About us Login Get email updates
County Fair
Print

WaPo looks for apostasy in all the wrong places

June 14, 2010 3:40 pm ET by Jamison Foser

One persistent flaw in news reports about politics and policy is the media’s stipulation to a conservative frame in which social programs (but not, say, defense spending) constitute “big government” and government regulation of health care and guns (but not, say, abortion or marriage) is “intrusive.”

Opposition to “big” and “intrusive” government is, after all, a pretty significant part of the conservative movement’s (and the Republican Party’s) appeal -- even as conservative political leaders have spent decades supporting government spending they would describe as massive if it were coming from liberals and backing government restrictions on marriage and military service that are the very definition of “intrusive.” Would the conservatives’ platitudes about government win them nearly as much support if, rather than stipulating that conservatives dislike big, intrusive government, the media consistently pointed out the conflicts between their stated principles and their specific policy positions? I rather doubt it.

Today’s front-page Washington Post article about Ted Olson’s efforts to overturn California’s ban on gay marriage is exactly the kind of news report that should have examined those conflicts. The article purported to examine the tension between Olson’s work on behalf of gay marriage and his status as an impeccably-credentialed member of the conservative movement. It’s right there in the headline: “Olson surprises many conservatives by seeking to overturn gay-marriage ban.”

And yet Post reporter Robert Barnes never got around to mentioning the disparity between Olson’s fellow conservatives' professed abhorrence of large, intrusive government and their support for laws banning the marriage of two loving, committed adults.

At times, the omission is glaring.  Barnes reports:

That the man who was a loyal Reagan lieutenant and defended Bush's anti-terrorism policies is now championing gay rights has been too much for some conservatives. M. Edward Whelan III, whose National Review column is influential in conservative legal circles, called the lawsuit "a betrayal of everything that Ted Olson has purported to stand for."

Paul D. Clement, who was Olson's deputy as solicitor general and then took over the job, said conservatives have "come to terms" with Olson's decision, "but those who never understood it are still scratching their heads."

That seems like a pretty good place to introduce the question of who is really betraying everything that conservatives like Olson have “purported to stand for” -- Ted Olson, who is arguing that the government has no business telling two consenting adults who they can marry, or Edward Whelan & company, who want it to do exactly that.  

But Barnes introduced no such question. Incredibly, almost unbelievably, he managed to write an entire article about the supposed oddity of a leading conservative working on behalf of gay marriage without ever mending the concept of limited government. That is perhaps the central (stated) principle of the conservative movement and the Republican Party -- and yet their position on gay marriage is, at least on its face, inconsistent with that principle. It is absolutely mind-boggling that inconsistency is absent from Barnes' article, which is all about the tension between Olson and fellow conservatives over his opposition to a ban on gay marriage. 

The fact that such an article could be printed on the front page of the Washington Post just shows how thoroughly many in the media have internalized the conservative movement’s spin that it opposes big, intrusive government. How else can you explain the Post’s failure to consider the possibility that it is the rest of the conservative movement, not Ted Olson, that is committing apostasy -- or that the movement’s stated principles are just empty spin?

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by nerzog (June 14, 2010 3:55 pm ET)
      5 1
      I find it somewhat amusing, in a sad sort of way, that Conservatives consider it "intrusive" if their tax money is used to provide healthcare for someone, but not if excess hardware bought with that same money sits rusting in a Pentagon warehouse.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by ForTheLoveOfEllipsis... (June 14, 2010 3:59 pm ET)
        2  
        Right-wing Doublespeak, Part I:

        Listening to all your electronic communications=unintrusive

        Allowing same-sex couples to marry=intrusive


        George Orwell, please call your service...
        Report Abuse
        • Author by Invent a Scandal (June 14, 2010 4:46 pm ET)
          1  
          The corporate media knows they must allow--even promote--this blatant hypocrisy.

          Otherwise, the Cons can't pull the wool over the eyes of the family values crowd.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by ForTheLoveOfEllipsis... (June 14, 2010 3:55 pm ET)
      2 1
      There is a real question of terms involved here. As bintx and others here would point out, the modern "conservative" or neo-con movement is not at all conservative, in the sense of conservatism meaning restraint in government's role in a society or restraint in making changes to existing institutions. What they truly are, are reactionaries; advocates of "turning back the clock" to earlier times (mostly--if not entirely--fictional, btw) when society was better in ways they like. To achieve this end, reactionaries are not at all uncomfortable with social change by government fiat, such as the deliberately-misnamed DOMA laws and abortion bans.

      Once one understands this, the right wing becomes entirely explicable; what they truly are, are right-statists pushing the involvement of government to put women, GLBT people, racila minorities, non-"Christians", and anyone else the right-statists dislike "back in their place". Thus, when a true conservative like Olson asserts that the federal government has no business regulating marriage, the right-statists predictably go apoplectic at the "betrayal," when in fact the only thing being betrayed is the hysterics' true philosophy and agenda...
      Report Abuse
    • Author by mattcable250650 (June 14, 2010 4:03 pm ET)
      1  
      What amazes me is that it became obvious to me in 1981 (As a young and foolish college student, I welcomed Reagan as President because Carter was too wimpy for me), when I was 21 years old, that Reagan's talk of his horror at deficit spending was just that, talk. Reagan was perfectly happy to talk about small, inexpensive government, but he very clearly didn't have the slightest intention of actually doing anything to actually reduce the budget.
      But when we look at Tea Party platforms, we see people advocating small, cheap government, just as Reagan did in his 1980 campaign. That promise quickly became inoperative as Reagan pumped so many billions into military spending that there was a lot of money allocated that his people couldn't even figure out how to spend.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (June 14, 2010 4:15 pm ET)
        4 1
        You probably remember, as I do, the outrage over the $400 hammers and $300 toilet seats purchased by the Pentagon many years ago. Seems that there were Congressional hearings and lots of political posturing.

        Apparently, the NeoClowns have forgotten those days. From what I've read, the fraud and waste that's been going on in Iraq and Afghanistan make a $400 hammer look like a Blue-Light special.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by nerzog (June 14, 2010 4:38 pm ET)
          1  
          Apparently we have a Defense Contractor visiting with us today.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by ForTheLoveOfEllipsis... (June 14, 2010 4:39 pm ET)
            1  
            Oh, just another sighting of the Yellow-Bellied Gutless Thumbs-Down Parrot...
            Report Abuse
    • Author by magnolialover (June 14, 2010 4:28 pm ET)
      1  
      Seems like Olsen IS being a conservative through and through, as in, getting Government out of everything that they don't need to really be concerned with, such as, gay marriage. Good for him.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by ForTheLoveOfEllipsis... (June 14, 2010 4:38 pm ET)
        3  
        As I posted above, mag, the right-wing likes intrusive government--at least when the government is intruding on things like dislike...
        Report Abuse
        • Author by magnolialover (June 14, 2010 5:09 pm ET)
          2  
          True enough. As I heard someone say once, they want to shrink down the size of Government so that it's just small enough to fit into our bedrooms and doctor's offices.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by shaggles (June 14, 2010 5:24 pm ET)
      2  
      I remember years ago arguing abortion rights with a co-worker. I said "Why is it conservatives want the govt to stay out of peoples business except for this one issue?" Her priceless reply was "Well they should've stayed out of it. They should kept it illegal like it was before."
      Report Abuse
      • Author by DellDolly (June 15, 2010 12:46 pm ET)
           
        Yeah, but of course the TRUTH is that abortion was legal for a very long time BEFORE it was made illegal. And you're right, of course, that she's being a total loon to suggest that keeping something illegal is government intervention.

        But she was sold the rightwing talking point that the US Supreme Court shouldn't intervene. Of course that's nonsense - that's their purpose, to intervene where appropriate!
        Report Abuse

my.MediaMatters.org

Login  Sign Up

About the Blog

Feed Icon
  • County Fair is a media blog featuring links to progressive media criticism from around the Web as well as original commentary, breaking news and rapid response updates to major media events from Media Matters senior fellows and other staff.