In February 2009, President Barack Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to try to stave off the worst economic environment since the Great Depression. The legislation, an aggressive stimulus package of tax benefits and government spending totaling roughly $800 billion over 10 years, overcame an all-out onslaught from the Republican Party -- and from their right-wing media allies.
Conservative journalists and pundits laid the groundwork months before Obama even took office, pushing back against calls for Keynesian stimulus, like that employed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, by creating a mythology that such New Deal policies had failed. Once the bill was unveiled, they vilified it with an ideological misinformation campaign aimed at convincing the public that Obama was a dangerous radical pushing a Soviet-style vision that would enslave Americans while killing jobs, not saving them. Their denunciations kicked off an eight-year campaign in which the right-wing press used lies, demagoguery, and vitriol to try to curtail Obama’s successes, denouncing government spending and health care legislation with apocalyptic fervor. Fox News led the way, identifying itself during the period as the “voice of opposition.”
A dozen years later, Democrats in both chambers of Congress have passed versions of the American Rescue Plan, a response to the coronavirus pandemic that is President Joe Biden’s top legislative priority. The bill is more than twice as expansive as the 2009 package at nearly $1.9 trillion, featuring $1,400 stimulus checks for most Americans, an expanded child tax credit that would drastically reduce child poverty, and other provisions that led Sen. Bernie Sanders to describe it as “the most significant piece of legislation to benefit working people in the modern history of this country.” The House of Representatives is likely to approve the Senate’s version and send it to Biden’s desk to sign later this week.
This time, however, the response from the “loyal opposition” at Fox and the rest of the right-wing press has been oddly muted.
It’s not that there are a host of apostates -- the right’s commentators are once again nearly united in opposing a Democratic president’s proposal to help rebuild a U.S. economy damaged under his Republican predecessor. But the volume and tenor of their coverage little resembles the frenzied doomsaying of 2009. When they mount the barricades, their battle is instead usually part of the never-ending culture war, as they defend the likes of Mr. Potato Head and Dr. Seuss from the “woke mob.”
Tucker Carlson, the Fox star whose occasionally heterodox commentary has led some to inaccurately characterize him as an economic populist or even a “socialist,” provides a good example of this phenomenon.