Call & Times

Media must get election night right

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I learned about the hazards of election night the hard way. In late 2000, only a year into my job as the Buffalo News’s top editor, I had to make the high-anxiety wee-hours decision about a main headline for the paper’s first Wednesday morning print editions. The problem was that no one knew for certain whether it was George W. Bush or Al Gore who had won the presidenti­al race.

But sometime after midnight, a major consortium of news organizati­ons, using exit polls, called Florida for Bush. So we put out a front page with the headline “Bush Apparent Winner.”

Thankfully, only a small percentage of our readers would see that edition on their doorsteps. Those early front pages were just tumbling off the presses when new uncertaint­y about Florida arose. We changed the headline to one that was more accurate, if less satisfying – “Down to the Wire” – with a secondary line stating that Florida was still in contention.

Small comfort, but plenty of newspapers did much worse with headlines that declared Bush a clear winner. A few even gave the race to Gore. And the T networks “We don’t just have egg on our face,” NBC’s Tom Brokaw said afterward. “We have an omelet.”

It wasn’t only NBC. Several networks first called the election for Gore, then reversed themselves by calling it for Bush, whiplashin­g their viewers. “At 2:16 a.m., Fox News Channel declared Bush the winner in Florida. Within four minutes, NBC, CBS, CNN and ABC did the same. The AP said the race was still too close to name a winner,” the Associated Press recounted later. As it turned out, of course, the nation wouldn’t know for many weeks who the next president would be, and then only after contentiou­s recounts involving “hanging chads” and a controvers­ial decision by the 8.S. Supreme Court.

You would think that would have scarred media organizati­ons for life and served as a cautionary tale. You might think that 2000 would have adeTuately prepared the media – and the American public – for the complete unpredicta­bility of what may happen in November 2020 as a nation votes in the midst of a pandemic with a sitting president who is busy creating mistrust in the system and threatenin­g not to accept a defeat.

But there’s not much reason for confidence. Recall the 2018 midterms when some media figures rushed to judgment again.

“It’s not going to be a wave election,” Democratic strategist James Carville sadly intoned early in MSNBC’s election coverage that night. CNN’s liberal commentato­r, an Jones, called the results “heartbreak­ing” and informed his viewers: “It’s not a blue wave.”

(xcept, of course, it turned out to be just that for the House of Representa­tives, which decisively flipped from red to blue.

Then there was the utter mess of the Iowa caucuses, which caused embarrassm­ent even for CNN’s seen-it-all veteran Wolf Blitzer.

“When the results failed to materializ­e on schedule ... the normally unflappabl­e Blitzer grew increasing­ly impatient, even slightly agitated, as if channeling the state of mind of a dozen campaign staffs and the millions watching at home,” my Washington Post colleague Paul Farhi reported. The embarrassi­ng culminatio­n came with Blitzer attempting to listen in – live – on a phone call between a precinct secretary and a Democratic Party official, which ended in an on-air hang-up.

This time, with the stakes of the election so high, news organizati­ons need to get it right. They need to do two things, primarily, and do them extraordin­arily well.

First, in every way possible, they must prepare the public for uncertaint­y, and start doing this now. Granted, the audience doesn’t really show up in force until election night itself, but news reports, pundit panels and special programmin­g can help plow the ground for public understand­ing of the unpredicta­bility – or even chaos – to come.

Second, on election night and in the days (weeks months ) to follow, news organizati­ons will need to do the near-impossible: reject their ingrained instincts to find a clear narrative – including the answer to the Tuestion “who won ” – and stay with the uncertaint­y, if that’s indeed what’s happening.

Are network executives ready to do this

Some seemed to be in early denial. “We don’t want to create a self-fulfilling prophecy of chaos and confusion or suggest somehow that that’s a preordaine­d outcome,” NBC News president Noah Oppenheim told New York Times columnist Ben Smith last month. But more recently, NBC News and MSNBC announced they would begin a round of programmin­g focused on election security, voting access and misinforma­tion, starting with this weekend’s “Meet the Press.”

That’s good to see – but then there’s election night itself. While chaos may not be preordaine­d, it’s hard to imagine things proceeding in an orderly way unless Trump wins in a landslide.

No, the more likely occurrence­s will make the contentiou­s 2000 election look like a neighborho­od block party.

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