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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
13.10.2008
Playing Balz

Washington Post news analyst Dan Balz has written a missive to the campaign press corps urging them to, well, there's no other way to put it: start holding Barack Obama to a higher standard than his opponent. Balz is one of the most prestigious members of the Washington press corps, and his commentary has already been fronted by conventional wisdom-arbiter The Page, so it's likely to be influential.

Why should the press train its sights on Obama? Balz says because the election is all but over:

He leads nationally in the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll by 53 percent to 43 percent. He leads, too, by a wide margin in estimates of the Electoral College. Virtually all of the closest states left at this point voted for President Bush four years ago.

The presidential race is not over, but at this point, Obama has a better chance of becoming president than McCain, and as a result, the questions ought to be going toward him as much or more than McCain  

In other words, Balz argues, Obama should be treated as if he's already president, rather than as one of two candidates for the presidency. I suppose that, if you think the election is truly a formality, an argument could be made for skipping ahead to post-election coverage. Yet, a few paragraphs later, Balz says that it's important that this new phase of one-sided inquiry happen now so that voters can potentially decide if they want Obama at all:

It would be helpful to voters to know now, rather than after the election, whether [Obama] will take a zero-based look at everything and rearrange priorities.

Does this make any sense? Balz is saying that voters need to know all these things about Obama (he does not say they need to know this about McCain) before the election. Why before the election? It can only be because they might decide they prefer McCain instead. But why should voters be making this decision on the basis of how they judge Obama, rather than an even comparison between the two candidates? Balz is saying that the press should give Obama the scrutiny of an incumbent president so that voters can potentially choose somebody else to be president. I suppose that if voters decide to start flocking to McCain, Balz's logic would compel him to urge the press corps to start suddenly applying one-sided scrutiny to the GOP candidate -- unless it happened too late.

I'm on favor of rigorous, intelligent questioning of both candidates. But the first "questions" Balz proposes aren't really questions at all but opinions that the press corps is apparently supposed to adopt. Balz:

[Obama] stayed in close contact with Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke and with Democratic congressional leaders. He both embraced the sense of urgency to act on the $700 billion bailout package and offered criticisms of the administration's initially sketchy plan. His criticisms were in line with changes that Congress made before eventually approving the package.

But it's not clear that he has had any better ideas -- or put them forward more aggressively -- than Paulson and Bernanke when it comes to dealing with the crisis in the credit markets. It's not clear that he has pushed ideas that would have dealt with the crisis more effectively. At every turn, he has voiced support for the general course the administration has outlined, but he's not been far out ahead.

What? First he says that Obama proposed different ideas than the administration, but then says it's not clear that he has any better ideas. I suppose Balz could believe that Obama's opinions are no better than Paulson's. That's a subjective judgment, though not many economists --- nor even, by this point, Paulson himself -- would agree with him. But clearly, as Balz just admitted in the previous paragraph, Obama did have different ideas.

Balz proceeds to propose more questions:

Nor is it evident that [Obama] has dealt realistically with the impact the economic crisis may have on the next president. He has not backed away from ambitious plans for a second stimulus package, for dramatically expanding health care, for reducing dependence on foreign oil or for other spending plans that long have been part of his campaign agenda.

First of all, this question has been asked -- in all three presidential and vice-presidential debates, while vast areas of domestic and foreign policy have been ignored. Second, the question is economically illiterate. Virtually any economists would agree that, to the extent that domestic spending makes any sense, its rationale is stronger, not weaker, during a recession. Certainly many conservative economists would oppose Obama's spending plans under any circumstances. No economist would favor them under normal conditions but oppose them due to the recession.

Balz flays Obama because he "has not backed away from ambitious plans for a second stimulus package." Of course he hasn't backed away from his stimulus plans because of the recession. He came up with it as a response to the recession. That's what a stimulus package is. Bill Clinton scaled back his plans for a stimulus package in 1993 because the economy was getting better and no longer needed it.

Balz then proposes a series of questions about whether Obama is a "pragmatist" or "ideologically oriented," and whether he'll pursue bipartisanship if elected. Okay, fine. Shouldn't the press be asking this of both candidates before the election? Balz covers himself by adding that "both candidates" should get these questions, but "especially" Obama. I've heard reporters admit that coverage can be biased for one reason or another -- ideology, desire for a close race, personal afinity for one of the candidates -- but I've never before seen one openly propose a double standard.

--Jonathan Chait

Posted: Monday, October 13, 2008 9:27 PM with 24 comment(s)

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icarusr said:

It's simple.  The MSM still can't believe this half-blood nig*** has beated Billy-Bob and is about to demolish POWPOW McCain, their darling.

The inanity of the argument is breath-taking, and assumes of course that the Media been sitting on a joystick for the past two years.

But then, the Post had its head deep in Bush-droppings before Iraq, so what's the surprise?

October 13, 2008 10:41 PM

shirhatti said:

All one can say is "Huh"?

October 13, 2008 10:41 PM

JEFF FREY said:

How about Balz just tells us to vote for McCain because that's the guy he wants to win? It would have been shorter and had the same impact. By this point, I think the public's bullshit-o-meter is pretty well calibrated.

October 13, 2008 10:55 PM

cspencef said:

What a goon.  How ham-fisted can you be?  

October 13, 2008 11:11 PM

gennitydo said:

This is standard NBA ref in the playoffs stuff.  You always call more fouls on the winning team (especially if it is the away team) so that the game is closer.

The media is interested in a close race.  The media in all its forms have made unbelievable amounts of money from this election and the primaries.  So much so that it has kept a few businesses afloat.

Dan just wants to keep the gravy train rolling and the best way to do that is to keep it close.

October 13, 2008 11:23 PM

ironyroad said:

I mean, we don't really KNOW who Barack Obama is, do we?  He could be anyone.  He needs to tell us what his plans are if he becomes president.

Maybe Balz fished this piece out of his file marked "Stories active - April 08" and is still trying to find a home for it.

October 13, 2008 11:23 PM

adaglas said:

Finally!  This chap - what's his name again? Obama? - this Obama fellow has flown under the radar for far too long.  It's about time some people started paying attention to this mysterious stranger from the so-called "Midwest" who appears to be running for some office or another.

October 13, 2008 11:38 PM

Lyn39 said:

icarusr, your first comment is so dead on.  During the last debate, as McCain shuffled around aimlessly and refused to face Obama directly, I thought, "He cannot believe that after all his POW POW history and 26 years in the senate, he is now having to defend his policies against a 47-year-old African American smarty-pants whose background included "community organizer."

Oh, the indignance of it all, Johnny.

I'm sure the most commonly used phrase on the Straight Talk Express is WHAT THE FUCK?

October 14, 2008 12:18 AM

maxblum13 said:

lol his name is 'Balz' and people have to take him seriously because he's important in Washington.  I wonder what Bush's nickname for him is...

October 14, 2008 12:53 AM

simon greenwood said:

I've been trying to come up with a charitable reading of Balz so I can pedantically nitpick but it's really way out of my league.  Balz writes like Palin interviews: stream of consciousness arguments and assertions and contradictions.  I think my favorite part is how he starts the article by saying that the press should shift its focus from McCain's tactics to substantive questions about Obama, then after he poses some example questions he concludes by writing a few paragraphs about McCain's tactics.

October 14, 2008 1:07 AM

mjhollerich said:

It's a competitive media market out there, and you can't blame Dan for fighting for shelf space.  

But that aside, what kind of preposterous drivel is this really?  We're  supposed to handicap the candidate? Why, pray tell?  So Dan can still have an exciting race on which to report?  What, in all seriousness, is there about Barack Obama that we don't already know?  The guy's been running a campaign for, what, almost two years now?  This is an insane way to elect a president.  And the fact that the guy seems unflappable through it all is, all by itself, a recommendation for office.  McCain, on the other hand, looks worryingly unstable, in his appearance, his behaviors, and his choices.  

October 14, 2008 1:36 AM

ackyri said:

icarsur, come on, don't mince words. Tell us how you REALLY feel.

October 14, 2008 3:16 AM

K.Crake said:

I'm really glad to see something on the Balz piece here on TNR; I thought I was the only one confused by his latest "analysis."  

First, the Balz piece made no sense because he flayed Obama for lacking a plan for the economy on the very day when Obama announced his reasonable plan for a 90 day moratorium on foreclosures combined with tax cuts for small businesses that create jobs.  At the same time, the McCain campain, having promised a new plan Monday, begged the press to wait until today when it became clear they couldn't come up with something over the weekend.  And Balz goes after Obama for lacking specifics?  How detached is Balz from the campaign?

Naturally some in the press are sharpening the knives; they don't want a blowout because its more fun to report on a horse race.  The Balz piece was a real disappointment because it screamed press pettiness and it didn't even make sense given the news context of the day.

October 14, 2008 4:58 AM

fougasseu said:

I know quite a bit about Obama and Biden. Obama, not having a long career in public life, is easy to know, Biden, having been around forever, is pretty much an open book.

McCain is more of an enigma. He has also been around forever, but he's full of contradictions, and his past is complicated. As with many Republicans, the back of the store isn't quite as tidy as the front of the store.

And his spouse is also a bit of a mystery. Neither Obama's spouse nor Biden's play such an interesting role in their campaign: A major source of funding throughout his career, and the source of those funds is controversial due to family history.

And then there's Palin. A candidate for VP arrives on the national scene late in the game with virtually no vetting, refusing to do serious media interviews - has there EVER been a candidate for VP who has not done "Meet The Press" and "This Week"? - who is also making the most hard-edged criticisms of her opponents and increasingly, serious critics inside and outside of her party feel is not qualified.

Balz wants more attentiion on Obama, less on the Republican ticket? I'm glad he doesn't cover the economy. He'd want more attention on Canada.

Here's Hitchens on McCain-Palin:www.slate.com/.../2202163

October 14, 2008 5:14 AM

psantillana said:

Balz' argument reminds me of this one: "Look, she's saying I raped her but I've never even met her. And furthermore, it was consensual."

October 14, 2008 5:34 AM

dbhuff said:

I don't mind the questions be asked, but I do think that they need to go to both candidates. The weak argument is one that says we should grill Obama so we can choose McCain...agreed.

However, I do want to point out that fiscal stimulous and government spending are NOT the same thing. Dumping megabucks into the economy via the healthcare plan will in fact not really do a lot for the economy becasue this is money that would be spent anyway, just less efficiently. And so an economist won't necessarily favor that under times of fiscal tightness. But investment in roads, internet infrastructure, etc IS stimulative. It puts people to work who would not otherwise have been working, increasing a sense of well-being, and ultimately (one hopes) jumpstarting the economy again.

Obama's speech yesterday on the economy was in fact some of this. Spending on roads, and some softening of the blow for folks caught in the cross-hairs. It wasn't as stimulative as I would have hoped.   But he makes a clear distiction in the early part of his speech which was important: his energy investments, teacher plan, etc. are all long term growth plans, but will not help us in the recession. Therefore he made a number of shorter term proposals. Mostly practical, relatively easy changes and funding for short-term spending.  And a warning that there were going to be hard decisions to make and tough times for us as we got through this. Not what someone in a tight race would say, but with a cushion, Obama can afford some truth...

October 14, 2008 8:28 AM

Rhubarbs said:

The funny thing is that President Bush's nickname for Balz is "Foucault." Folks inside the Betlway have been trying to figure that one out for years.

As to the idea of "Both, but especially one," that raises the question: Did Balz graduate from middle school? Because I've worked with high school journalism students who know better than to accept such lazy writing. If you mean one or the other, say it. If you mean both, say it. "Both, but especially one" is meaningless, both grammatically and logically.

October 14, 2008 9:02 AM

icarusr said:

Rhubs: come on now.  "Both, but especially one" has a healthy and long history.  As in, "All Presidential Candidates are Equal, but POWPOW is more Equal that the Negro."  In the American context, of course, it had a far more illustrious provenance; why, no less an authority than the US Supreme Court has ruled on "separate but equal" treatment; why would or should Balz argue with that?

psantillana: That was my morning smile :-).  Thanks

October 14, 2008 9:20 AM

Political Animal said:

DEMANDING A DOUBLE STANDARD.... The Washington Post's Dan Balz had an online item yesterday that was so odd, I read it a couple of times, just to make sure I wasn't misinterpreting his point. As Balz sees is, John McCain...

October 14, 2008 11:05 AM

JEFF FREY said:

Foucalt? Does Balz swing back and forth regularly, and slowly turn around in circles?

October 14, 2008 11:34 AM

jhildner said:

Balz is a big fat poo-poo head.

Seriously, this is pretty outrageous: a plea to go after a candidate because he's ahead in the polls.  The press should hammer both, and hammer them intelligently.  Balz proposes neither.  Balls, says this observer.  Balls.

October 14, 2008 1:09 PM

CAM2 said:

Balz has some balls!  He wants to hold Obama to a higher standard than Paulson and Bernanke, the former who sounded llike a Jersey City thug before Congress.  And which re-incarnation of the 'bail-out' are we now in?  What a dolt!

Almost as bad as Tom Brokaw asking Harwood  'can you  name one thing that Barack Obama has done to help us out of this crisis.'  Harwood was shocked and proceeded to rattle off Obama's contributions to he who is clearly an aging and worn former anchor.

October 14, 2008 1:43 PM

tpinter said:

Balz has a point. Obama should be spending his time running the country rather than campaigning during this crisis. We need to see him at work in the Oval Office.

October 14, 2008 9:58 PM

jsayko said:

All Balz cares about is the appearance of a close election.  And he's apparently willing to sell out what's left of his journalistic integrity to achieve it.

October 15, 2008 8:41 AM