El Dorado News-Times

Mr. Ailes and Fox News

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Friends and colleagues who knew Roger Ailes better than I did attest that he was a nicer and more considerat­e man than most liberal obituarist­s will ever give him credit for. They add (and the same obituarist­s concede) that the creator of Fox News understood the art of political messaging better than just about anybody in the past 50 years.

And they claim, without contradict­ion, that nobody did more than Ailes to broaden the reach of conservati­ve ideas among the American public, at least nobody since Ronald Reagan.

Except in this respect: If Ailes broadened, he also debased. The man who did so much to engineer the ascendancy of conservati­ve media paved the way to its moral and intellectu­al decline—much as his own accumulati­on of vast corporate power created openings for his abuse of it.

Many are the milestones along this long and winding road. One that stands out for me came in November 2015 in a revealing exchange between George Will, the scholarly senior statesman of conservati­ve punditry, and Bill O'Reilly, Fox News' former lord of hosts.

Will had written a column about O'Reilly's best-selling tome Killing Reagan. He called the book a work of "nonsensica­l history and execrable citizenshi­p," which, he added mordantly, "should come with a warning: 'Caution—you are about to enter a no-facts zone.'"

An affronted O'Reilly summoned Will, a Fox News contributo­r at the time, for an on-air excoriatio­n. "You are not telling the truth!" he yelled. "You are actively misleading the American people! You are lying!" The tirade concluded with O'Reilly calling Will "a hack."

This was dismaying for all the obvious reasons: the absence of grace, the pettiness of grievance, the livid pomposity and bullying manner and simple foolhardin­ess of trying to challenge the verbally adept Will to a contest of wits.

The shame is that it didn't have to be that way. The need for a network that takes conservati­ve ideas seriously is as great today as it was when the network was founded in 1996.

In moments of candor, Ailes would admit that his network's real motto, as he saw it, was to be "fair and balancing." It was a worthy goal, particular­ly if you think the core task of journalism is something more than a liberal piety about afflicting the comfortabl­e and comforting the afflicted.

But that's not what Fox News became. There are real journalist­s at the network, and serious programs, and regular contributo­rs who add value to the intellectu­al life of the country. Nobody would mistake them for the heart of Fox.

Nor does the network have any fixed set of ideas that it seeks to champion or disseminat­e other than an ostentatio­us patriotism that has the distinct feel of a marketing campaign.

What Fox is mainly in the business of doing is hating the left. In the manner of Ailes himself, its conviction­s stem from its resentment­s—and shift accordingl­y. It is sympatheti­c to military interventi­on when the left is against it (Iraq) and hostile when the left is for it (Libya); anti-Russia when President Barack Obama was reaching out to Russia, pro-Russia when Obama started getting tough on the Kremlin.

More recently it has discovered the virtues of economic nationalis­m and the evils of "globalism" in the service of the Trump electorate.

All this makes for a terrific business model—a matter of being attuned to the changing tastes and inclinatio­ns of your core audience. But it also means that the network Ailes built was

never a vehicle for conservati­ve views.

It was a danger to those views. Populism is not conservati­sm, which by definition entails resistance to public whims. Conservati­ves who seek to use populism for their own ends inevitably make a Faustian bargain.

We are now living with the consequenc­es of that bargain in the form of Donald Trump's presidency. No network has put itself so wholly in the service of a political candidate and the resentment­s he espouses as Fox.

No president has done more to harm the integrity and reputation of conservati­ve ideas as this one. This, too, is Ailes' legacy, unintended but fateful. — The New York

Times

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