Search This Blog

Friday, June 11, 2010

Campaign Coverage

At Politics Daily, Walter Shapiro laments the decline of statewide campaign coverage. Last Saturday afternoon, he covered South Carolina gubernatorial candidate Nikki Haley and noticed the absence of the South Carolina press corps.
What we are witnessing in this election cycle is the slow death of traditional statewide campaign journalism. I noticed the same pattern (and the same nearly reporter-free campaign trail) in Kentucky last month as I covered libertarian Rand Paul's decisive defeat of the state Republican establishment in the GOP Senate primary. Aside from an occasional AP reporter, virtually the only print journalists whom I encountered at campaign events were my national press-pack colleagues from the New York Times, the Washington Post, Politico and the Atlantic Monthly.

Newspapers like the Louisville Courier-Journal and The State, South Carolina's largest paper, have dramatically de-emphasized in-depth candidate coverage because they are too short-handed to spare the reporters. A survey by the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) found that newsroom staffs across the country have declined by 25 percent since 2001.
As we discuss in our chapter on the mass media, blogs are ill-equipped to fill the gap, since much of their information actually comes from the mainstream media.