrospect. And yet it had to happen if the press was to have any hope of "calling them on it." That it didn't happen isn't discussed, or even mentioned in press circles. Still, Cheney is routinely described -- by journalists themselves -- as the most powerful vice president ever, and as extremely "secretive." So it's not that they are unaware of the phenomenon. But they don't know what to do about it without overhauling rituals and assumptions that have lasted a very long time.

Similarly, they couldn't imagine that in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, the closer your sources were to the White House, the more likely they were to be wrong -- or entirely propagandistic. For it's a radical thought. And yet according to Warren Strobel, whose reporting for Knight-Ridder was more skeptical and closer to the mark, that was definitely the case. Listen to what he says:

We had people talking to us [whom I call] "professionals," I mean intelligence analysts, uniformed military and US diplomats who were expert in Iraq, expert in the Middle East, had done this stuff their whole careers. And they kept telling us over and over again that their views were being ignored, that the process was being politicized, strange things were going on, that a separate, almost alternate government was being set up, different reporting channels, and so on and so forth. And I think what happened was -- They were talking to other members of the media as well, obviously they just didn't come to Knight Ridder, but we took them a lot more seriously. We followed very aggressively on what they had to say. And in the end we found that their version of reality was more accurate than the version of reality that the White House was trying to put out.

"A separate, almost alternate government was being set up." Where's the rulebook for that? The closer you get to the White House, the further you are from the reality of what the White House is doing. What does that do to the notion of an "inside" story? Under these conditions, the normal routines of White House reporting actually lead you away from the story, and the longer you stick with those routines the further away you get. And yet you think you've done nothing wrong because you're doing what you have always done.

Which gets to another factor I want to emphasize. The press has a weakness for cyclical theories in politics. It tends to favor a view of Washington in which the pendulum may swing back and forth but the eternal truths remain true. As history this outlook is mostly junk, but it expresses well the view of a permanent political class that includes the press and expects to be around longer than any Administration. Republicans are in power today, Democrats tomorrow. Ideology gains for a while, but pragmatism soon takes over. Reformers may seize the initiative, but soon enough they will be followed by business-as-usual. And every four years "presidential hopefuls" will make the trek to Iowa and New Hampshire. What does the political class call elections? "Cycles."

In other words, if you wait long enough, politics will assume a familiar shape. The excitements of the moment, in which the press itself participates, are just that -- momentary. People who think this way are absolutely vulnerable to game-changers like the Bush crowd. And this too has been a factor in the Washington journalist's inability to cope with the current regime.

* * *

Jay Rosen teaches journalism at New York University and writes PressThink. He is also co-publisher, with Arianna Huffington, of OffTheBus, a citizen journalism project hosted at the Huffington Post and launched in partnership with NewAssignment.Net. For more information, read Arianna's project introduction. If you'd like to join our blogging team, sign up here. If you're interested in other opportunities, you can see the list here.

Follow Jay Rosen on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu

 
 
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09:05 PM on 09/11/2007
Knute Rockne invented the forward pass and the backfield shit in football. The entire football community pro and college adapted to these new techniques in less than two years. The press corps keeps falling for it every time with Bush.
12:09 AM on 09/07/2007
This is really good analysis (as opposed to good news).
10:30 PM on 09/06/2007
Reading blogs is great, PadrePio, but how much of their content is based on the major newspapers' actual reporting that you disdain?
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splashy
Really?!?!!!
07:37 PM on 09/06/2007
It sounds to me like there are no real investigative journalists in Washington any more. They are all status-quo keepers, in over their heads, because the status-quo keepers suffer from a lack of imagination, which keeps them from imagining anything but what they themselves have experienced. They are authoritarian types, that can't think original thoughts. They can only follow what their leaders tell them.
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rantsrus
04:43 PM on 09/06/2007
Hey, I've got an idea. Whenever gas prices go haywire, there's a call for a BOYCOTT. In this country there is a call for a BOYCOTT for everything from isolating China for its talent to export death to BOYCOTTING corporations to be made accountable. ACCOUNTABLE! There's the rub. WHY DON'T WE JUST BOYCOTT ALL NEWSPAPERS FOR A DAY. NO ONE BUY A NEWSPAPER. CANCEL A SUBSCRIPTION. They'll take you back...guaranteed. Send a message that we will not buy into a cowardly news media that is the lackey of both government and the corporate monolith which is really what controls this country.
01:07 PM on 09/06/2007
This is what happens when Americans pay more attention to what's on tv than who owns the tv network they're watching. There are no more mainstream "independent" media outlets in this country. All the mainstream outlets are owned by a large corporation, and in the television industry, those large corporations - EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM - has ties to the defense industry and is making money off armed conflict, wherever it is in the world.

The American mainstream media is no longer the 4th Estate, they are now part of the developing 4th Reich!

Until more Americans get fed up with seeing and reading propaganda, or even realize they're being fed propaganda by the media, America is doomed. Without a press, without tv outlets, that investigate and dig for truth, instead of worrying about their hairdos and what their camera image is, America is doomed.
12:33 PM on 09/06/2007
It's called the "Bully Pulpit".

Never before so aptly named.
11:51 AM on 09/06/2007
Great article. I'd only like to remark, despite my lack of any credentials or experience in the fiel of psychology, in my opinion:

Karl Rove is an obssessive sociopath able to totally focus on his goals with no regard for ethics or morality, which explains his remarkable success. Depressing that anyone would admire him.
10:29 AM on 09/06/2007
I accept the notion that the Washington press corp had never seen anything like the Bush regime. I do not accept that as an excuse. Why were Knight Ridder and McClatchy reporters able to get the story about the stupidity of invading Iraq? Why didn't Judith Miller do her work and talk to expert analysts? Why do Times reporters in Iraq continually re-write White House press releases and call it news? These are experienced reporters who are too caught up in the scene to do their jobs.

Fine, the Rove regime changed the rules of the game in terms of press coverage. After the debacle that is Iraq, why are reporters falling for the same bag of tricks as Cheney takes us into war in Iran? Has the press corp learned nothing in 6 years?

P.S. The press corp should have refused to go to Iraq with Bush. Don't editors have cajones?
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BritPatJax
10:08 AM on 09/06/2007
Can no one see that Anbar is a farce? You might decide to swamp with forces, any notorious area like Brixton in London and Harlem in NY and North Jax in my hometown where there is a lot of trouble and you would quell that activity. The villains would take a vacation from their activity. But as soon as things return to normal and the presence ceases the place remains the same. Brixton is still Brixton. Harlem is still Harlem. North Jax is still North Jax and Anbar is still Anbar? What on earth does it prove other than a temporary difference CAN be successful if sufficient numbers of Police/Military are deployed. Sooner or later though the place has to exist without the presence? Only then do we find out what IS and IS NOT possible in Anbar?
09:59 AM on 09/06/2007
Today's media is a joke. They go to a "question and answer" press conference given by Bush, which in itself is a rarity, and they all wave their hands like they're going to be called on. Bush has a pre-selected group of "reporters" that he's going to call on for "safe questions" and they're all unscrupulous enough to play along. This is common knowledge and he even admits this in a film clip from a recent Bill Moyers special about the run-up to this war shown on PBS. It's all BS when you see that dweeb speak to the so-called "media". He doesn't have the guts to go before reporters that don't play the game yet he expects our boys to have the guts to die in his stupid war. Some courage and the media types that play along are just as gutless. Their apathy is common though in many influential people in America today. They participate in the charade, go home pet the dog, put their feet up with a drink and check the Wall Street Journal to see what they're money is doing and delude themselves into thinking that they've actually done the American public a service. They don't have loved ones dying for this little dictator either and just as PadrePio alludes, anyone that would find Karl Rove something to be admired is despicable. The sad part is that most American people still do want real news and they're smart enough to know when they're not getting it. Hence the decline in ratings for CBS, NBC, ABC and CNN over the last several years. I won't include FOX news in that group because the people that watch that bunch obviously don't care to know the truth. Just FOX's version of it. I also believe that there are reporters that don't like "playing the game" and would love to climb up some asses in Washington to get at the truth but their employers won't let them. No wonder so many are turning to the internet flawed as it is.
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BritPatJax
09:30 AM on 09/06/2007
Why are the American people so limp wristed in claiming the need is for the Democrats to stop the rot in the leadership? The British People stopped the rot in their Government and quite painlessly. The Party remains but the leader is changed. Courtesy of Public Demand? The right to change the party will come again in due course? Seems the right way to me?
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janmB
loves life
09:27 AM on 09/06/2007
The MEDIA has failed us.
Mike Wallace on C-Span said as much not long ago criticizing the media today--- while his son Chris Wallace sitting next to him avoided the subject by saying he wanted to be able to stay in the business ( apparently afraid to speak out against his FOX bosses )
That about says it all.
09:17 AM on 09/06/2007
FOX ''noise'' is always decrying the 'liberal media'' What liberal media?? As far as I can tell, the Washington journalists suck up to this Administration like nobody's business. It'll be interesting to hear their takes on the ''betray-us Petraeus'' report. They'll eat up every bit of it.
08:24 AM on 09/06/2007
There seem to be at least two factors that are so negatively affecting the press coverage of this administration.
As you clearly explain in your article, this administration is not playing by the old rules. In science, we call that a paradigm shift. The problem is that science is ultimately empirical, and all paradigms must eventually be tested against external reality, while this administration works by denying reality (to our eventual sorrow).
The second factor, as pointed out by some of the other commenters is concentrated corporate control of the MSM. Since their corporate masters benefit from the status quo, is it that shocking that they would hire managers and editors that choose and edit stories that support it? Fox is only the most obvious and obnoxious of these. I saw a clip the other day (Daily Show?) of one of the Fox newsparrots (Cavuto I think) "interviewing" Bush. I swear, I thought he was going to get down on his knees, open his mouth, and hand Bush a $20 to prove his devotion.

This is why I also watch very little TV news anymore.