Site icon journal-isms.com

Journal-isms 11/5

Read Financial Pages for Political Predictions, Analyst Says


Olbermann Suspended Over Political Contributions


Reporter Hurt After Clown Yanks Him Off Halloween Float


Rod Richardson May Be Laid Off, but He’ll Still Be at Seminar


Considered, but Not Included in NPR History


Short Takes



President Obama says on “60 Minutes” that he failed to properly explain his policies and persuade people to agree with them. “Leadership isn’t just legislation,” he told Steve Kroft. (Video) 


Read Financial Pages for Political Predictions, Analyst Says


For the better part of two decades, Dr. David A. Bositis of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies has been one of the key go-to guys for data on African Americans and politics. He says that journalists who want to interpret Tuesday’s election results would do as well to read the financial pages as much as those dealing with politics.


“This election was solely about the economy,” Bositis told Journal-isms on Friday, citing exit polls. And the Federal Reserve Board can affect the economy more than an incoming Republican-controlled House of Representatives, which still must face off against a Democratic-controlled Senate and White House, he said.


If the economy improves sufficiently by 2012, he continued, things will look good for President Obama‘s reelection.


The financial pages seem to offer backup for Bositis’ position. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke decided Wednesday to pump $75 billion a month more into the economy over the next eight months, Jon Hilsenrath reported for Saturday’s Wall Street Journal an action taken independent of Congress.


Moreover, “Since the central bank said it would launch a new round of government-bond buying, an effort to drive down long-term interest rates and support a recovery that lost steam around midyear, the economic news has been surprisingly good,” the story reported. The Fed might not even need to continue its infusion of dollars for the full eight months, the story continued.


Bositis, senior research associate at the think tank, also does not agree with pundits who bemoan an insufficient African American turnout on Tuesday. Blacks were 10 percent of the electorate on Tuesday according to exit polls. That is down from 13 percent in 2008, but the same as it was in 2006, he said, and it played a key role in several contests.


“Black turnout was fine,” he said. “The black population is poorer less educated than the white population. These are people who don’t get midterm elections. There is no focal point at the top of the ticket,” as there would be in a presidential election.


In the 2008 presidential election, 60.8 percent of eligible blacks went to the polls, compared with 59.6 percent of whites, 32.1 of Asian Americans and 31.6 percent of Hispanics. The overall figure was 58.2 percent.


Meanwhile, the Latino vote was credited for playing a decisive role in a number of contests.


Latino voters may have saved the Senate for the Democrats, even as Latino candidates gained a record number of congressional seats on the Republican ticket,” Elena Shore reported for New America Media.


“Political observers say these seemingly contradictory outcomes make one thing clear: Latinos — as candidates and as voters — played a decisive role in Tuesday’s election.


“Ironically, the party that was accused of using anti-immigrant rhetoric gained victories for Latino candidates. Republican Susana Martinez was elected New Mexico’s first Latina governor and Brian Sandoval became Nevada’s first Latino governor. Latino Republicans won five new House seats, and one new Senate seat, giving Latino Republicans a record total of eight seats in both houses of Congress.”


President Obama taped another interview with Steve Kroft of CBS-TV’s “60 Minutes,” saying the defeat of his party in the midterm elections was probably because the people thought his emergency stimulus and bailout spending was “a huge expansion of government,” the network said. It was a reiteration of what Obama said in his Wednesday news conference, except the setting was the president’s first one-on-one interview since the election. It is to be broadcast Sunday at 7 p.m. ET/PT.



Olbermann Suspended Over Political Contributions


MSNBC has suspended star anchor Keith Olbermann following the news that he had donated to three Democratic candidates this election cycle,” Danny Shea reported Friday for the Huffington Post.


” ‘I became aware of Keith’s political contributions late last night. Mindful of NBC News policy and standards, I have suspended him indefinitely without pay,’ MSNBC president Phil Griffin said in a statement.


“Politico reported Friday that Olbermann had donated $2,400 each to Reps. Raul Grijalva and Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona, and to Kentucky Senate contender Jack Conway. While NBC News policy does not prohibit employees from donating to political candidates, it requires them to obtain prior approval from NBC News executives before doing so.


“In a statement earlier Friday, Olbermann defended his donation, saying, ‘I did not privately or publicly encourage anyone else to donate to these campaigns nor to any others in this election or any previous ones, nor have I previously donated to any political campaign at any level.'”


Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting: If Olbermann’s Donations Are Bad, What About GE’s?





Reporter Arthur Chi’en of New York’s WPIX-TV was on board the “Heroes and Villians” float, left, when he was dragged off by a man dressed in a clown costume at Sunday’s Village Halloween Parade. (Credit: WPIX)


Reporter Hurt After Clown Yanks Him Off Halloween Float


Reporter Arthur Chi’en of New York’s WPIX-TV “was scheduled to undergo surgery Thursday, four days after he suffered extensive injuries to his face when an unidentified man yanked him off a float at Sunday’s New York City Village Halloween Parade,” the station reported.


“Chi’en was on board the ‘Heroes and Villians’ float when the suspect, dressed in a clown costume, attempted to hitch a ride near W. 14th St. along Sixth Avenue just after 9 p.m.


” ‘I started waving him off, telling him it was unsafe but then he grabbed my forearms and tried to pull himself up that way,’ Chi’en told PIX 11 News as he recounted the ordeal. ‘The combined weight caused the railing at the top of the float to collapse and we went over. I tried to brace myself but he clung onto me as we fell.’


“As the two men fell on the pavement, Chi’en landed face first, causing six facial fractures among other injuries. The veteran newsman was rushed to nearby Bellevue Hospital where he remained hospitalized for two days.


“Chi’en was scheduled to undergo surgery Thursday, where doctors will attempt to reconstruct the half dozen facial fractures they have labeled a ‘crash injury.’ Recovery will be determined on the outcome of Thursday’s procedure, Chi’en said.”


 


Rod Richardson May Be Laid Off, but He’ll Still Be at Seminar


Rod Richardson, who was laid off this week as managing editor at the Times in Shreveport, La., said Friday he was not sure what he would do next, but “I still have a great passion for journalism but I realize there are many ways to make a positive contribution in this world so I won’t close my eyes to opportunities in other areas.”


As reported Thursday, Richardson was part of cost-cutting at Gannett newspapers that also claimed Don Hudson, managing editor of the Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Miss. He joined the Times in 2004 from the Associated Press, where he was assistant bureau chief in Dallas.


“I still plan to attend a seminar at Poynter this month,” he told Journal-isms on Friday, referring to the Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla. “I won an NAA Fellowship to participate in ‘Editing 2010: How to wear 5 hats and still succeed.’ I was encouraged that the organizers were willing to let me come even after Wednesday’s announcement. So, I take that as proof that this temporary setback won’t keep me down.” The reference is to the Newspaper Association of America.


Considered, but Not Included in NPR History


“When Michele Norris joined National Public Radio in 2002 to host its popular afternoon news show ‘All Things Considered,’ she made history as the first black woman to host a major show at the public radio outlet,” Eric Deggans reported Friday in his St Petersburg (Fla.) Times blog.


But you won’t find that achievement in the new book about the news organization’s 40-year history, This Is NPR, because Norris was left out of the book completely.


“I’m disappointed,” said Norris, who declined to speak in detail on the issue when contacted by telephone. “But you have to ask NPR why it happened.”


“Norris was asked to contribute a chapter, along with other staffers or people who appear regularly on NPR for the book, which weaves the stories into a chronological history. Other contributors include Cokie Roberts, Nina Totenberg, P. J. O’Rourke and Paula Poundstone. But because she was on sabbatical writing her own book, The Grace of Silence: A Memoir, Norris couldn’t contribute an essay and was not included anywhere else, said NPR spokeswoman Dana Davis Rehm.


” ‘It was an inexcusable mistake,’ Rehm added. ‘She should have been in the book.’ “


 

Short Takes



Follow Richard Prince on Twitter

Facebook users: Sign up for the “Richard Prince’s Journal-isms” fan page.

Exit mobile version