Fall 1995
Teddy White Would Have Approved
By Stan Cloud
Executive Director
Citizens Election Project
Between sips of Jack Daniels, White, who had interviewed Carter that afternoon only to discover afterward that his tape recorder had malfunctioned, was explaining why he had pretty much decided to give up writing books about how presidents are made. For one thing, he said, it was becoming harder and harder to predict with any certainty who would win – and therefore which candidates should get his attention. And for another thing: “You guys in the regular press corps are now routinely doing during  the campaign what I used to do after it was all over.” He was right. For better or worse, two generations of political reporters learned their craft at the knee of the late, talented White. His speciality was providing mountains of inside detail that went beyond describing a campaign’s public activities-Teddy assumed those were already well-covered – to emphasize behind-the-scenes strategic maneuvers by candidates. Sometime in the late 1960s or early 1970s, the “regular press corps” had begun beating Teddy at his own game. The focus of campaign coverage shifted from what candidates said and did on the stump to what was going on in the so-called smoke-filled rooms. The problem with such coverage, however, was that it was not very helpful to voters who had to choose one candidate over another. White himself was disturbed by what he had wrought. As early as 1972, he told an interviewer how much he regretted having “invented” this new form of political journalism. If he had regrets then, however, he would have been horror-stricken to see what campaign coverage has become in the 1990s. Reporters increasingly focus on the minutia of staff politics, on the “horse race” among the candidates, on so-called “character issues,” on campaign “gaffes.” With television coverage, to the extent candidates are heard at all outside of formal “debates” and their own ads, they are heard in 10-second “sound bites.” And throughout the media, greater emphasis is given to reporters’ interpretations than on what the candidates actually do and say. Even when journalists focus on “the issues,” they tend to choose issues that they and the politicians deem important; it rarely seems to occur to them that other things may be on voters’ minds. The Citizens Election Project, launched last spring by the Pew Center for Civic Journalism with the University of Maryland’s School of Journalism, is intended to demonstrate ways modern political journalism might be changed. Involving at least five media partnerships and focusing on four crucial states in the 1996 presidential election – Iowa, New Hampshire, Florida and California – the CEP is trying to bring the priorities and attitudes of the voters back into what has become the closed shop of political campaign coverage. Beyond helping to support the basic partnerships, the CEP also makes available expert technical consultants, focus-group and polling services by the Washington-based Harwood Group and Andrew Kohut’s public-opinion research firm, plus an on-line communications capability provided by Soundprint Media Center. Each partnership has developed its own plan, but all share a commitment to changing the status quo. Here is a rundown on what the partnerships are up to:
A Boston-based partnership involving the Boston Globe and NPR station WBUR-FM and WABU-TV will provide intensive reporting on how the campaign affects a single town – Derry, N.H., near the Massachusetts border – as its voters follow the issues and the candidates and finally cast their ballots. The project is to begin by early October with a poll on attitudes among Derry residents. In late October, a series of feature articles and broadcasts on Derry will be launched and will continue for about a month. Between Thanksgiving and Christmas, Derry residents will question presidential candidates in a series of public forums. Other coverage is still being planned, but town meetings to discuss such general issues as future job security are under active consideration.
Different as these five CEP projects are, they have at least one thing in common: All seek to break the “this-is-the-way-we’ve-always-done it” mold of political reporting and to reassert the primacy of the voter, as opposed to the journalist, in the political process. I think Teddy White would have approved.
Back in the summer of 1976, when I was covering Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign for Time magazine, I spent one warm summer evening sitting poolside at the press motel in Americus, Ga., with Teddy White, author of the famous Making of the President books.