EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
While much attention was given to the trivial questions asked in the final debate of the 2008 primary season, the problems with the primary debates went much deeper and highlight some of the broader weaknesses in the news media's coverage of the campaign. Media Matters Action Network undertook this analysis to identify the weaknesses in the media's performance during these debates in the hope that future debates will be more substantive and useful to voters.
Simply put, the primary debates were a disaster. With a few exceptions, the media figures who moderated the debates focused on endless rehashes of campaign gaffes, pointless dissections of political tactics, and personal issues that had little or nothing to do with the challenges the next president will face. Many of the substantive questions that were asked, furthermore, were of the “Let's you and him fight” variety, attempting to initiate squabbling between candidates instead of a meaningful exploration of issues.
As a result, critical issues were pushed aside. Only 9 percent of the questions addressed the economy, which has become the most important issue in the general election. Only six questions out of the total of 2,304 touched on the growing crisis in the mortgage industry, which was already making headlines in 2007. Only three questions mentioned the minimum wage, and only two questions touched on the issue of declining wages.
Other critical issues were likewise given short shrift. There were 61 questions about abortion - half as many as all other health care questions combined. There were dozens of questions about oil prices, but only three questions about conservation and renewable energy. There was not a single question about the administration's unprecedented use of signing statements, its dramatic claims of executive privilege, or its extraordinary secrecy. These 31 debates featured only one question about warrantless wiretapping and only two questions about the prison at Guantánamo.
Republicans and Democrats were equally subject to the parade of silliness. When not being forced to name their favorite Bible verse or take sides between the Red Sox and the Yankees, candidates were asked to comment on polls or political strategy. While some candidates got more substantive questions than others, almost all the candidates who were near the top of the polls found themselves answering mostly trivial questions.
Debates are the best opportunity the public has to get an extended look at the candidates, in their own words. While the candidates are ordinarily filtered through news programs that typically reduce their speeches to six-second sound bites, a debate actually allows them to answer questions at length and exchange ideas with each other. But the degree to which debates do this is dependent on those who moderate them. Those moderators set the rules, ask the questions, and guide the discussion. If they are obsessed with trivia, the debates will be obsessed with trivia, and the public will be not be led anywhere closer to an informed decision. Unfortunately, that is just what happened in the 2008 primary debates.