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Eric Boehlert
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The GOP's looming (media) civil war

November 10, 2009 1:47 pm ET

It's not easy to flip a congressional district that's been Republican since the late 1800s, but after being willingly hijacked by the right-wing media -- after getting steamrolled by Fox News' embrace of third-party candidate Doug Hoffman -- Republicans managed to hand Upstate New York's 23rd District to Democrats last week. And they did it just in time for the newly elected Democrat to help (barely) push health care reform through the House of Representatives during Saturday night's historic vote.

Doug Hoffman was, first and foremost, a media candidate (a media creation), which means we are entering a very new and different realm in American politics. We're entering a sort of Fox News Era where media outlets -- where alleged news organizations -- essentially co-sponsor political campaigns. We've moved well beyond the time when Fox News, for instance, leaned right and gave conservative candidates more air-time and tossed them lots of softball questions. We're now watching unfold a political reality where Fox News literally selects candidates and then markets them through Election Day.

There's a reason Hoffman described Glenn Beck as his "mentor" and pledged his "sacred honor" to uphold the "9 Principles and 12 Values" of Beck's 9/12 Project. There's a reason Sean Hannity wanted to "declare" Hoffman the election winner, and why Fox News' on-screen graphic read "Conservative Revolution?" when Hoffman was being interviewed (i.e. prematurely crowned) by Hannity on the eve of Election Day.

Hoffman's outsider bid, originally opposed by the Republican Party, was a media production, plain and simple, which means his loss was a media loss, as well.

Former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich had it right when he told The Washington Times that Hoffman's rise as a third party candidate was the "result of Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Fox News." Gingrich, who originally opposed Hoffman's candidacy, added: "This was not an isolated amateur; this is an entire movement."

Indeed, it's a media movement that's doing it's best to obliterate the line between journalism and politics.

As I've been noting for some time, Fox News has transformed itself into the Opposition Party of the Obama White House. So it makes sense that, as a purely partisan player, Fox New would immerse itself in backroom horse-trading. It makes sense that rather than covering the campaigns and the candidates, Fox News would insert itself as a political player within Republican contests and throw its support behind a specific candidate, the way it did in NY-23.

The looming problem for the GOP, though, is that the right-wing media can't pick winners and stands poised to rip the Republican Party apart. (Did you notice how Limbaugh last week claimed "Newt" had "screwed the whole [NY-23] thing up"?)

It's yet more evidence that during President Bush's pro-war tenure, far-right radio and TV talkers, along with fringe bloggers, convinced themselves they represented the mainstream -- the majority -- of the GOP. But they don't. They represent the radical CPAC wing of the GOP, and it shows on Election Day. We saw that in 2008, when bloggers and talkers opposed Sen. John McCain in the GOP primaries yet were completely unable to sway Republican voters in the process. In the immortal words of Republican strategist Mike Murphy, "These radio guys can't deliver a pizza, let alone a nomination."

 What's different now, though, is that the right-wing media have become even more powerful within conservative circles, while the Republican National Committee and traditional Republican leaders have receded even further into the background. (Does anyone really see Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell as the leader of anything?) That power vacuum means it's Fox News that sets the conservative agenda in America. It's at Fox News where partisan strategies are hatched, rallies are marketed, and smear campaigns are launched. And it's Republican politicians and traditional Beltway professionals who are forced to play catch-up to the conservative media.

In other words, in just the last 12 months, the balance of power within the conservative movement has completely swung in the direction of the right-wing press, which is stoking the flames of the GOP civil war. It's a partisan press corps that no longer documents internal Republican squabbling; it initiates the infighting.

National political parties go through all kinds of evolutions; all kinds of natural expansions and contractions over time. (Barry Goldwater, for instance, oversaw perhaps the GOP's most radical contraction in modern times.) It's quite rare, though, for the catalyst of that change to be external media forces. Sure, permanent Beltway insiders such as Bill Kristol have routinely hopped back and forth between "the role of Republican flack and alleged journalist without changing even a comma in his prose 'style'," as columnist Eric Alterman noted last week.

But what we're seeing unfold in 2009 is something entirely different. This isn't a few conservative pundits dipping their toes into Republican political waters during election cycles and trying to generate an electoral wave. And this isn't like 1994 when AM talk radio morphed into an RNC echo chamber and helped spread the Republicans' anti-Clinton message.

This is a case where huge swaths of the conservative media, including television, radio, and online, have shed any façade of being journalists and embraced their king-making role. Or, if savaging a GOP candidate is what's needed, as was the case in NY-23 and Dede Scozzafava, then they'll do that as well.

Looking forward, it's inevitable that during the 2012 GOP Republican primary season, there will be, for the lack of a better term, a Fox News candidate in the field. There will be a far-right darling of the Tea Party movement (cough, cough, Sarah Palin) who has both the official (Limbaugh, Beck, Malkin) and unofficial (Fox News) endorsement of the right-wing media.

But will that do any good in the real world? Ask Doug Hoffman.

Beck, Hannity, Limbaugh, and Malkin, among others, all put their reputations on the line in NY-23, touting the contest as a referendum on the anti-Obama, Tea Party movement in America. And they lost, big time. Not unlike the way the same right-wing media leaders put their reputations on the line in early 2008 and went all-in against McCain in the South Carolina Republican primary. (FYI, McCain wasn't sufficiently conservative.) Result? McCain won the SC contest in a walk.

See a pattern here? Me, too. The Republican Party is now attached to a political movement -- a media-led movement -- that cannot win elections. It's a movement that cannot even win elections in traditionally red districts (NY-23) or in very red states (SC). By refusing to separate itself from media players who claim the president of the United States is a racist and a Nazi, the GOP may be assigning itself a permanent minority status.

And I'm sorry, but belated and feeble attempts by Republican leaders such as Rep. Eric Cantor to create the slightest glimmer of daylight between the GOP and the right-wing media aren't going to do the trick. (For the record, comparing health care reform to the Holocaust was the line Limbaugh and company recently crossed, according to Cantor. Good to know.) Republican politicians in 2009 have made it blindingly obvious that they lack both the courage to consistently stand up to the far-right media's hate merchants and the resources. Meaning, without the energy of the fringe activists who insist Obama is destroying America on purpose, the Republican Party would be virtually kaput today.

Disillusioned "Right Wing" blogger Rick Moran, recently bemoaning what he sees as the rise of an "anti-reason" movement on the far right, may have put it best when he asked, "What is it that possesses certain conservatives to fool themselves so spectacularly into believing that they can create a majority out of a minority?"

His definition of "anti-reason" conservatives, who now anchor the right-wing media, seemed dead-on, as well: "[T]hose who reject reality in favor of persecution complexes, wildly exaggerated hyperbole, and a frightening need for vengeance against their imagined 'enemies.' "

Moran actually penned that lament before the votes were counted in the NY-23 congressional race. And incredibly, the "anti-reason" fanatics Moran described were encouraged by the results in Upstate New York, which, in a strange way, actually made sense. Of course anti-reason conservatives would celebrate as a victory the fact that a district that hadn't elected a Democrat to Congress in nearly 150 years did so last week. Of course they'd announce that it was good news that by backing a candidate who did not even live in the district and who, according to a local newspaper editorial board, was woefully ill-informed about local issues, the movement had helped toss a Republican seat to the Democrats.

Anti-reason conservatives watched Hoffman go down in defeat and immediately announced they were going to target more Republican candidates, which means the right-wing media stand poised to unleash even more wingnuttery on the GOP establishment.

Grab the popcorn. This is going to be fun to watch.

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by fawkyous (November 10, 2009 2:46 pm ET)
        4
      The fact that anyone in the US has any faith in the traitors in Wa. DC regardless of which party is sad. After twenty years of our nation being sold down the road by both major parties we still have extremest on both sides of the political realm pointing out the problems and mistakes of the other party. The real problem is that nobody in Washington has represented Americans in general and the Constitution as a whole. Prove me wrong...i dare you.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by brutusmaximus (November 11, 2009 7:53 pm ET)
          4
        "The real problem is that nobody in Washington has represented Americans in general and the Constitution as a whole." - fawkyous

        Yous got that right. Especially the Constitution part.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by 42boxes (November 10, 2009 3:11 pm ET)
      1 1
      Great article.

      An editorial nitpick, though: 7th graf, 2nd sentence, "Fox New" should be "Fox News."
      Report Abuse
    • Author by NiceguyEddie (November 10, 2009 3:24 pm ET)
      5  
      Yes, it is indeed.

      It's perfectly OK to b*llsh!t. Sometimes you juts have to. I do from time to time myself. Sometimes you just don't have enough info, and you have to make up the difference with bravado. This is expecailly true in politics. The trouble happens when you do this so often that you start BELIEVING your own b*llsh!t, mistaking you bravado, which is essentially a bluff, for REAL INFORMATION and REASON. And THIS is what's happening to those in the far right at the moment.

      --------------------------------------------------------------
      I like lots of butter on my popcorn, and a liberal does of salt. This IS going to be fun to watch!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by only_myschly3567 (November 10, 2009 4:09 pm ET)
      14  
      Yes it is indeed the downfall I had hoped for once the Palin support-numbers started to dip, and McCain said the economy was fine when people were panicking. I must admit I didn't think it'd go this nuts, but I was hopeful that a future was in store where the GOP split in two and wasn't going to win any elections anytime soon.

      This is just wonderful. Now we've just got to elect some REAL Democrats instead of Corporatists, and we're gonna see this country finally improve.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (November 10, 2009 4:46 pm ET)
        6  
        Still,
        I am worried about a Palin - Roger Ailes ticket in 2012. This could be a real problem.

        I don't think Mitch McConnell will emerge to lead the Cons. I don't believe McConnell is actually alive--it looks to me like he's some sort of battery powered blow-up conservative doll.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by overmars jr. (November 10, 2009 5:13 pm ET)
          5  
          I am worried about a Palin - Roger Ailes ticket in 2012. This could be a real problem.


          I have one word for the prospects of such a ticket: pfft.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Byte Man (November 12, 2009 4:14 pm ET)
            1  
            Here's My version of that...

            ...

            ...

            ...

            ...HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!
            Report Abuse
      • Author by bruce1ace (November 10, 2009 4:55 pm ET)
        4 1
        Asw people leave the Republican Party because of their problems and the Democratic Party expands, what do you think happens to the progressive wing of the Democratic Party? It becomes less influential because the people switching sides aren't changing their ideology, they are just voting for the candidate that more closely represents them.

        A weaker Republican Party really increases the chances of electing more centrist Democrats because that's where the votes are. I wouldn't hold your breath for this progressive revolution.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by magnolialover (November 10, 2009 6:26 pm ET)
          7  
          I think you have a point there, although, we're already looking at a fairly centrist democratic president, who seems convinced that leading from the middle is the way to roll. It always makes me laugh when these yay-hoos start talking about how RADICAL Obama is. Good lord, Richard Nixon was more progressive than Obama.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by bruce1ace (November 10, 2009 7:11 pm ET)
            2  
            That's why I voted for him.
            Report Abuse
          • Author by wookie (November 12, 2009 9:25 am ET)
            5  
            Nixon was a product of the times. He would have been more right wing if he could have. Obama needs to get the message out more to broaden support for liberal ideas. To some extent he is by pointing out that Fox is absurd and the Repubs are beholden to them.
            Report Abuse
    • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (November 10, 2009 4:56 pm ET)
      12  
      Excellent piece Eric, though you made one mistake when you said "Beck, Hannity, Limbaugh and Malkin, among others, all put their reputations on the line in NY-23..."

      These dirtbags have no reputations to put on the line. Their reputations disappeared a long time ago.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by aBeck in 10-O-C (November 10, 2009 5:22 pm ET)
        4  
        These dirtbags have no reputations to put on the line

        I thought this same thing at first. But then I realized that Eric was referring to their "reputations" as pundits who wield political power and influence. In that context Boehlert is spot on.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by DellDolly (November 10, 2009 5:46 pm ET)
          11  
          What are they really?

          They are defined as "anti-reason" conservatives, who now anchor the right-wing media. The definition seems dead-on, as well: "[T]hose who reject reality in favor of persecution complexes, wildly exaggerated hyperbole, and a frightening need for vengeance against their imagined 'enemies.' "

          This sounds very similar to most of the righty's who post here too.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by hurricaneyankee52983 (November 11, 2009 5:18 pm ET)
            3  
            These FAR RIGHT WING NUTS are pushing for IDEOLOGICAL purity and with that the attitude of no compromise with any opposition. The opposition is to beaten down and destroyed by their way of thinking.Unfortunatly for them, they forget that this GOVT was constructed on compromise and by give and take and compromising is how things get done and legilation gets passed.
            Report Abuse
    • Author by MaskedMarauder (November 10, 2009 5:33 pm ET)
         
      So, the pseudo news media are finally turning on the only community outside the lunatic fringe that liked them. There's no way to pull off such a stunt without conspicuously barking at the moon in broad daylight. Even the most goonish of the conservatives will have to turn on them. The postmodern conservative Movement will be consumed by the monsters they conjured to serve them.

      About bloody time, too, I say. This is the best news I've heard in a long, long, long time.

      Sadly though, most of the good guys will have been purged and the credibility of the media will be shattered well before the barbarians gasp their last. So, where/how can a serious and competent and effective media emerge from the looming politico-journalistic Götterdämmerung? And will anybody listen to them if/when they ever do?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Pope Buck I (November 10, 2009 5:52 pm ET)
      5  
      It's no surprise that they are actually encouraged by the loss in NY-23. By this point, the "anti-reason conservatives" are behaving like compulsive gamblers - the more they lose, the more they want to risk "to win it all back with one big haul."

      They should ask William Bennett how well that strategy works.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by bewildered (November 10, 2009 9:37 pm ET)
      6  
      This article sized up everything perfectly.

      My sentiments exactly although I couldn't have said it better.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by classicliberal2 (November 10, 2009 11:14 pm ET)
      4  
      Good piece, Eric, but I think you focus too narrowly on the right-wing media contribution to constructing Hoffman. He was, in fact, a pre-fab candidate. A piece of astroturf, invented only in part by the right-wing press. There was more to it. I've just written a crude piece about it myself.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by rwmacdonald2091 (November 11, 2009 5:44 am ET)
      4  
      All I can say is, Geez it couldn't have happened to a nicer group of people.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Meremark (November 11, 2009 12:07 pm ET)
      1  
      -
      Let's not get popcorned-up toooo comfortable, Eric, waiting like couch potatoes for evil to self-destruct. Whereas, in fact, we can get off our butts, get in gear, go to work and DESTRUCT them.

      Partisan campaign airtime has a market value of MILLIONS of dollars.

      That is why candidates get donations -- to be able to buy broadcast airtime. When we BAN paid-broadcast political commercials, just as we already banned paid-broadcast cigarette commercials, then candidates won't waste all their time getting donations. Think of it as campaign finance reform on the Spending side -- candidates may get Income (donations) as much as they like wherever they like BUT they CAN NOT Spend it on TV or radio commercials. (If they want to produce some and post them on a website, that's okay, but NOT BROADCASTING.) No broadcasting :: Use print. Write a position paper, write a newspaper oped, write a blog or bumpersticker, whatever -- show voters literary skills, the ability to read and write, which is, after all, the job description for lawmakers.

      What we'all can do today is light a fire under the Fed.Election.Commission to enforce regulations that require rightwing broadcasters to report the dollar value being donated in airtime to candidates or one partisan party.

      Partisan donations are partisan donations -- REQUIRED to REPORT -- no matter whether in dollars (to buy airtime), or directly in airtime, or by a printer whose Trade-in-Kind prints some candidate's lawn signs 'for free' -- it is a political contribution of a market-based dollar value and must be reported to F.E.C.

      Donations/contributions are also capped at $2000 a year per couple, or somesuch, and Beck can go to jail for exceeding that limit in Hoffman's case ....

      And Limbaugh could never have Shut Down Congress - twice! - by reciting reciting reciting the switchboard number - live, coast-to-coast - chanting for listeners to call it, and they did, and Congress recessed 24 hours - unprecedented - in the confusion and jammed phone lines. Because of broadcasting. Broadcasting makes a massmind a.k.a. 'mob mentality' that print and newspapers never did and can not -- since newspaper readers read the paper at different times of day, not in mass.

      Broadcast hate is a public mental health hazard.
      Broadcast hate is addictive.
      Those are the same two reasons we ban paid-broadcast cigarette commercials.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by RowdyFFC (November 11, 2009 2:53 pm ET)
        9
      You've got to be kidding me! Hoffman almost won that race with no name recognition whatsoever, despite Scozzacaca endorsing the democrat.

      Rofl! Creating a majority out of a minority? You're kidding me...you don't seem to realize that ObaMao only won with 29% of voting age Americans, hardly a slam dunk as McCain was right behind him, and would've won had not Bernanke/Geithner/Obama not pulled the economic crisis hoax less than 50 days before the election. Do you ever read anything? McCain/Palin was beating his socks off to that point!

      Who writes your stuff, anyway? Serious lack of credibility here. Jeebus!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by wookie (November 12, 2009 9:22 am ET)
        6  
        To that I can only say

        Who writes your stuff, anyway? Serious lack of credibility here. Jeebus!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by pearlene_scott1602 (November 12, 2009 5:09 pm ET)
        2  
        Who writes your stuff, anyway? Serious lack of credibility here. Jeebus!

        Seriously, double that medication, NOW!
        Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (November 11, 2009 10:36 pm ET)
      4  
      Lets all just hope that Sarah Palin and Doug Hoffman (being the failed experiments they were) is the closest this new Cluster Fox opposition party to reality ever comes to having one of their hand picked whores gaining an elected office!

      Not that I believe the Democrats are going to be some great or grand party any time soon... but compared to this new form of right-wing corporate extremism... they are saints.

      May God (assuming he/she/it even gives a damn) have mercy on this planet if any of these Cluster Fox supported clowns ever get elected to any office anywhere!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by erock33 (November 12, 2009 12:20 am ET)
          5
        I wouldn't worry too much is Palin or any other real conservative gets elected into office. It will just mean more freedom for you and less taxes that you pay. Oh but then more personal responsibility too....yeah I can see where that might frighten you.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by dlincoln (November 12, 2009 11:20 am ET)
      4  
      It isn't a "media war" that the Republican Conservative-Fundamentalist-Neo-Con-Right-Dominionist Christian Movement is manufacturing, it is all out Civil War. Much of this movement has been funded by those who have Calvanistic puritanical theosophy intentions to dominate American and turn it into a THEOCRACY. The media is outright overlooking AND seem to lack the ability to distinquish how this movement operates. - THE DOMINIONIST MOVEMENT which is frought with libertarianism and under the spell of zealot anti-government Christians on the Right and funded by the illegal actions of people like the Rev. Sung Myung Moon have long wanted to demolish this secular society and return it to God's law rather than the law of the people who most conservatives have a dim and negative view of. We need to distinquish CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICAN from DOMINIONIST REPUBLICANS. Not once in my intensive research of media have I ever found one solid history or mention of this Dominionist Movement towards Christian National Socialism and theocracy.
      ( see Goldberg,Berlet,Hedges for starts ) One only has to trace back to its origins with the figures of Rushdoony to reveal these groups who lunge toward a slow national apocalypse and their contempt for democracy. The reason this nation is so psychotic and undergoing a deep split, is that we continue to fail to point out to the American people, in clear and precise language and history, who is involved in this massive movement to destroy America. The fear and anger of the people in this nation is misdirected and is directed by the media. Until Koch, Saife, Moons, Bushes, and all the old shadow government pricks are identified as well as the Prince Foundation and their connection to Amway, Eric Prince and Blackwater, to the Roman Catholic church and its rich barrons, to their links to the Christian Right and the horrible Reverand James Dobson and his links. When the term "cultural war" arose in the media it was abstract, a word game, naming something which had no meaning and continues to have no meaning because of silence. The cultural war is now on the verge of civil war for which it has always intended.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by mycos2679 (November 12, 2009 7:43 pm ET)
        2  
        Dr. Robert Altemeyer, a world-reknowed and frequently cited social psychology professor, became so disturbed about what his work on the authoritarian personality revealed that he placed an easily understood summary of his decades of research on the web, free of charge. He has this to say in the lead-up on his webpage: "The studies explain so much about these people (right-wing authoritarians/conservatives). Yes, the research shows they are very aggressive, but why are they so hostile? Yes, experiments show they are almost totally uninfluenced by reasoning and evidence, but why are they so dogmatic? Yes, studies show the Religious Right has more than its fair share of hypocrites, from top to bottom; but why are they two-faced, and how come one face never notices the other? Yes, their leaders can give the flimsiest of excuses and even outright lies about things they’ve done wrong, but why do the rank-and-file believe them? What happens when authoritarian followers find the authoritarian leaders they crave and start marching together? I think you’ll find this book explains a lot. Many scattered impressions about the enemies of freedom and equality become solidified by science and coherently connected here." http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~altemey/

        I've read it as well as everything else I can get my hands on regarding the RWA-SDO personality. Everything happening now was almost presciently foretold and warned about by him in "The Authoritarians"(above) and in John Dean's "Conservatives Without Conscience". The time for the media to also get on-board is long overdue.
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    • Author by dlincoln (November 12, 2009 11:22 am ET)
      1 1
      Media War to Civil War
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    • Author by Rocknroll (November 12, 2009 4:37 pm ET)
      2 1
      fawkyous - You are sooo right! Most politicians go to "work" for money, power, notoriety, whatever self serving item is on their agenda. Since Obama was elected and health care reform has become such a hot topic, it has become convenient to their "purpose" to say they are fighting for / representing their constituency. But the sinking middle class is proof that they have not represented the people for many, many years....Or the Constitution. The "Revolution" should not be against the Obama administration, it should be against the entrenched "representatives," lobbyists and their corporate bed-fellows!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by skyreader7 (November 12, 2009 11:47 pm ET)
         
      With all their name calling and hysteria who can believe these right wing republicans? They keep calling "wolf" when there is no wolf. They yell "run there is a tiger on the loose." When you look, it is really a pathetic little mouse looking for food. The republicans lack credibility. They scream as loud as they can that Obama is Muslim, a communist, a nazi, a socialist, an Indonesian, a Kenyan, the anti-Christ. The man is so many people he must be a bit actor. He must be worn out by all the different roles he has to play. How can you be a Nazi and a communist at the same time? The republicans just can't call Obama enough names to make him the devil they want him to be. Have the republicans ever heard the psychological term projection? Naw, they just aren't that educated.
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    • Author by dmcmass (November 13, 2009 10:03 am ET)
         
      ....and I don't see it changing as long as these supposed media outlets have an audience and are bringing in the cash!

      Paraphrasing Lawrence O'Donnell, "5% of the population can make a broadcaster lots of money, but 5% of the population does not make a ruling political party"
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