http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/10/28/fox_versus_obama/Why is the media defending Fox and attacking Obama?
It could be a simple matter of who's in the club, and who isn't
By Mike Madden
snip//
No other media organization has been anywhere near as outraged as Fox has on its own behalf, of course. Fox host Glenn Beck has practically issued a fatwa against White House communications director Anita Dunn, the Obama aide who first went public bashing the network, accusing her of Maoist tendencies and frequently bringing up China's Great Leap Forward, as if the plans for the early years of Chinese Communism had been hatched at Dunn's political consulting firm. But
the spectacle of Washington pundits defending a competitor that had itself cheered on the Bush administration as it went after NBC last year was still a little strange. (For that matter, Fox News didn't seem too concerned when Dick Cheney's staff tried to boot the New York Times from the press plane that travels with the vice-president, either.) "As soon as the press hears politicians are attacking the press, there's a little bit of 'circling the wagons' effect," said David Brock, the founder of Media Matters, a liberal group that has been far more ferocious about Fox than the White House has. "It would seem to me that the rest of the press knows exactly what Fox is and knows that this attack isn't an attack on the press, it's an attack on a partisan political operation."The White House says it didn't expect to persuade many reporters. "We're not surprised, since the mainstream media believe in institutional solidarity, even though many Fox hosts make a living out of attacking them," one senior administration official told Salon.
That does, in fact, seem to be part of the reaction here. The White House press corps has its own membership guild, the White House Correspondents Association, with bylaws, a board of directors and regular meetings; the WHCA may discuss the Fox feud at its next board meeting, scheduled before it all started. (Full disclosure: Salon is a member of the in-town pool rotation that the WHCA maintains, and I'm a member of the association, but we don't buy a table at its annual Hollywood-meets-D.C. dinner.) The group decides who sits where in the White House briefing room and which news organization gets workspace in the West Wing. Though the TV networks have their own smaller klatch that dealt with the Treasury situation, the WHCA didn't like it that much, either. "Our core principle is that the press should determine the structure of the pool, not the White House," said WHCA board member Caren Bohan, who writes for Reuters Thompson. "And this seemed to be an attempt by the administration to try to micro-manage the structure of the pool." But
contrast the reaction now with the way the press hounded Gibbs for giving the Huffington Post a heads-up that Obama would call on one of its editors to ask a question in June, and it seems like at least some members of the press corps are just standing up for Fox because it's been around longer.Certainly, the White House -- any White House -- shouldn't be in charge of deciding who does and doesn't cover the administration. But that's not entirely what's at stake with Fox News. Aides insist they're not freezing out Fox's White House correspondent, Major Garrett. (Fox's P.R. officials wouldn't allow Garrett to talk to Salon for this story.) The administration hasn't banned Fox reporters from official events; so far, the battle is mostly rhetorical. But that hasn't stopped other news outlets from sticking up for Fox, anyway.
What the White House seems to have realized is that bashing Fox is a good way to score some points with progressives -- MoveOn.org has been calling on Democrats to boycott the network for years, and Democratic presidential candidates wound up canceling a planned 2007 debate that the network would have aired. "So far as the White House has been able to use media outlets and figures like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Fox News to brand the Republican Party, it's been a pretty effective strategy," said Democratic political consultant Phil Singer, who worked for Hillary Clinton's campaign in last year's primaries -- a campaign that also tried, at times, to battle back against what it saw as unfair media coverage, though not with as much success as the White House has had here.
For now, both sides in the fight probably think they're winning. The White House gets a boost from its allies, who like to see it battling back against Fox; the network gets higher ratings. As long as that continues, don't expect to see a truce any time soon. Don't expect to see much change in the way the rest of the press handles it, either. It's not personal -- it's just business.