Like a couple of hundred thousand of my fellow Americans, I was this close to cancelling my subscription to The Washington Post, but waited to learn more about the story behind Jeff Bezos' decision to pull the newspaper's presidential endorsement. What I learned in Bezos' op-ed this morning, was that he made the decision after seeing recently released Gallup data showing that American's trust in "mass media" -- newspapers, TV and radio -- to fully, fairly and accurately report the news, had fallen to an all-time low.
How pulling or publishing a presidential endorsement would exacerbate that isn't entirely clear, until you dig into the Gallup data a little more. Specifically, its tabs showing how the news media trust skews along political party lines.
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Look at the chart above and you'll see 42 point delta between Republicans (only 12% of whom said they trust America's news media) and Democrats (a 54% majority of whom trust America's news media).
In other words, Bezos' decision to go dark on a Washington Post endorsement was based on placating to a an extreme polarized view of a minority of American voters. According to Gallup, only about 28% of Americans consider themselves Republican.
What's more, independent research from other sources, including Ipsos' political tracking team, shows a strong correlation that Republican news media preferences correlate with being factually inaccurate. In other words, voters who are most misinformed are the ones least likely to trust the media.
Personally, that makes sense to me when you consider the untrustworthy nature of the media they use as their primary source of information, but I've already written about that a number of times.
Facts aside, there is a far more fundamental reason why there is a strong partisan Republican distrust of American's news media: partisanship.
Need I remind you that Donald Trump's first official act on his first full day as President in 2017 was to give a speech in front of the CIA's wall of fallen heroes declaring war on America's news media. And he's been re-declaring it ever since, including at this week's rally in Madison Square Garden.
Trump is not alone. Republican leadership up and down the ballot have persistently attacked the validity of America's news media.
It should be no surprise that Republicans have such a low regard for America's news media. What is surprising, is that the owner of The Washington Post does too.
Democracy dies when a minority of Americans determine what goes dark there.
Actually, when you dig deeper, it turns out that most Republicans absolutely trust the TV news media that they watch on a regular basis--Fox News and NewsMax, for example. What they don't trust are MSNBC, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, etc. which they usually avoid---or watch very sparingly. And the other side also thinks in the same manner. It doesn't trust Fox or NewsMax--which it almost never watches but thinks that MSNBC and CNN are honest--which it frequently watches. So what is really meant by the polls is that most people don't trust news sources that they think favor the other side---politically. In the case of many Republicans this is a much longer list than applies for many Democrats---hence the unfavorable overall rap that the news media arte getting.
Thanks for that info Ed. I sometimes watch BBC News from time to time along with NewsNation, I only watch Fox News 5 days with an hour or 2 which is largely Outnumbed & The Five I don't watch the primetime host not really into opinion shows the only one I ever really got into was The O'Reilly Factor his final years just watched for Talking Points Memo & the email from viewers at the end. MSNBC is the worse I don't trust them at all why I don't watch them and will leave it at that.