Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Health Care Tops the News and Race Resurfaces as an Issue

PEJ News Coverage Index September 14-20, 2009

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On the week when a key Senate Democrat unveiled a long-awaited bill, the battle over health care reform was the No. 1 story—the eighth time in nine weeks that issue has topped the news agenda.

The health care debate, fueled by Senator Max Baucus’ proposal, accounted for 17% of the newshole the week of September 14-20, according to the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. While that is a significant drop from the previous week (32%), when Barack Obama’s prime-time speech drove the coverage, the subject was particularly dominant in the media sectors that feature talk shows, radio (31%) and cable (28%), according to PEJ’s weekly News Coverage Index.

But another storyline, one simmering since the summer’s boisterous town hall health care showdowns, emerged in the media narrative last week in a substantial way. It was the sensitive and politically thorny issue of whether race is a factor in some opposition to Obama and his policies. A series of recent events—the September 12 Tea Party protests, Congressman Joe Wilson heckling Obama during his September 9 speech and ex-President Jimmy Carter’s assertion last week that race motivates some Obama detractors—triggered a press examination of what is often called the “third rail” of American politics.

Last week, stories that focused on Obama’s race as an issue accounted for 5% of the overall newshole, making it the fourth-biggest topic. Perhaps more telling was the presence of that theme in stories dominated by the President. According to the NCI, from early February through mid-September, Obama’s race was a significant factor in only 1% of the stories in which he was a lead newsmaker. (A lead newsmaker is someone featured in at least 50% of a story.)

Last week, Obama’s race was a significant element in fully 25% of the stories in which he was the prominent figure.

Depending on what transpires from here on, we may look back on this week as a significant one in Obama’s presidency. That may be one reason why the President himself discounted the idea that race was an issue in the criticism of his efforts to reform health care.

The No. 2 topic in the news last week was the economy (at 13%), and on the one-year anniversary of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy that helped trigger the crisis, the subject generated its highest level of coverage in seven weeks. The third-biggest subject was the murder of Yale graduate student Annie Le (7%), with a lab co-worker being arrested for the crime. The No. 5 story was the conflict in Afghanistan (4%), where much of the coverage focused on Obama’s pending decision about whether to bolster troop strength.

The Health Care Debate

The biggest event in the media narrative of health care last week was the long-anticipated release of Senate Finance Committee Chairman Baucus’ bill, a measure quickly criticized from both the left and the right.

Some of the coverage analyzed key elements in the proposal.

“The biggest beneficiaries of the Baucus bill would be people who lack insurance now, especially older people who have trouble buying coverage on their own,” reported the September 17 Wall Street Journal. “For Americans who already have coverage through their employers or Medicare…not much would change immediately in most cases. The biggest losers would include those who have especially generous health plans, which would be subject to a new tax aimed at insurers but that could be passed onto consumers.”

Other stories focused more on the political equation.

“A long-awaited plan to revamp health care got a tepid response from lawmakers Wednesday, underscoring the challenge President Obama confronts as his top priority enters a critical new phase,” declared a USA Today story. “No Republicans backed the measure Wednesday and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called it ‘just the beginning.’” 

Yet another health care-related theme continued to reverberate in the media last week—the continuing fallout from South Carolina Republican Congressman Joe Wilson’s “you lie” shout during Obama’s September 9 speech. Last week, the House of Representatives—by a 240-179 vote—passed a resolution disapproving of Wilson’s outburst, largely along partisan lines.

On September 15, the CBS evening newscast aired a story on the controversy by taking the pulse of Wilson’s home district in South Carolina. The report noted that in one local diner, many of the patrons were heartily cheering Wilson’s rebuke of the President, but also stated that “some people here sense racial overtones to the Wilson heckle.”

Race and the President

At various times during the presidential campaign and Obama’s tenure in the White House, race and racial politics have become a notable story. Obama’s March 2008 speech on race—a response to the uproar over remarks by his long-time pastor Jeremiah Wright—was widely viewed as a crucial moment in the campaign. Two months ago, the President’s statement that the Cambridge Massachusetts police had “acted stupidly” in the arrest of black Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates helped make that episode the No. 3 story for the week of July 20-26.

Last week, Obama’s presidency and race intersected once again in the press, accounting for 5% of the coverage. This time, the principal question was whether there were racial overtones to some of the fervent opposition to his policies—with the Wilson incident serving as one of the more dramatic examples.

On the September 16 broadcast of the PBS NewsHour, senior correspondent Gwen Ifill asked whether the issue is “bad feeling about race” or “bad feeling about policy?”

In a series of network interviews over the weekend, Obama seemed to downplay the racial theme. The President told NBC “Meet the Press” host David Gregory that race is “catnip” to the media and asserted that “this debate that’s taking place is not about race, it’s about people being worried about how our government should operate.”

But in this hot-house environment, the administration’s low-key response became a story in and of itself. “In Latest Race Debate, White House Sits It Out,” declared the headline on a September 17 New York Times story.

“President Obama has long suggested that he would like to move beyond race,” the story stated. “The question now is whether the country will let him. He woke up on Wednesday to a rapidly intensifying debate about how his race factors into the broader discussion of civility in politics, a question prompted in part by former President Jimmy Carter’s assertion Tuesday that racism was behind a Republican lawmaker’s outburst against Mr. Obama last week…”

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The Rest of the Week’s News

Filling 13% of the newshole from September 14-20, the economic crisis generated its highest amount of coverage since early August. And while the economy received only modest attention in the cable and radio sectors, it was the No. 1 story online (20%), in newspapers (17%) and on broadcast network news (17%).

The major event last week was Obama’s speech on Wall Street one year after the Lehman Brothers collapse that helped trigger a massive bailout of the financial sector. Last week, the President’s message to bankers was a cautionary one.

“Lecturing Wall Street on its own turf, President Barack Obama warned financial leaders not to use the recovering economy to race back into ‘reckless behavior’ that could cause a new meltdown,” reported an AP story posted on Yahoo! News. “He declared that a bailout-weary public will not break their fall again.”

The week’s third-biggest story (7% of the newshole) was the case of Annie Le, the 24-year-old Yale graduate student who was murdered days before her wedding and whose body was found in the basement of a campus laboratory. A worker in the lab, Raymond Clark, was arrested for the crime. The tragedy got the most attention on network TV (16% of the newshole), but the level of coverage varied dramatically on the morning and evening news shows. On the nightly broadcasts, Le was the fourth-biggest story (7%). In the morning, the murder was the top subject, accounting for almost one-third (32%) of the week’s coverage.

The fifth-biggest story—coming after the race-related storyline—was the conflict in Afghanistan (4%), although attention was down from the two previous weeks when it accounted for 9% of the newshole.

A story that ended up No. 6 for the week (at 4%) ignited charges of liberal bias against the mainstream media by some conservatives. Undercover video from activists posing as a prostitute and pimp showed workers of the community group ACORN offering advice on potentially illegal activities and led to a cutoff of funds by Congress. Some critics argued that the media was slow to pick up on the story, a sentiment broadly echoed in a column by Washington Post ombudsman Andy Alexander. The story generated the most attention on cable news (9%), with the Fox News Channel aggressively covering it.

Newsmakers of the Week

With the impact of race on his presidency emerging as a key narrative, Barack Obama was the week’s top news generator, registering as a lead newsmaker in 12% of the stories. That is, however, down from 19% the previous week when he delivered the crucial speech on health care reform.

The second-biggest newsmaker (6% of the stories) was murdered Yale student Annie Le and the alleged perpetrator of that crime, Raymond Clark, was next at 4%.

Congressman Joe Wilson, reprimanded by his House colleagues, was among the top newsmakers (3% of the stories) for the second week in row, finishing at No. 4. And Senator Max Baucus, whose health care bill became the focal point for the legislative battle last week, was the fifth-biggest newsmaker at 2% of the stories.

About the NCI

PEJ’s weekly News Coverage Index examines the news agenda of 55 different outlets from five sectors of the media: print, online, network TV, cable and radio. (See List of Outlets.) The weekly study, which includes some 1,300 stories, is designed to provide news consumers, journalists and researchers with hard data about what stories and topics the media are covering, the trajectories of that media narrative and differences among news platforms. The percentages are based on “newshole,” or the space devoted to each subject in print and online and time on radio and TV. (See Our Methodology.) In addition, these reports also include a rundown of the week’s leading newsmakers, a designation given to people or institutions who account for at least 50% of a given story.

Mark Jurkowitz of PEJ 

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