Hillary Clinton, At Home with The New
York Times
By Clay Waters, Times Watch Director
Special Report | April 19, 2006
Executive Summary
When Sen. John Kerry lost to George W. Bush in
the presidential election of 2004, the press turned its attention to
2008 and Sen. Hillary Clinton as a potential Democratic savior. The
junior senator from New York leads national polls among potential
Democratic presidential contenders, although she is polarizing among the
general electorate.
As both the nation’s most influential newspaper
and Mrs. Clinton’s home state broadsheet, the Times has a front-row seat
for the run-up to Election 2008. Yet a Times Watch study has discovered
that ever since the Hillary-for-president talk heated up in earnest, the
newspaper has used its seat more as a cheering section for Clinton than
as a dispassionate perch for objective observation.
A reader wishing for a full, balanced picture
of Sen. Hillary Clinton won’t get it from the New York Times, which has
followed a pattern of mainstreaming Clinton’s liberal policies while
throwing roadblocks in front of her potential Republican Senate
opponents and playing down Clinton’s controversial remarks. Such
whitewashing from America’s paper of record will serve Clinton well as
she prepares for a presidential run.
Among the ways the Times helped the Clinton campaign in the 17-month
period between Election Day 2004 and April 1, 2006:
- Centering Mrs. Clinton -- Far from accurately terming Clinton a
liberal (doing so less than 1% of the time), the Times insisted the very idea
was a “caricature.” Meanwhile, two Republican senators were labeled
“conservative” in 7% of stories that mentioned them -- a labeling disparity of
roughly 15 to one.
- Sliming Critics as Hillary-Haters -- The Times was always eager to
find rabid “Clinton-haters” assaulting poor Mrs. Clinton.
- Clearing Hillary’s Re-election Highway -- Feminism only went so far
at the Times, as the paper helped clear the field for Clinton’s 2006
reelection to the U.S. Senate by laying into potential Republican opponents
Jeanine Pirro and K. T. McFarland.
- Hillary’s Hum-Drum Controversial Remarks -- Even Clinton’s most
notorious remarks were either ignored or quickly brushed aside by the Times,
including her notorious Martin Luther King Day accusation that Republicans
were running Congress like a “plantation.”
See Full Study |