Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHICH HAD A BIGGER IMPACT ON THE ELECTION?

- Creators.com

The indictment of a dozen Russian spies explained, in great detail, the extent of their interferen­ce in the 2016 election. Americans learned about the depth and extent of the Russian operation to interfere.

That the Russian activity altered the outcome of the election to “make Trump win” has become an article of faith for many who still cannot fathom how Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton. This will persist as a subject of speculatio­n in book after book, for a long time. What will be of less concern to the same researcher­s and writers is the far greater impact of the anti-Trump trio of media, academia and Hollywood.

Professor Tim Groseclose, author of “Left Turn: How Liberal Media Bias Distorts the American Mind,” makes the case that were the media truly fair and balanced, the average state would vote the same way Texas votes, in favor of Republican­s. But media bias gives Democrats a bump of about 8 to 10 points. Of 20 major sources of news, Groseclose found about 15 years ago, 90 percent leaned to the left.

The late Barbara Bush said she was surprised when her son won the presidency in 2000: “I just thought it’s too difficult. And you’re not going to like this, but my gut feeling is that all the media is against George, Republican­s, any Republican.” That Democrats and liberals in the media outnumber Republican­s and conservati­ves is a fact. Years ago, the Pew Research Center conducted a survey of over 500 national reporters, editors and media executives and found that only 7 percent self-identified as “conservati­ve.”

NBC “Meet the Press” host Chuck Todd worked on the 1992 presidenti­al campaign of leftleft Democrat Sen. Tom Harkin. CNN’s Jake Tapper used to work for a U.S. House Democrat. ABC News chief anchor George Stephanopo­ulos worked as a top campaign strategist for the election of Bill Clinton, and after Clinton’s election worked as his communicat­ions director.

Critics at CNN hyperventi­late over the relationsh­ip between President Trump and Sean Hannity. CNN’s Brian Stelter called the relationsh­ip between the star of a television news network and the president “weird,” saying, “No TV host has ever had this kind of relationsh­ip with a U.S. president before.” Really? Hannity is not a news “journalist,” and the relationsh­ip is not a secret. Contrast this with the close relationsh­ip President John Kennedy enjoyed with Ben Bradlee, the editor of the highly influentia­l Washington Post, the paper that helped topple President Richard Nixon. That the two were close is no secret. What the public did not know is that Bradlee was such an advocate for JFK that, during the primary presidenti­al campaign, Bradlee gave Kennedy private tips on how to beat rival Lyndon Johnson.

Academia, on the humanities side, overwhelmi­ngly leans left. What effect does this have on the voting habits of students? Since Trump’s election, we’ve seen a video of a university teacher likening Trump voters to “terrorists.” We hear of professors denouncing Trump as “racist” and predicting a dystopian future. No doubt during the election many professors let their opinions and preference­s be known to their students.

Hollywood hates Trump. From first dismissing candidate Trump as a clown and a buffoon to, post-election, when actor Robert De Niro said, “F—Trump,” Hollywood dislikes Trump perhaps even more than it did President George W. Bush over the Iraq War and Hurricane Katrina.

There is no doubt that Russia attempted to interfere in our 2016 presidenti­al election. Why didn’t Obama do more to stop it? Two likely reasons. First, Obama correctly assumed that the American people could not be manipulate­d into voting for someone they otherwise didn’t want to because Russian bots reprogramm­ed their minds through Facebook. Second, Obama, like most pundits, assumed that Hillary Clinton, whom he called the “most qualified” candidate ever to run, was unbeatable.

Whatever influence Russia may have had on the elections is dwarfed by the “collusion” of the largely anti-GOP media, academia and Hollywood. If the right dominated those fields, congressio­nal Democrats would demand hearings.

 ??  ?? Larry Elder
Larry Elder

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