Mainstream media outlets have responded to Brandon Johnson’s election as mayor of Chicago on Tuesday by treating it primarily as a local story of a narrow progressive victory, whereas many of the same outlets treated Eric Adam’s 2021 mayoral win in New York City as a bellwether event with national significance for Democratic policymakers. The decidedly different responses showcase how mainstream media editorial decisions often promote so-called “tough-on-crime” candidates under the guise of straight reporting — sometimes because the outlets are following the cues of right-wing media, and sometimes because their institutional class interests align with more conservative candidates.
Johnson is a progressive who won with support from the Chicago Teachers Union against Paul Vallas, a conservative opponent who relied heavily on racist, “tough-on-crime” dog whistle messaging. Vallas also closely aligned himself with the right-wing Chicago police union — representing one of the most corrupt, violent departments in the country — while Johnson promoted a holistic approach to public safety and health that sees investment in public schools, stable and affordable housing, and easily accessible health care as the foundations of safer communities. In the zero-sum game of city budgeting, increased funding for police crowds out these other approaches, which some evidence suggests can lower crime and recidivism rates.
Many mainstream outlets had wildly different responses to the Chicago and New York City races, but The New York Times’ approach is illustrative of the general trend.
In two fairly good pieces over the past two days, the Times covered Johnson’s win as a local story. Both articles address Vallas’ police ties as potential liabilities, a rare but welcome practice in political journalism. Neither piece drew national conclusions from the outcome of the race, which is entirely appropriate — but it also highlighted a problem in the paper’s pattern of coverage when that restraint is selectively applied to more progressive candidates.
A follow-up piece from the Times on April 5 framed Johnson’s win as a possible “Blueprint for Democratic Messaging on Crime,” but was still tempered with caveats.
“Analysts also cautioned that Mr. Johnson’s victory most likely had less to do with ideology than with Mr. Johnson’s consolidating the Black vote after a divided primary and with Mr. Vallas’s failing to make up for that with a larger-than-expected Hispanic turnout,” the Times wrote. It’s not clear which analysts the paper was referring to.
The Times’ coverage of Adams’ victory in 2021 was far more editorially heavy-handed, signaling to readers and other news outlets that he represented a paradigm shift in Democratic politics nationwide.
“The apparent victory of Mr. Adams, who embraces a relatively expansive role for law enforcement in promoting public safety, amounts to a rebuke of the left wing of his party that promoted far-reaching efforts to scale back the power of the police,” the Times wrote after Adams’ primary win that July. “The race was a vital if imperfect test of Democratic attitudes around crime amid a national wave of gun violence in American cities.”
Noting that Adams was “the only leading candidate with a law enforcement background,” the paper added that “some Democrats, aware that national Republicans are eager to caricature their party as insufficiently concerned about crime, have taken note of Mr. Adams’s messaging.”
The Times’ breathless coverage of Adams continued later that month, with a headline that read “Why Top Democrats Are Listening to Eric Adams Right Now.” The subheadline underlined the point: “Some prominent Democrats think their party’s nominee for mayor of New York offers a template for how to address issues of public safety.”
Stories from Axios exemplified this bifurcated approach to covering each candidate’s victory as well.
Reporting the morning after Johnson’s win, the Beltway-focused outlet wrote that his victory “reflects a progressive shift in Chicago politics.” The piece noted Johnson’s expected local policies on taxes and education, but it didn’t draw any conclusions about what his victory signals for Democrats nationwide — or about the more general political salience of public safety policies that don’t rely on hiring more police.
Tellingly, Axios linked to another story about the city’s mayoral race that the outlet published on March 1, with the headline “Why Chicago matters for the Democratic debate on crime.” That story, which framed the race as nationally significant, situated Vallas as a candidate “leading a real-time transformation of the Democratic Party in a post-pandemic world where voters demand more forceful answers on public safety solutions.”
Axios also followed up on Thursday with a piece examining the larger context of Johnson’s win but framed it primarily as a regional story, pairing it with the victory of progressive Judge Janet Protasiewicz in Wisconsin. Like the Times, Axios tempered its analysis, offering three supposed counter-examples — including Adams’ 2021 victory in New York — to show criminal justice reform “as a major wedge issue for Dems” and suggest Johnson’s victory was not a more general emerging trend.
Compare that with Axios’ coverage of Adams’ win. Adams, a former registered Republican, ran by juxtaposing himself with the progressive movement, like Vallas, and appealing to the same “tough on crime” business and police interests. Following Adams’ victory in the city’s Democratic primary — all but assuring him of victory in the general election — Axios heralded the “rise of the anti-’woke’ Democrat.”