For a long time, as he campaigned for president, a wide spectrum of establishment media insisted that Bernie Sanders couldnāt win. Now theyāre sounding the alarm that he might.
And, just in case you havenāt gotten the media message yet — Sanders is āangry,ā kind of like Donald Trump.
Elite media often blur distinctions between right-wing populism and progressive populism — as though thereās not all that much difference between appealing to xenophobia and racism on the one hand and appealing for social justice and humanistic solidarity on the other.
Many journalists canāt resist lumping Trump and Sanders together as rabble-rousing outliers. But in the real world, the differences are vast.
Donald Trump is to Bernie Sanders as Archie Bunker is to Jon Stewart.
Among regularĀ New York TimesĀ columnists, aversion to Bernie Sanders has become more pronounced in recent days at both ends of the newspaperās ideological spectrum, such as it is. Republican Party aficionado David Brooks (whose idea of a good political time is Marco Rubio) has been freaking out in print, most recently with a TuesdayĀ columnĀ headlined āStay Sane America, Please!ā
Brooks warned that his current nightmare for the nation is in triplicate — President Trump, President Cruz or President Sanders. For Brooks, all three contenders appear to be about equally awful; Trump is āone of the most loathed men in American public life,ā while āAmerica has never elected a candidate maximally extreme from the political center, the way Sanders and Cruz are.ā
That āpolitical centerā of power sustains huge income inequality, perpetual war, scant action on climate change and reflexive support for the latest unhinged escalation of the nuclear arms race. In other words, what C. Wright Mills called ācrackpot realism.ā
Meanwhile, liberalĀ TimesĀ columnist Paul Krugman (whose idea of a good political time is Hillary Clinton) keepsĀ propoundingĀ a stand-on-head formula for social change — a kind of trickle-down theory of political power, in which āhappy dreamsā must yield to āhard thinking,ā a euphemism for crackpot realism.
An excellent rejoinder has come from former Labor Secretary Robert Reich. āKrugman doesnāt get it,ā ReichĀ wrote. āIāve been in and around Washington for almost fifty years, including a stint in the cabinet, and Iāve learned that real change happens only when a substantial share of the American public is mobilized, organized, energized, and determined to make it happen.ā
And Reich added: āPolitical āpragmatismā may require accepting āhalf loavesā — but the full loaf has to be large and bold enough in the first place to make the half loaf meaningful. Thatās why the movement must aim high — toward a single-payer universal health, free public higher education, and busting up the biggest banks, for example.ā
But for mainline media, exploring such substance is low priority, much lower than facile labeling and horseracing⦠and riffing on how Bernie Sanders sounds āangry.ā
On āMorning Edition,ā this week began with NPR political reporter Mara LiassonĀ tellingĀ listeners that āBernie Sanders’ angry tirades against Wall Street have found a receptive audience.ā (Meanwhile, without anger or tirades, āHillary ClintonĀ often talks about the fears and insecurities of ordinary voters.ā)
The momentum of the Sanders campaign will soon provoke a lot more corporate media attacks along the lines of aĀ Chicago TribuneĀ editorialĀ that appeared in print on Monday. The newspaper editorialized that nomination of Trump, Cruz or Sanders ācould be politically disastrous,ā and it declared: āWise heads in both parties are verging on panic.ā
Such panic has just begun, among party elites and media elites. Eager to undermine Sanders, theĀ TribuneĀ editorialĀ warned that as a āself-declared democratic socialist,ā SandersĀ ābrandishes a label that, a Gallup poll found, would automatically make him unacceptable to nearly half the public.ā
A strongĀ critiqueĀ of such commentaries has come from the media watch group FAIR, where Jim Naureckas pointed out that āvoters would not be asked to vote for āa socialistā — theyād be asked to vote for Bernie Sanders. And while pollsters donāt include Sanders in general election matchups as often as they do Hillary Clinton, they have asked how the Vermont senator would do against various Republicans — and he generally does pretty well. In particular, against the candidate theĀ TribuneĀ says is ābest positionedā to ācapture the broad, sensible centerā — Jeb Bush — Sanders leads in polls by an average of 3.0 percentage points, based on polling analysis by the website Real Clear Politics.ā
In mass media, the conventional sensibilities of pundits like Brooks and Krugman, reporters like Liasson, and outlets like theĀ Chicago TribuneĀ routinely get the first and last words. Here, the last ones are from Naureckas:
āWhen pollsters match Sanders against the four top-polling Republican hopefuls, on average he does better than Clinton does against each of them — even though she, like Bush, is supposed to be ābest positionedā to ācapture the broad, sensible center,ā according to theĀ Tribune.
āActually,Ā the elements of SandersāĀ platform that elite media are most likely to associate with āsocialismā — things likeĀ universal, publicly funded healthcareĀ andĀ eliminating tuition at public collegesĀ — are quiteĀ popular with the public, and go a long way to explain hisĀ favorable poll numbers. But they areĀ also the sort of proposals that make Sanders unacceptable to theĀ nationās wealthy elite — and to establishment media outlets.ā
Norman Solomon is the author of āWar Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.ā He is the executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy and co-founder of RootsAction.org.
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