The most definitive report ever on verdict effects, this book
gives striking new evidence that media assessments of presidential
debates sway voters. The authors conducted 2,350 surveys and
extensive analysis of news reports to scrutinize the post-debate
news of 1988. They also examined the effects of the attack ads used
by Bush and Dukakis. They found that the news media consistently
downplay debate content and instead emphasize their own views on
candidate performance--media verdicts influence voters as much as
the debates themselves.
Extensive content analyses and more than 2,350 surveys were
conducted to analyze media verdicts on the 1988 debates. The
verdicts on Bush, Dukakis, Quayle, and Bentsen announced in
post-debate newscasts are compared with those from debates in 1984,
1980 and 1976. The study finds that the news media consistently
downplay debate content and instead emphasize their own views on
candidate performance. These media verdicts influence voters as
much as the debates themselves. The study also examines the effects
of attack ads used by Bush and Dukakis, and finds that they
backfired--network news probably rebroadcast more excerpts of
attack ads in 1988 than ever before. Television journalists, the
essays in this book show, have become increasingly less interested
in how the debates served the information needs of the voters and
increasingly more preoccupied with how they affected the ambitions
of the candidates. A noticeable trend in 1988 was as the fall
debates went on, voters' beliefs that further debates would be
helpful to them went down. Another finding of the study deals with
a huge tactical error that the League of Women Voters committed by
simultaneously announcing its withdrawal and blasting the format
and ground rules imposed on it by the Commission on Presidential
Debates. Also, the spin doctors who continually spouted insider
information during the 1988 campaign gained more legitimacy and
impact than ever before--and had a very strong effect on American
public affairs journalism. This intriguing book, which also
provides policy recommendations for the debates, their sponsors,
and the news media, is useful to journalists, researchers, and
civic groups concerned with elections, government, campaign reform,
and communications.
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