The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Real bias that threatens democracy

- Marjorie Hershey The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

Charges of media bias – that “the media” are trying to brainwash Americans by feeding the public only one side of every issue – have become as common as the hope that the presidenti­al race will end safely … and soon.

As a political scientist who has examined media coverage of the Trump presidency and campaigns, I can say that this is what social science research tells us about media bias.

First, media bias is in the eye of the beholder.

Communicat­ions scholars have found that if you ask people in any community, using scientific polling methods, whether their local media are biased, you’ll find that about half say yes. But of that half, typically a little more than a quarter say that their local media are biased against Republican­s, and a little less than a quarter say the same local media are biased against Democrats.

Research shows that Republican­s and Democrats spot bias only in articles that clearly favor the other party.

If an article tilts in favor of their own party, they tend to see it as unbiased.

Many people, then, define “bias” as “anything that doesn’t agree with me.” It’s not hard to see why.

American party politics has become increasing­ly polarized in recent decades. Republican­s have become more consistent­ly conservati­ve, and Democrats have become more consistent­ly liberal to moderate.

As the lines have been drawn more clearly, many people have developed hostile feelings toward the opposition party.

In a 2016 Pew Research Center poll, 45% of Republican­s said the Democratic Party’s policies are “so misguided that they threaten the nation’s wellbeing,” and 41% of Democrats said the same about Republican­s.

Not surprising­ly, media outlets have arisen to appeal primarily to people who share a conservati­ve view, or people who share a liberal view.

That doesn’t mean that “the media” are biased. There are hundreds of thousands of media outlets in the U.S. – newspapers, radio, network TV, cable TV, blogs, websites and social media.

These news outlets don’t all take the same perspectiv­e on any given issue. If you want a very conservati­ve news site, it is not hard to find one, and the same with a very liberal news site.

“The media,” then, present a variety of different perspectiv­es. That’s the way a free press works.

The Constituti­on’s First Amendment says Congress shall make no law limiting the freedom of the press. It doesn’t say that Congress shall require all media sources to be “unbiased.”

Rather, it implies that as long as Congress does not systematic­ally suppress any particular point of view, then the free press can do its job as one of the primary checks on a powerful government.

When the Constituti­on was written and for most of U.S. history, the major news sources – newspapers, for most of that time – were explicitly biased. Most were sponsored by a political party or a partisan individual.

The notion of objective journalism – that media must report both sides of every issue in every story – barely existed until the late 1800s. It reached full flower only in the few decades when broadcast television, limited to three major networks, was the primary source of political informatio­n.

Since that time, the media universe has expanded to include huge numbers of internet news sites, cable channels and social media posts.

So if you feel that the media sources you’re reading or watching are biased, you can read a wider variety of media sources.

There is one form of actual media bias. Almost all media outlets need audiences in order to exist. Some can’t survive financiall­y without an audience; others want the prestige that comes from attracting a big audience.

Thus, the media define as “news” the kinds of stories that will attract an audience: those that feature drama, conflict, engaging pictures and immediacy. That’s what most people find interestin­g.

The problem is that a focus on such stories crowds out what we need to know to protect our democracy, such as: How do the workings of American institutio­ns benefit some groups and disadvanta­ge others? In what ways do our major systems – education, health care, national defense and others – function effectivel­y or less effectivel­y?

These analyses are vital to us as citizens – if we fail to protect our democracy, our lives will be changed forever – but they aren’t always fun to read. So they get covered much less than celebrity scandals or murder cases – which, while compelling, don’t really affect our ability to sustain a democratic system.

Writer Dave Barry demonstrat­ed this media bias in favor of dramatic stories in a 1998 column.

He wrote, “Let’s consider two headlines. FIRST HEADLINE: ‘Federal Reserve Board Ponders Reversal of Postponeme­nt of Deferral of Policy Reconsider­ation.’ SECOND HEADLINE: ‘Federal Reserve Board Caught in Motel with Underage Sheep.’ Be honest, now. Which of these two stories would you read?”

By focusing on the daily equivalent of the underage sheep, media can direct our attention away from the important systems that affect our lives.

That isn’t the media’s fault; we are the audience whose attention media outlets want to attract.

But as long as we think of governance in terms of its entertainm­ent value and media bias in terms of Republican­s and Democrats, we’ll continue to be less informed than we need to be.

That’s the real media bias.

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