These are tough
times. More than 3 million people have lost their jobs just since
February 2009 and consumer confidence fell unexpectedly in
September. The unemployment rate has spiked from 8.1 percent to 9.7
percent in the first seven months of Barack Obama’s presidency and
is expected to climb even higher.
Despite that
grim news, the major news networks have spun their unemployment
reports into “good news” and presented Obama positively. Journalists
tried hard to present rising job losses in the best possible light.
ABC’s Charles
Gibson called the loss of 539,000 jobs in April a “marked
improvement” May 8, 2009, because fewer jobs were lost than in
March. In June 2009, Gibson was talking again about “hopeful” signs
in the job numbers as more Americans were out of work.
But flashback 27
years ago to 1982, the unemployment rate was in roughly the same
range as it was in 2009. Yet, network reporters consistently
presented the U.S. economy under President Ronald Reagan as the
“worst of times” by showing people living out of their trucks under
a bridge and collecting free food at a food bank.
CBS reporter Ray
Brady told a “tale of two cities” on June 4, 1982. He found the
“worst of times” in Waterloo, Iowa, where the unemployment rate was
the highest in the nation: 25.4 percent. That was nearly 16
percentage points higher than the national unemployment rate of 9.5
percent. He contrasted Waterloo’s joblessness with 4.6 percent
unemployment in Sioux Falls, S.D. where things were “close to” the
best of times.
Brady’s report
addressed two very different employment situations, but most 1982
reports focused heavily on places where “desperation has turned to
hopelessness.” The unemployment rate under Obama and Reagan was
nearly identical, yet they received almost exactly opposite
treatment from ABC, CBS and NBC reports. Reagan was mentioned
negatively in reports 13 times more often than Obama.
While in Obama’s
case, reporters found bright spots – like 25 police recruits’ jobs
being “saved” by the stimulus package – during Reagan’s term,
journalists found tragedy everywhere. They interviewed a battered
wife, a family that had run out of food and many unemployed people.
One NBC anchor even warned that suicide and murder rates increase in
such hard times.
Although there was
a difference between the two presidents in how long they had been in
office, the spin was still significant. Unemployment numbers rose
similarly under both Reagan and Obama, but journalists continued a
long-standing trend of spinning the numbers.
The Business &
Media Institute analyzed network unemployment stories on the
evenings that data was released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
between March 2009 to September 2009 and March 1982 to September
1982. There were 66 stories in all – 35 stories in 2009 and 31
stories in 1982.
BMI found that
network reports were 13 times more negative in their treatment of
Reagan than Obama. In fact, 91 percent of stories (20 out of 22)
mentioning Reagan’s administration portrayed it negatively – while
only 7 percent (1 out of 15) of Obama administration mentions were
negative. Obama was mentioned positively 87 percent of the time (13
out of 15). There was not a single positive mention of the Reagan
White House.

Blame for
‘Wicked’ Reagan, but Praise for Obama’s ‘Important’ Stimulus
In 1982, network
reports showed desperation, sadness and tragedy as a result of
rising joblessness. NBC pictured lines of people waiting outside a
food bank and interviewed crisis counselors in Seattle on May 7.
“More callers
talk of despair and even suicide,” Don Oliver reported that night,
before interviewing Jim and Pam Smalls. Oliver called them “victims
of unemployment depression and anger,” because Pam had to seek help
from a battered woman’s shelter.
Another network
showed people living under a highway overpass out of their trucks
because they couldn’t find work. But under Obama the networks found
a man “doing backflips” when he was asked to return to work at a
Minnesota window company and another man who was thrilled to be
hired by a hamburger stand in Arizona.
Network reports
on unemployment were mirror opposites. They made Reagan look bad in
a huge majority of stories and conversely made Obama look good.
Broadcasts
journalists tied “rising” unemployment to Reagan in 1982 by
mentioning him in 71 percent of stories (22 of 31), but linked Obama
to the economy slightly more than half as often in 2009 – only 40
percent of the time (14 of 35).
When the
respective presidents were mentioned, political attacks on the
Reagan administration over job losses were commonplace in the 1982
network coverage. Union leaders, Democratic politicians and the
unemployed were all quoted blasting Reagan for his economic
policies.
NBC’s Irving R.
Levine found a soon-to-be unemployed textile worker who “blames
President Reagan” for his situation on March 5, 1982. That worker,
Gene Biffle, told NBC, “When he went in there he said it, he was
gonna get jobs and help the economy, but don’t look like he’s doing
too much about that.”
Following
Levine’s segment, anchor Roger Mudd took Reagan to task himself by
responding to statements from the administration:
“Spokesmen for
the Reagan White House are coming to dread each month’s unemployment
numbers because it gets harder and harder for them to explain.
Economic Adviser Weidenbaum says today the figures may mean the
economy may be bottoming out. Communications Director Gergen says
that while unemployment may get worse, the recession seems to be
bottoming out. Meanwhile, more and more people are getting bottomed
out.”
In August 1982,
Sam Donaldson of ABC highlighted the “partisan savagery” of
Congressional Democrats, including Rep. Parren Mitchell’s, D-Md.,
claim that Reagan was pursuing “sadistic fiscal policies.”
The dark and
gloomy tone of 1982 reports was a near polar opposite of the tenor
of 2009 unemployment stories.
In 2009, the
networks praised Obama for merely trying to stop rising unemployment
– even when he wasn’t succeeding. And
month after month reporters tried to find the “good news” or signs
of a turnaround.
All three
nightly newscasts mentioned Obama favorably March 6, 2009, even
though 651,000 jobs had been lost in February and unemployment had
jumped half a percentage point to 8.1 percent from 7.6 percent. And
all three of those broadcasts emphasized a mere 25 jobs “saved” by
the stimulus package.
NBC’s Chuck Todd
gave Obama credit that night saying, “For these 25 new police
officers here in Columbus, Ohio, the president’s stimulus plan
didn’t create these jobs, it saved them. Without the money these
folks would be looking for a new line of work.”
CBS Anchor Katie
Couric revealed her faith in Obama’s stimulus plan that night as
well saying, “I know the government is going to be creating jobs, as
we’ve mentioned, through this stimulus package.”
After the Bureau
of Labor Statistics announced May 8 that more than a half million
jobs were lost in April, another CBS anchor, Maggie Rodriguez,
looked for a ray of sunshine saying, “There is new hope the sun may
be starting to peek through those economic storm clouds tonight,”
before delivering the news that unemployment had jumped .4 percent
to 8.9 percent nationally.
Rodriguez’
optimism led into Anthony Mason’s report. Mason quoted Obama and
emphasized his call for education as the solution to joblessness and
request that states allow people to maintain unemployment benefits
while going back to school.
Identical
Unemployment Rates, Opposite Treatment
The unemployment
rate reached 9.4 percent under Reagan and under Obama (twice), but
received completely different treatment from the networks
– and in one case from the same
reporter.
In 1982, Dan
Rather reported the rate as “9.4 percent and rising.” Dan Cordtz
called it “rising steadily” on ABC, while Ray Brady warned that “job
loss is still spreading.” NBC found lines at food banks “four times
what they were six months ago.”
In 2009, ABC
found “glimmers of improvement” for an identical unemployment rate.
CBS’s own economic “grim
reaper,” Anthony Mason said the “economy’s showed signs of
improving.” NBC also found “positive trends” to discuss
– specifically mentioning “2,100 new
reasons” to be “hopeful” in Georgia.
But Charles
Gibson illustrated how dramatically different the network coverage
of Reagan and Obama really were.
Gibson, who was
a Capitol Hill correspondent for ABC in 1982, told viewers May 7,
1982, “[T]here really isn’t any good news in the statistics. All the
numbers are bad.” He then quoted two Democratic attacks on Reagan
including Rep. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis., who charged that Reagan’s
“policies aren’t just mistaken, they’re wicked.”
But as an ABC
anchor in 2009, Gibson was full of hope. He introduced that night’s
story saying “sometimes a bad jobs report can look good.”
“345,000
Americans lost their jobs in May, a big number to be sure. Traumatic
if you are one of the 345,000. But the number was smaller than
economists had predicted, and that’s good news,” Gibson said before
admitting that the unemployment rate of 9.4 percent was “pretty
bad.” Neither Gibson, nor reporter Betsy Stark mentioned President
Obama at all that night.
On Aug. 7, 2009,
Gibson suggested “the economy may be finally turning the corner.”
Methodology
The Business &
Media Institute analyzed network unemployment stories on the
evenings that data was released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in
similar seven-month periods – between March 2009 to September 2009
and March 1982 to September 1982. There were 66 stories in all – 35
stories in 2009 and 31 stories in 1982.
A story was
counted as a mention of Obama or Reagan if it named the respective
president, the administration, the “White House,” or any
administration spokespeople. Each mention was then graded positive,
negative or neutral based on context.
Conclusion
Despite having
similar periods of rising unemployment, Presidents Reagan and Obama
were treated very differently by the network news media. This fit
the theme of the network news when it came to economic reporting.
Jobs and
unemployment have been one of the most significant economic measures
because they impacted everyone so directly. Network viewers who
watched coverage of unemployment during the Reagan years were
consistently told things were bad. For identical numbers under Obama,
those very same networks claimed the economy was improving. That was
clear-cut bias.
And it isn’t
new. The Business & Media Institute released a Special Report in
2004 called “One
Economy, Two Spins” which showed the way similar economic
conditions (unemployment, inflation and GDP growth) were presented
negatively during the re-election campaigns of George W. Bush’s
Republican administration, but positively under Bill Clinton’s
Democratic re-election bid.
BMI found that
jobs stories in particular were positive more than six times as
often under Clinton than Bush. The networks continued to
distort the good economy under Bush in 2005 and 2006 giving
negative stories more air time and using ordinary people to
underscore those downbeat reports.
The Media
Research Center also reported in 2004 that the news media sought to
discredit
Reaganomics with their news coverage. Virginia Commonwealth
University professor Ted J. Smith III found that out of 14,000
network news stories between 1982 and 1987 the amount of network TV
coverage shrunk and became more negative as the economy improved.
When one economic indicator got better, the networks covered it less
and focused on something unhealthy about the economy.
Recommendations
State the Facts:
Unemployment data, like all economic data, should be presented as is
without reporter opinions being inserted into the broadcast.
Forecasting job losses or gains should be left only to the experts.
Be Consistent:
If
9.4 percent unemployment is bad, then it should be treated so
regardless of who is president. If the number discredits a
Republican administration, it should also discredit a Democrat.
Use History as a
Guide:
It is up to the networks to ensure that they cover stories
consistently over time. A reporter working on a story about
unemployment being the worst in 26 years should consult the coverage
from that time for guidance.
Don’t Spin the
Economy:
Reporters should be embarrassed when they highlight 25 jobs gained
after telling viewers 651,000 jobs were lost. If a story is
negative, then tell it that way. Don’t allow White House spin from
either party to distort the final result.
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