Nattering Nabobs: The GOP's Endless Assault Against the Media

From "nattering nabobs" to hypocritical demands for privacy, the GOP attack machine never stops

September 9, 2008 RSS Feed Print

In the 1992 presidential race, President George H. W. Bush attacked the media as his campaign was sinking fast against Democratic Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas. "Annoy the Media: Re-elect Bush" became a regular bumper sticker on the cars of Republicans. While Bush eased off on the sloganeering later, he helped foster a toxic atmosphere conducive to those who love to hate the press.

While assaulting the press, the Republican attack dogs conveniently forgot that Clinton himself was the focus of intense press scrutiny during the Democratic primaries. His draft status and womanizing was a big problem and the Clinton campaign groused about the press intrusion. Not a peep out of Republicans who loved it.

In fact, the GOP feasting on the media goes back at least to the Nixon-Agnew administration when, on Sept. 11, 1970—38 years ago this week—Vice President Spiro Agnew targeted the press as "negative nabobs of negativism." Agnew also said that the nabobs were the "hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history."

Now, in the current campaign, the Republicans seem to be gearing up for another blitzkrieg on the media. Party strategists in St. Paul were screaming about press inquiries in Alaska about Gov. Sarah Palin's brief political career.

It became apparent that the vetting process of Palin was woefully inadequate for a little-known woman about to be nominated for a position a heartbeat away from the presidency. McCain's pick was a surprise to even most Republicans, thus reporters scrambled to learn more about her.

"The media" should apologize, demanded some of McCain's allies at the GOP convention. Did they mean all of us from a remote blogger to the New York Times editorial board to the Palin-boosters at Fox News should issue a mea culpa because the website Daily Kos raised a wild and false accusation about Palin's 17-year-old daughter and her own 4-month-old baby?

With the advent of 24-7 cable television, bloggers on the right and left, national and local talk show hosts largely on the right, news magazines and periodicals, daily and weekly newspapers, and network television, the "media" is hardly a monolith. But it still represents an easy target for a politician hoping for an angry response from a party's base voters.

The family asked for privacy into their family affairs and Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee, agreed quickly on that point. But then over the next two days, the Palins and John McCain exploited the family by bringing them all (including the boy friend who had impregnated 17-year old Bristol) out on the platform and in the nearby convention floor—from the zone of privacy into the spotlight. Yes, it is traditional to bring family on-stage during the convention, but Palin bringing the family out twice, including the baby late at night, was way over the line. All this while privacy was demanded.

It was hypocrisy and exploitation—and it wasn't even subtle.

Such talk is especially galling coming from the John McCain camp. McCain has long enjoyed a reputation of being a pet of the press. In fact, his GOP rivals in the primaries complained that reporters were too chummy with him on his "Straight Talk Express" bus. He even famously referred to the media as his "base."

Let's face facts: The media will always be a convenient target. Many consumers of newspapers, the Internet, and TV blame the press for bringing bad news to them. The press certainly does, and should, dig into government activity at all levels. At times, it is the only watchdog for the public. Of course, the press makes mistakes and should answer to them.

But without press perseverance, we would not have known about Watergate, Clinton's sexual escapades, or George W. Bush's secretive maneuvering on the war in Iraq and other scandals in this administration.

It is amusing, too, to see Karl Rove, now a newspaper columnist and TV analyst, as a part of that hated media. Throughout Rove's career as a political consultant, he was eager to attack the media when it served his purpose. As one who despised Rove's tactics, I'm ashamed to count him as one of us now.

In the next eight weeks, voters should brace themselves for more wild accusations against the collective press. Such charges may make nifty applause lines, but they're not worth much more than that.

Tags:
presidential election 2008,
media,
campaigns,
republican party

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In para. 3, you wrote "negative nabobs of negativism" instead of "nattering nabobs of negativism." This article might be old, but the info is still appropriate! Thanks! I couldn't remember the rest of the "hypochondriacs of history" part of the quotation.

PatF of WA 5:02PM December 04, 2010

No doubt columnists everywhere are getting an eyeful now that the great silent majority, the people, vox populi, the Great Beast has at last waked from its long slumber. One has to pity the liberal aristocracy as it realizes first with incredulity and then with horror that the sans cullotes are out in force and here to stay - and that the liberal ancien regime itself is actually in peril from those uncouth commoners. How could such a thing ever come to pass? How has the world suddenly turned upside down?

It is perfectly obvious that journalists just don't get it and probably never will. Mr. Mashek's sublime certitude and serene confidence in his own rectitude is by no means rare in the journalism trade. Such people are unable to imagine that they could ever become the targets of serious and legitimate criticism because in their own hearts and minds they know they have only the purest of motives and also that they are absolutely right in every one of their premises and prescriptions for the universal betterment of all mankind.

Let the revolution proceed so that such faux-sages can be released from their thankless task of telling the rest of us how and what to think, and return to the trade for which they are trained and suited, the reporting of the news itself.

Teleologicus of GA 4:46PM September 14, 2008

Here we are a full six days after this column was posted and still the full comments do not load so we all can read what other readers think of Mr. Mashek's premise. I'll wager the comments are overwhelmingly negative, otherwise this little glitch would have been corrected waaaaay back on Sept. 6. Funny thing about liberals. They champion dissent, except when it is aimed at them or pet causes or pet presidential candidates. Dissent then quickly becomes hatespeech, or in this case, "an endless assault". Mashek profers a bogus claim of victimhood even as his team perpetrates the most viscious political attack in history on Palin. The ability to see glaring hypocrisy in themselves seems to have been lost in that standardless partisan gray area they inhabit.

E Warner of FL 1:13PM September 14, 2008

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