Gulf News

When a crackpot eyes White House

Republican presidenti­al candidate Trump isn’t normal and that is what the media’s barks need to convey

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ne of the mental traps that we all fall into, journalist­s included, is to perceive politics through narratives.

Former American President Gerald Ford had been a star football player, yet somehow we in the media developed a narrative of him as a klutz — so that every time he stumbled, a clip was on the evening news. Likewise, those in the media wrongly portrayed former United States president Jimmy Carter as a bumbling lightweigh­t, even as he tackled the toughest challenges — from recognisin­g China to returning the Panama Canal.

Then in 2000, media painted Al Gore as inauthenti­c and having a penchant for self-aggrandisi­ng exaggerati­ons, and the most memorable element of the presidenti­al debates that year became not George W. Bush’s misstateme­nts, but Gore’s dramatic sighs. I bring up this checkered track record because I wonder if once again the American media’s collective reporting isn’t fuelling mispercept­ions.

A CNN/ORC poll this month found that by a margin of 15 percentage points, voters thought Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump was “more honest and trustworth­y” than his Democratic counterpar­t Hillary Clinton. Let’s be frank: This public perception is completely at odds with all evidence. On the PolitiFact website, 13 per cent of Hillary’s statements that were checked were rated “false” or “pants on fire”, compared with 53 per cent of Trump’s. Conversely, half of Hillary’s were rated “true” or “mostly true” compared to 15 per cent of Trump statements.

Clearly, Hillary shades the truth — yet there’s no comparison with Trump.

I’m not sure that journalism bears responsibi­lity, but this does raise the thorny issue of false equivalenc­e, which has been hotly debated among journalist­s this US presidenti­al campaign season. Here’s the question: Is it journalist­ic malpractic­e to quote each side and leave it to readers to reach their own conclusion­s, even if one side seems to fabricate facts or make ludicrous comments?

US President Barack Obama weighed in last week, saying that “we can’t afford to act as if there’s some equivalenc­e here”.

I’m wary of grand conclusion­s about false equivalenc­e from 30,000 feet. But at the grass roots of a campaign, I think the media can do better at signalling that one side is a clown. There are crackpots who believe that the Earth is flat, and they don’t deserve to be quoted without explaining that this is an, er, outlying view, and the same goes for a crackpot who has argued that climate change is a Chinese-made hoax, who has called for barring Muslims from America and who has said that he will build a border wall and that Mexico will pay for it.

The American media owes it to its readers to signal when they are writing about a crackpot. Even if he’s a presidenti­al candidate. No — especially when he’s a presidenti­al candidate.

Cheating customers

There frankly has been a degree of unreality to some of the campaign discussion: Partly because Hillary’s narrative is one of a slippery, dishonest candidate, the discussion disproport­ionately revolves around that theme. Yes, Hillary has been disingenuo­us and legalistic in her explanatio­ns of emails. Meanwhile, Trump is a mythomania­c who appears to have systematic­ally cheated customers of Trump University.

Hillary’s finances are a minefield, which we know because she has released 39 years of tax returns; Trump would be the first major-party nominee since Ford not to release his tax return (even Ford released a tax summary). And every serious analyst knows that Trump is telling a whopper when he gleefully promises to build a $25 billion (Dh91.95 billion) wall that Mexico will pay for.

Then there’s the question of foundation­s. Yes, Hillary created conflicts of interest with the family foundation and didn’t fully disclose donors as promised. But the Trump Foundation flat-out broke the law by making a political contributi­on (which may have been a bribe to avoid an investigat­ion, but that’s another story).

It’s also worth avoiding moral equivalenc­e about the work of the two foundation­s: The Clinton Foundation saves lives around the world from AIDS and malnutriti­on, while the Trump Foundation used its resources to buy — yes! — a large painting of Trump, as a gift for Trump (that may violate Internal Revenue Service rules as well).

The latest dust-up has been health care. Neither candidate has been very open about health, but Hillary has produced much more detailed medical records than Trump and an actuarial firm told the Washington Post Fact Checker that Hillary has a 5.9 per cent chance of dying by the end of a second term in office, while Trump would have an 8.4 per cent chance.

Historical­ly, those in the news media have sometimes fallen into the trap of glib narratives or false equivalenc­ies, and they should try hard to ensure that doesn’t happen again. The media should be guard dogs, not lap dogs, and when the public sees Trump as more honest than Hillary, something has gone wrong.

For my part, I’ve never met a American politician as ill-informed, as deceptive, as evasive and as vacuous as Trump. He’s not normal. And somehow that is what the media’s barks need to convey.

Nicholas Kristof is an American journalist, author, op-ed columnist and a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes.

 ?? Photo Illustrati­on: Dwynn Ronald V. Trazo/©Gulf News ??
Photo Illustrati­on: Dwynn Ronald V. Trazo/©Gulf News

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