Monday, January 22, 2007

Is Journalism Ready for a Black President?

I thought this was a good CJR Daily article about how the press tends to cover black candidates. It's true that the emphasis tends to be on the candidate's race much more than issues in some cases. Already we're seeing a trend of that with Barack Obama.

Forget America, is Journalism Ready for a Black President?

"Is America Ready for a Black President?" It's a question that many media outlets have posed recently ahead of a possible presidential run by Senator Barack Obama. But instead of asking if the country is prepared, the press would do well to ask itself, "Is Journalism Ready?" Not necessarily, say political scientists studying media coverage of minority candidates. Their research on black politicians running in majority-white districts turns up some touchy historical patterns that are germane to both Obama-mania and also the national media's readiness to cover a highly competitive white-black contest.

Three main batches of research -- the most recent published this winter in the Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics builds on two others published in the summer 1999 Journal of Politics and as the book Voting Hopes or Fears? -- focus on mayoral races in New York and Seattle in 1989, and national congressional contests in 1992, 1994, and 2004. It's a small sample by social scientific standards, and shouldn't be considered conclusive. But the primary limit on its size is also a commentary: blacks are still largely absent in the pool of candidates seeking state and national office, let alone the pool of winners. In the 130 years since Reconstruction, only two African Americans have been elected governor, and only three have been elected senator. None have come from a state more southern than Virginia.

Check out the rest of the article here.

1 Comments:

At 8:18 PM, Blogger FireSpeaker said...

No doubt race is an issue in politics in the USA. But should it be about race more than it is about issues?

Journalism connotes professionalism and while I hope to see this exhibited during the run up to the presidential election, I am wary of America's obsession with physical appearance. Obama, being black, and Hillary, being a woman, would be fodder for the popular press to feed off in a mad frenzy over the next few months.

 

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