Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

On the press, Mike Pence has a point

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Of all the many, many words about Hillary Clinton uttered at the Republican National Convention, the truest may have been these, from the party’s vice presidenti­al nominee, the governor of Indiana, Mike Pence: “She’ll have the press doing half her work for her.”

You can hear it on taxpayer-funded National Public Radio, where one reporter on “All Things Considered” earnestly asked a black woman GOP at-large delegate about Trump, “Do you believe that he is a racist?”

You can read it in The New York Times, which put all pretense of neutrality aside by greeting the Republican convention with front-page headlines such as, “Rancor Reigns as Bitterly Divided Republican­s Begin Their Convention.” That headline was unintentio­nally true, if you count the rancor of whoever wrote it at the Times.

Then, after the Republican­s featured convention speeches from Dr. Benjamin Carson and black local officials from Milwaukee and Colorado, the Times ran a frontpage headline: “Black Republican­s See a White Convention, Heavy on Lectures.”

The Times paraphrase­d one attendee describing the 2016 convention as “one of the whitest in memory.” As a newspaper storyline for Republican convention­s, that one qualifies as a hardy perennial; in 2008, a Washington Post news article contended, “Republican­s are presenting a convention that is almost entirely white.”

The New York Times story this year did report that “one party official estimated that there were 80 black delegates.” But the newspaper did not tell its readers that — if this was an accurate count — it would be a marked increase from the 47 black delegates at the Republican convention in Tampa in 2012 or the 38 in Minneapoli­s in 2008.

It’s not that The New York Times doesn’t write articles about the problems with Mrs. Clinton’s policies. In the past week the newspaper has published not one but two separate pieces detailing just how Hillary Clinton’s plan to make tuition at public colleges “free” for families earning less than $125,000 a year is a really bad idea. “The plan could have the perverse effect of driving tuition higher,” the Times warned.

Another Times column detailed the problems with heavily subsidizin­g wind and solar energy, as Hillary Clinton proposes — but without mentioning her at all. Both the tuition coverage and the energy coverage ran inside the newspaper, not on the front page, where the anti-Trump headlines are.

What’s unusual in this election is that the antiTrump tilt extends beyond traditiona­lly left-of-center organs such as The New York Times or National Public Radio. It has also affected conservati­ve outlets, including news magazines such as the Weekly Standard, Commentary and National Review, some widely syndicated conservati­ve newspaper columnists and television commentato­rs, at least one Fox News anchor, and at least one Wall Street Journal editorial page columnist.

Why are they all so adamantly anti-Trump? The NPR and New York Times types were against Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, too. But there are two new factors with Trump that go beyond mere partisansh­ip and may help to explain some of the intensity and extent of the opposition.

First, he’s a disinterme­diator. When Trump bypasses the press to deal with voters directly — on Twitter, at mass rallies, in live videostrea­ms — he reminds the reporters and editors that they may become obsolete.

Second — and this particular­ly applies to the conservati­ve media — Trump makes them look like fools. First they said he wouldn’t run. Then they said he couldn’t win. If he wins, it will prove them wrong. They don’t want that.

When Gov. Pence said the press would be doing half of Mrs. Clinton’s work for her, the only thing he may have gotten slightly wrong was the percentage. He may have underestim­ated it.

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