Standing in front of a television camera last week, the chairman of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s campaign, Terry McAuliffe, uttered four words that the Fox News Channel would not soon forget.
“Fair and balanced Fox!,” he exclaimed, noting that the network was the first to project Mrs. Clinton’s Pennsylvania primary win.
Fox executives could not have asked for a more rousing endorsement. The next day it showed up in promotions.
All of a sudden, the once-frosty relationship between Fox News and the Democratic candidates seems to have grown warmer. Mrs. Clinton and Barack Obama, who steadfastly refused to attend Fox-sponsored debates last year, are now giving plenty of interviews as they court Fox’s viewers, who are largely white, conservative and undecided.
“It’s probably true that we appeal to white working-class voters,” said Brit Hume, the network’s Washington managing editor and the host of “Special Report.” “The candidates are going where the voters are.”
Conversely, Fox seems to have softened its stance toward the Democrats, mindful of the intense viewer interest in the prolonged primary season. Although Fox News remains firmly in first place among news channels, CNN has crept up in the ratings on primary nights. So Fox wants to appeal to people who might otherwise flip the channel in search of more time with the Democrats.
In short, Fox News and the Democrats abruptly find each other useful.
|
|
||||
|
Login
Search
This Month
Month Archive
who employs me
|
Monday, May 5
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 05 May 2008 10:42 PM EDT
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 05 May 2008 10:35 PM EDT
Economist Todd Hirsch says that too many argue Canada's economy needs what he calls "faster horses" -- more tax cuts for business, more social spending for the poor. But the problem is a horse-drawn-buggy economy, when Canada needs to think about a transformation on the scale of mass production of automobiles (his opening anecdote is based on a Henry Ford quote: "If we had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 05 May 2008 10:25 PM EDT
The Globe and Mail's Lawrence Martin uses the Conservative government's decision to kill the Access to Information database to review the many and creative ways the Harperites attempt to control the information agenda. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 05 May 2008 10:20 PM EDT
The Tories quoted ATI expert Alisdair Roberts in question period today to justify their decision to kill the CAIRS database. Roberts then uncharitably crapped on their talking points. more » |
email this blog
Don't have a reader account, but still want to commend/castigate? Send an email.
recent articles
tweet o' the moment
News sites i can't live without
The craft
Blogs i admit to viewing
blogs i don't admit to viewing
Amusements, diversions
muzeek
|
||