Fox News
Hannity was the first Fox program to air following the debate on October 22, and it ran several segments that pushed these narratives, including interviews with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, who both fearmongered about a massive loss of jobs and economic downturn in response to Biden’s comments. On October 23, host Sean Hannity ranted about Biden’s comments, falsely stating that “the oil and gas industry would become a thing of the past” under a Biden administration and claiming that up to “10% of the entire U.S. workforce” would be eliminated (the entirety of the energy sector, including clean energy jobs, constitutes only 5% of the U.S. workforce). Additionally, the Fox prime-time host lied about American energy independence and claimed Biden’s climate plan would “weaken our national security.”
On the October 24 edition of Fox & Friends Weekend, co-host Will Cain interviewed an oil worker who claimed that Biden’s transition plan “is terrible for America” while Trump “undoubtedly supports oil and gas, and he is going to fight for the oil and gas workers.” The segment failed to mention that the oil and gas industry hasn’t really done that well under Trump: Production has declined, tens of thousands of workers have been laid off, and dozens of companies have gone bankrupt. Discussing Biden’s oil transition comments on the October 26 edition of America’s Newsroom, Fox anchor Maria Bartiromo cited the oil industry’s always dubious numbers on the millions of jobs that would supposedly be affected.
Also on October 26, Fox’s Pete Hegseth lamented on Outnumbered that “the left has converted to the religion of climate change, and because they’re so tied to radical environmentalism, they’ve rejected the working men and women in the industries that have built this country.” Hegseth also falsely stated that “the president, with his energy independence and all of the above strategy on energy, is exactly where the American people are.” (Once again, most U.S. citizens are supportive of the transition to a clean energy economy, as guest Marie Harf pointed out in her pushback to Hegseth.)
Some segments ran with the narrative that Biden’s comments were the downfall of his campaign. On the October 23 edition of Fox & Friends, former Trump 2016 campaign staffers Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie talked about how Biden’s comment supposedly flipped the election toward Trump, with Bossie calling the comments a “game changer for us, and we're going to close this election and win Pennsylvania again like we did in 2016.” Special Report with Bret Baier echoed this framing later that evening, suggesting that the “damage was done” and that Biden was already trying to walk those comments back.
All together, Fox News has pushed these conservative, pro-industry messages 92 times.
CNN and MSNBC
However, it’s not just right-wing media running with the pro-fossil fuel industry framing of Biden’s oil transition comments -- Fox’s cable counterparts CNN and MSNBC echoed the narrative as well. Over the four-day period from October 23-26, CNN pushed this Big Oil narrative 29 times, while MSNBC pushed it 17 times.
One of the worst examples came on the October 25 edition of CNN’s New Day Weekend. The segment called Biden’s oil transition comment “an awkward moment” and claimed that he was “playing cleanup” on it. CNN correspondent Vanessa Yurkevich reported from western Pennsylvania, and she noted “natural gas is king” and interviewed a natural gas worker and a restaurant owner who has natural gas employees as customers. But the segment did not mention climate change or the environmental effects of fracking, and it did not go into further detail on the general downturn of the fracking industry right now. The segment could have come straight out of a pro-industry ad from the American Petroleum Institute.
Another bad example came from the October 23 edition of CNN’s The Lead with Jake Tapper. Tapper fed into the right-wing narrative on “the controversy about whether or not (Biden) wants to move away from fracking,” before noting, “If it is banned, obviously that would kill tens of thousands of jobs in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas.” Conservative commentator Scott Jennings stated that “if you remember what the Obama-Biden administration did to coal, that's what they're planning to do with fracking and that's what they're planning to do to oil.” (This is false, as market forces and the rise of natural gas have been responsible for coal losing its share of energy production). To his credit, CNN’s Van Jones did push back a bit on this framing, noting that while Biden got “his words tangled up,” it was indeed cheap gas that killed coal, and explaining that Biden’s comments were really about oil subsidies.
On the October 23 edition of MTP Daily, host Chuck Todd played a clip of the Biden and Trump’s oil transition exchange along with a debate clip discussing the ongoing coronavirus pandemic before stating, “If you think this is an issues election, the oil answer may matter more” than one on coronavirus. (This statement feeds into the conservative narrative around the oil industry; in reality, it may not be playing that big part in the election.) Conservative strategist Brad Todd then stated that Biden’s policies might be too “far-left” for some voters, who “worry about the fact that transitioning away from fossil fuels in a hurry like Joe Biden and AOC want to do, that’s going to crash the economy.” Guest Maria Teresa Kumar pushed back on this framing, noting that Biden is “talking about transition in 15 years” and adding that “the oil industry itself is investing tens of billions of dollars because they know that is where their future is.”