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Edited on Mon Feb-28-05 03:03 PM by AP
...Daschled for a couple weeks. After that, he sort of Edwardsed himself.
Clark did not get ignored in the weeks before he announced. In fact the two days around his anouncement, he pretty much was the only story on cable news. Then in the week after, he was the only story when they started interviewing his former colleagues who spewed the bullshit about how people under him didn't like him. However, Clark was climbing in the polls towards Dean throughout December, despite the early fall Daschling.
I think it's fair to say that being ignored is being Edwarsed (and I mean pre-Jan 26). Edwards was, in fact, ignored by the media up until one week after Iowa (when it was too late to make a difference). MediaTenor.org published reports on candidate coverage throughout '03, and they, very conveniently, broke the coverage down by type (personality, policy, horse-race, etc.). Dean got more coverage than anyone else -- in fact, he got more coverage than everyone else combined, and he got more coverage in every category.
Edwards was at the bottom of the list, and the only coverage he got was personality coverage -- and I mean, literally, he was at the bottom of the list, ranking in only a single category. The media rarely told you where he stood on the issues. Clark, in fact, was the other candidate near the bottom of the list, but only when you broke it down by categories. Cummulatively, Clark got better coverage than Kucinich, Edwards and Mosley-Braun, but it was primarily (IMO) because he talked about Iraq so much, and that was clearly the thing the media loved to report on. So Clak got personality and policy coverage (and probably horse-race coverage, since he did in fact climb the polls to challenge Dean, but I don't remember the precise categories).
Anyway, fact remains, Edwards was getting less absolute coverage than even Braun and Kucinich. Furthermore, at DU we timed the amount of talk/face time they got in the debates. The first few debates didn't require equal time for candidates. In those debates, there were two tiers of candidates: Dean and everyone who attacked him in the days leading up to the debate got between 10 and 15 minutes of talking/face time, and then Braun, Kucinich and Edwards got in the 5 minute range. Gephardt, Clark, Kerry and Lieberman, along with Dean, were regularly in the 10+ minute range. It's kind of crazy for Edwards to get so little time, especially since he ultimately did so well in Iowa -- he was obviously talking about things people wanted to hear about, but they weren't going to hear about it from CNN, FOX, NBC, or CBS, so long as their moderators had any control over the forum.
Now, one thing that is clear to me: Kerry won the nomination by winning Iowa. All the talk among Democrats after IA was, "I want to nominate the guy who can beat Bush and because Kerry won in IA, he can beat Bush." So, no matter what happened after Iowa, the media and the other campaigns had no control over it. Dean was not going to come back from such a huge disappointment. Clark Edwardsed himself in many respects by not competing in Iowa. And Edwards continued on his surprise upward arc, but the media sold it (and Democrats accepted him) as Edwards running for VP. Nobody else really had a chance before or after Iowa, so I really don't think formulating arguments about media control of the nominating process, or the media screwing over candidates after Iowa really have any relevance at all. If you want to know what the media thought about the Democrats, everything that happened prior to January 19, 2004 is very revealing.
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