Fox News and other media outlets owned by Rupert Murdoch are embarking on a sustained campaign against President Joe Biden’s pandemic relief proposals, seeking to fortify Republican opposition to the entire package by highlighting specific facets of economic aid and separating them from the wider context of the coronavirus’s impact on the economy.
Their latest target is museum funding, which is only a small portion of the wider $1.9 trillion proposal. And as with other examples, the spending requests are being attributed solely to Democrats, when in fact previous similar spending and requests for aid have already been going on during the Trump administration. And as a further clarification, these examples of arts and cultural spending make up around 0.025% of the total stimulus package.
Right-wing media also tend to pick and choose which elements of the economic rescue package get to be considered as “pandemic-related,” often glossing over the wider economic impact that COVID-19 has made in people’s lives. (For example, museums and the arts contribute to tourism and other jobs, but travel and even local foot traffic will have now taken a serious hit.)
The Wall Street Journal editorial board, a corporate cousin of Fox News, declared earlier this week that “most of the blowout is a list of longtime Democratic spending priorities flying under the false flag of Covid-19 relief.” As one example, it wrote, “don’t overlook the nearly $500 million for, as the CBO puts it, ‘grants to fund activities related to the arts, humanities, libraries and museums, and Native American language preservation.’”
And on Wednesday, Fox Business ran an article titled “Dems' $2T coronavirus relief bill includes $500M for museums, libraries,” listing $200 million proposed for the Institute of Museum and Library Services and $270 million for the National Endowment of the Arts. “Deficit-weary Republicans have criticized the size and scope of the legislation,” the article said, “arguing the aid should be better targeted to those who need it the most and slamming Democrats for including provisions unrelated to the pandemic.”
This outrage is also very similar to another manufactured right-wing media scandal, in which Fox figures claimed that a proposed $1.5 million outlay to shore up the lost revenue of a toll bridge that connects upstate New York to Canada is a “pet project” for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY). In fact, the funding request originated from the Trump-era Department of Transportation, under then-Secretary Elaine Chao, who is also the wife of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).
And likewise, pandemic-related economic relief for the National Endowment for the Arts also began last year, under the previous CARES Act. At the time, Trump-appointed NEA chair Mary Anne Carter said that the first relief bill’s $75 million allotment for the arts “does not come close to meeting the demand,” with the grants being distributed to a wide range of organizations across the country.
Carter wrote again toward the end of 2020 in the NEA’s American Artscape Magazine: