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Subject: AEJ 06 KaplanA GRAD Medias Role in Declining Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections, 1960-2004
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Mon, 23 Oct 2006 06:24:28 -0400
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Francisco August 2006.
        I am not the author. If you have questions about this paper, 
please contact the author directly.
	If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] 
eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to
[log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the
body (drop the "").

(Oct 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================


      The Media's Role in Declining Voter Turnout in
Presidential Elections, 1960-2004


[ Andrew Kaplan, U. of Maryland ]

Submitted to:
AEJMC, Graduate Education Interest Group,
for 2006 National Conference

Length: 25 Pages (plus Abstract, Appendix, Endnotes, and Bibliography)

ABSTRACT
      Voter turnout has declined precipitously in the past 45 years 
for presidential elections, from about 73% of the non-South in 1960 
(the South is not counted due to discriminatory practices) to 54% in 
2000 and 60% in 2004. In 1996, nearly half the country did not vote. 
For decades, scholars asserted that as education levels rose, voter 
participation would also increase. Yet, it has sharply declined. 
Scholars also claimed that as registration requirements became less 
burdensome, turnout would increase, yet the opposite has happened. We 
live in a time when no formal discriminatory practices exist, yet 
turnout has never been lower. What could explain this? This thesis 
argues that the mass media has come to supplant the traditional role 
political parties once played in educating and mobilizing voters, yet 
is not suited for the job. As many citizens have gradually disengaged 
from political parties, the nation's de facto political party – the 
mass media – has done a poor job informing citizens as to why 
elections matter and what voters' options are. Instead, the press has 
helped to increase public cynicism and instill low levels of trust in 
government, which has kept voters home.

This paper addresses the question as to why voter turnout in the 
United States has dropped precipitously since 1960. I will argue that 
the main reason turnout has dropped is because in the past 45 years, 
the mass media has come to supplant the traditional roles political 
parties once played in informing and mobilizing voters. In essence, 
the mass media has become the nation's de facto political party, yet 
it is not suited to assume this new responsibility of voter education 
and mobilization. On the contrary, the mass media's emergence in 
shaping the political landscape has brought about a nation of largely 
cynical voters who are turned off by elections, and have increasingly 
decided not to exercise their right to vote.
Americans Are Not Voting and Why This Matters
          The United States has been facing the problem of declining 
voter turnout for over 45 years. In 1960, 73 % of eligible citizens 
in the non-South voted in the presidential election. Since that time, 
turnout for presidential elections has dropped dramatically until 
1996, when the number of eligible American voters not voting (49%) 
nearly equaled those who did (51%).1 The turnout rate improved in 
2000 and 2004, (54% and 60% respectively)2 yet still lagged far 
behind elections held a generation ago. Put a different way, about 
100 million Americans are not exercising their right to decide the 
country's future.3 The United States has the lowest voting turnout of 
any industrialized country in the world except Switzerland. By 
comparison, Italy had 87.4 % in their parliamentary election in 1996 
while Belgium had 82.6 % in 1999. Even Russia, so new to voting in a 
democracy, reported a 67.5 % turnout in 1996.4  In January 2005, in 
spite of Sunni Muslims largely boycotting the national election and 
the insurgents' grave threats to kill those who dared to vote, Iraq 
experienced over 60% voter turnout in its first election.5 Subsequent 
elections in that country in October 2005 (to ratify the 
Constitution) and December 2005 (to install a full-term parliament) 
were significantly higher.
	Since the 1960 election, voting turnout has declined steadily not 
only in presidential elections but congressional contests as well. 
Whereas the voting rate was nearly 50 % in the 1960s for midterm 
elections, this rate has now fallen to the 30s. In 1998, for example, 
only 33% of the electorate turned out to vote. Since the 1974 
mid-term congressional election, turnout among voters has been mired 
in the 30s.6
	Turnout for congressional primaries has taken an even sharper turn. 
In 1970, 30% of the electorate participated in choosing who would 
represent their party for a House or Senate seat. By 1986, this had 
fallen to 20%. Since this time, the average has hovered around 15%.7
	This downward trend in voting does not just involve voting turnout 
but political participation in general. The political scientist 
Thomas Patterson noted that participation has declined in a myriad of 
election activities including volunteers who help with campaigns and 
viewers who tune in for televised debates. Incredibly, although the 
United States had 100 million fewer people in 1960 than in 2000, 
fewer viewers tuned into the October debates in 2000.8
	Turnout plummeting in the past 45 years from 73 % to the low to high 
50s is significant. Nevertheless, it masks the true story, which is 
that turnout has declined considerably more than these numbers 
suggest. Consider the factor of education: high levels of education 
were thought to engender high levels of political participation.9 It 
was assumed that as education levels continued to rise, with more 
Americans attending college, turnout would also rise. Yet, it has 
declined. How could this be? In 1960, half the population did not 
finish high school, whereas now 25% have a college degree with 
another 25% having attended college.10 Clearly, some force is turning 
off voters, which was not foreseen years before.
	Compounding this mystery is the easing of registration requirements. 
Before the Motor Voter Act passed in 1993, some states purged voters 
off rolls for little reason.  Many states mandated that voters 
register months before the election to be eligible.11 Lowi, Ginsberg, 
and Shepsle report that throughout the 20th century, registration 
requirements were quite burdensome:
"[Voters] usually could register only during business hours on 
weekdays. Many potential voters could not afford to lose a day's pay 
in order to register. Voters were usually required to register well 
before the next election, in some states up to several months 
earlier...Since most personal registration laws required a periodic 
purge of the election rolls, ostensibly to keep them up-to-date, 
voters often had to re-register to maintain their eligibility."12

Nevertheless, despite these burdensome requirements, turnout 
throughout the 19th century often approached 85 % of eligible voters.13
        Today, however, no state is allowed to mandate that voters 
register more than 30 days prior to a federal election.14 Indeed, 
many states allow citizens to register one to three weeks before the 
election. There are even seven states (Idaho, Maine, Minnesota, New 
Hampshire, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and Wyoming) that allow residents 
to register the very day they vote.15 Nevertheless, several of these 
states have recorded sharp voter turnout declines: from 1960 to 1996, 
New Hampshire's turnout has declined by 21.3%; Idaho by 20.2%; 
Wisconsin by 14.5%; Wyoming by 13.2%.16
        It is hard to imagine that in spite of registration 
requirements becoming easier, turnout has sharply decreased. 
Moreover, the Motor Voter Act, enacted into law in 1993, makes 
registering as easy as ever. Under this law, citizens can register at 
any driver's license agency. The act also encourages states to offer 
registration at unemployment offices and public places, such as 
libraries and schools. Citizens could even register by mail. The act 
prohibits states from arbitrarily purging voters' names off rolls.17
        Voters do not need to take off work to find a registration 
site, often located in obscure places. The entire registration 
process has been condensed into several minutes. Nevertheless, since 
this comprehensive act was passed, while registration has increased, 
the percentage of eligible citizens voting has declined in most elections.18
	Perhaps the most marked difference between 1960 and today is the 
Civil Rights movement that eliminated barriers to voting in the 
South. Ratified in 1964, the 24th Amendment prohibits states from 
requiring citizens to pay any kind of poll tax before voting in a 
federal election. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 eliminated the use of 
literacy tests. Thus, the 63% who turned out in 1960 is an 
artificially low number, for many poor whites and African Americans 
were turned away at the polls. Others may have been too intimidated 
to vote. To observe the difference we need to look at turnout for 
non-southern states in 1960, which was about 73%. Consequently, 
turnout has really declined over 20% in 40 years.19
	Turnout rates reported prior to 1964 are artificially low because 
the South trailed the rest of the country in voting rates, due to its 
discriminatory practices. (Please see Figure 1 in the Appendix 
showing trends in presidential voting, 1828-1996, outside the South 
and in the South.) For example, between 1900 and 1960, southern 
voting rates hovered between 20 to 38 % of the population. This rate 
included all African Americans, who were technically allowed to vote, 
and therefore counted by the U.S. Census (and other studies) in the 
overall percentage of those who voted.20 This makes the 1960 
percentage of voters artificially low. Therefore, to understand 
declining voter turnout in America, we must compare voting rates 
today with the non-South, otherwise the comparison is meaningless. 
After all, our interest is in why citizens do not vote when they can. 
If they do not vote because they are disenfranchised, that is another 
matter entirely. The rate I will use as a benchmark to explore 
declining voter turnout, therefore, is 73%, the percentage of 
eligible Americans in the non-South who voted in 1960.21
The Importance of Turnout
	Why is voter turnout important? First, such a low participation rate 
is an embarrassment for a country that prides itself on being the 
world's first democracy. How can America inspire other fledgling 
democracies around the world, like Iraq, Iran or Afghanistan, if its 
own citizens don't vote?
        Yet there are more practical implications as well. The 
political scientist Thomas Patterson believes that "as turnout in 
recent congressional primaries declined, hard-core partisans (the 
'wing nuts') became an increasingly large proportion of those voting, 
which contributed to the more frequent defeat of moderate candidates. 
In turn, Congress became a more divided and rancorous institution."22 
Declining turnout could partially affect Congress' inability to reach 
key compromises and could encourage grandstanding. A broader 
electorate would force candidates to run on a broader platform.
	Low voter turnout often means that a few groups are overrepresented 
in Congress, while many groups are excluded. According to Thomas 
Patterson, as the electorate –- those citizens who actually cast a 
vote -- has shrunk, it has come to include citizens who tend to have 
higher incomes, are older, and who hold intense positions on a 
variety of issues.23 Both parties have been accused of catering to 
special interests and the rich. Yet, in a way, this is inevitable 
given the voting patterns. The problem with citizens not showing up 
is that they take themselves out of the political process and do not 
help define the agenda or affect the choices their leaders make.
	There are also civic benefits that may come from voting. In fact, 
the sociologist Robert Putnam has found that the very act of voting 
can improve citizen participation in a number of activities. He 
reports that when people vote, they are more attentive to politics 
and are better informed about a range of issues. He also found that 
the act of consistently voting makes one more likely to volunteer and 
engage in the community. Although Putnam does not claim that 
consistent voting actually causes greater community engagement, he 
has found that these two activities are positively correlated, that 
is, one may reinforce the other.24
Four Traditional Explanations for Explaining Declining Voter Turnout
	Why is voter turnout declining? This question has puzzled scholars 
for three decades. During this time, four distinct explanations have 
emerged in the field as to why citizens are not voting. The first 
category consists of those political scientists who believe weakened 
political parties are the reason. Scholars who argue this position 
assert that for most of American history, political parties have been 
a major force in mobilizing the electorate. As Americans have become 
less loyal to political parties in the past 40 years, with many 
voters considering themselves independents, this mobilizing force is 
largely absent. These scholars note that turnout rates have dropped 
at the same time citizens began to identify less with the nation's 
political parties.
        The second and third categories consist of institutional 
reasons. Some scholars argue the low voting numbers are a result of 
flaws in the system, such as registration problems, the fact that 
citizens must vote on a workday, etc. A subset of this institution 
group, which I will call "elite bias," argues that political elites – 
party leaders, major donors, elected officials, etc. -- are not 
interested in mobilizing the electorate because they have found other 
– nonelectoral -- ways of achieving their political objectives, such 
as litigation and administrative rulings. As voters are an 
unpredictable lot – there's no way of knowing how they will vote, 
best to leave them out of the system. In other words, citizens have 
not been coming to the polls because, in essence, the political 
elites want it that way.
	The fourth category cites media and behavioral reasons. This group 
believes that many voters no longer show up at the polls because they 
have soured on the political process. They hold low levels of trust 
and efficacy in government. They believe politics is so corrupt it is 
not worth getting involved in. Events such as Vietnam and Watergate 
are often blamed for this decline in public trust but so is the rise 
of the mass media and attack journalism. As journalists have become 
more distrustful of public officials, stories are framed in such a 
way as to increase the public cynicism about the political process.
	My argument, which is original in its synthesis of previous 
explanations, is that in the past 45 years, the mass media has 
effectively supplanted the traditional role of political parties in 
educating the voter and serving as a guide throughout the process. 
However, unlike parties, which excelled at mobilizing voters and 
providing reasons to vote, I will show that the mass media tends to 
encourage cynicism and reasons not to vote. As parties have become 
weaker and the media stronger, this process has accelerated to the 
point where campaigns in the past several decades are not so much 
party affairs as they are media events; they are no longer 
party-centered but candidate-centered.
Weakness of Political Parties	
        In advancing the argument that voter turnout has declined 
largely because the mass media has supplanted political parties, we 
must first understand what the traditional role of political parties 
was in the American political system, and how they were instrumental 
in mobilizing citizens to vote. In his classic work The Decline of 
American Political Parties, Martin Wattenberg noted the unifying 
function of parties in a system otherwise designed to fragment power. 
He wrote that political parties were unique in their ability to 
generate symbols of identification and loyalty, to aggregate and 
articulate political interests, to socialize voters and maintain a 
popular following and to recruit political leadership and pursue 
governmental offices, among other functions. For Wattenberg and other 
political scientists, modern democracy was unthinkable were it not 
for parties.25
        Parties have long served to orient the citizen through an 
otherwise complex array of decisions (as stated above, Americans have 
more choices at the ballot box than any other nation except 
Switzerland). A kind of psychological attachment occurs when one 
belongs to a party.26 In the U.S., electoral politics is complicated 
and time-consuming for the average citizen, more than nearly any 
other democratic country. Americans are asked to vote for political 
offices ranging from president and senator to state senator and state 
representative, to mayor, school board members, judges, and many 
other offices. They are expected to make these decisions often. In 
fact, one study showed they are faced with more than a dozen separate 
elections in four years.27 Shortcuts or voting cues, therefore, are essential.
        Moreover, Ginsberg and colleagues have found that individual 
voters tend to form psychological ties with parties, and this party 
loyalty encourages them to take part far more than those without such ties.28
        Clearly, parties have played a key role in electoral politics 
throughout our country's history. Yet, over the past several decades, 
they have declined. Why should this be the case? One answer may be 
that elections today are no longer party-centered. Instead, they have 
become unrelentingly candidate-centered. Successful candidates must 
constantly monitor public opinion because their campaign lives or 
dies in the present. Patterson wrote that "unlike the party politics 
of old, there is no thought of using today's defeat to build toward 
tomorrow's victory."29
        In a given election, salient issues arise when the 
candidate's pollsters identify them as strategic weapons, and these 
same issues are often forgotten in future elections.30 In other 
words, ideas and issues no longer emanate from the party but from the 
present needs of the campaign. This has contributed to the decline of 
the party as an idea – what people carry in their heads when thinking 
about the party. Patterson notes that at one time, the party shaped 
its messages with large ideas, thereby connecting its future to that 
of it supporters. Politics has since reversed, based largely on 
immediate promises to nearly any group that can deliver votes.31 
Certainly, this process complicates citizens' efforts to embrace 
parties as vehicles in which to place their trust.
        The new reality of candidate-centered elections is borne out 
by the presidential candidates' rhetoric. Roderick Hart, a 
communication scholar at the University of Texas, studied candidates' 
choices of words between 1948-1996. He found that over the years, 
candidates talked much more about themselves and far less about 
political parties. Their emphasis became far more about the present, 
and less about the future.32 Politics having become fiercely 
candidate-centered has left many citizens unsure as to what the 
parties stand for, and how they differ from each other.
Revised Presidential Nomination System Further Weakens Parties
	As campaigns were increasingly candidate-centered and as parties 
declined as objects of loyalty and thought in people's minds, the 
party system was perhaps dealt a crushing blow by the revised 
nomination system, first used in 1972.
        In 1972, under the chairmanship of Senator George McGovern, 
the newly created Commission on Party Structure and Delegation 
Selection laid down a set of rules and standards to govern Democratic 
parties in every state and territory appointing delegates to the 
national convention. The commission dismantled the party officials' 
right to appoint delegates. These rules opened up the nominating 
process and in so doing, gave presidential campaigns a very 
unpredictable quality. As Robert Shogan points out, this gave 
structural impetus to the rising power of the media – endowing its 
judgment with greater authority.33
	The McGovern-Fraser reforms were groundbreaking not only in how 
campaigns were waged for a party's nomination but also in formally 
disavowing the old system run by party leaders.1 The new system 
denied party leaders the power to recruit, evaluate, and select 
potential nominees. With the new rules taking control from party 
regulars, a vacuum of power was created. Those pushing for reform 
assumed the voters -- the rank and file -- would be the new 
kingmakers. But this assumption was false. The rank and file needed 
guidance. After all, they were not deciding merely a yes-no vote on a 
single issue of policy. Voters needed to make a complex decision that 
is difficult even for seasoned party professionals. Since the press 
was the only intermediary left, the McGovern-Fraser commission 
essentially anointed them as the new power brokers.34
        This proved to be a watershed event for the press. No longer 
merely a vehicle for candidates to get out their message, the media 
became the vehicle for educating and influencing voters. The press 
was quickly filling the roles formerly performed by the political 
parties: the media would examine the candidates' platforms, evaluate 
their fitness for the presidency, and determine their chances to be 
elected.35 In addition, the press needed to implement these tasks in 
a way that would allow the voters to exercise their discretion 
effectively in the choice of nominees.  The problem is, as we shall 
see in the next chapter, the media is not suited for this purpose. 
They are, in Patterson's words, the "miscast institution."
        With the reforms in place, the parties lost essential 
functions in recruiting and nominating candidates. In fact, the noted 
political scientist E.E. Schattschneider identified these functions 
as the most critical: "Unless the party makes authoritative and 
effective nominations, it cannot stay in business. The nature of the 
nominating procedure determines the nature of the party."36
        Another way the McGovern-Fraser commission weakened the 
political parties was through sapping the national party conventions 
of their energy and purpose. National party conventions were once 
exciting affairs, with an unpredictable quality. The public paid 
attention because the presidential nominee was not known beforehand, 
and there was suspense as to who would be chosen. Conventions were 
sometimes tumultuous, as was the Democratic convention of 1924, which 
lasted nine days and went to 103 ballots, or the 1964 Republican 
convention when Goldwater supporters shouted down Nelson Rockefeller. 
More important, with the nation tuning in, the conventions offered a 
chance for the party to speak directly with the electorate. It shored 
up old loyalties and perhaps invited new ones. Today, however, sapped 
of their strength, conventions are choreographed, made-for-TV events, 
designed to keep dissent off the floor.37
Television Helps Disengage the Electorate
	In discussing how the mass media has supplanted the traditional 
roles political parties once played, we also need to consider the 
technology underlying mass media – in particular, television. Perhaps 
more than any other invention in the 20th century, television has 
reshaped the political arena and has enabled the mass media to assume 
center stage in recent elections.
	Television has weakened political parties in two key ways. First, 
the medium allows candidates to speak directly to the voter, through 
advertisements or staged media appearances. The medium also 
encourages voters to get their information from the television 
journalists who come into their living rooms. Citizens no longer rely 
on the party for guidance in voting. Television has helped fuel the 
candidate-centered campaign. With the advent of television, 
party-centered campaigns gradually faded away. With its great reach 
and expense, television also relegated parties into fundraising 
machines to raise the money largely for advertisements -- that would 
run on television.
        Television, in particular the habitual viewing of it, has 
contributed to a disengagement from civic life. Political parties 
thrive in an environment in which citizens regularly attend meetings, 
or volunteer for grassroots organizations. In the past, parties 
relied on this kind of engagement. But television has encouraged 
citizens to remain tied to their homes, and has established the mass 
media as the source such citizens use for guidance and information on 
politics and elections. In essence, the widespread habitual use of 
television, in which viewers watch whatever is on for long periods of 
time, has created a toxic environment for political parties but an 
ideal environment for the media to thrive in. Habitual (as opposed to 
selective) watching of television is considerably more widespread 
among the younger generations (below forty), even among the highly educated.38
        Clearly, the hours spent watching television has further 
weakened political parties, which rely on civic engagement, and has 
helped give rise to the mass media, which has effectively supplanted 
it. Yet, Putnam's study reveals something even more startling: 
Collective forms of engagement have declined far more than individual 
forms of engagement. Whereas television has cut individual activities 
(such as signing petitions or writing letters to elected officials) 
by 10-15%, habitual TV viewing has reduced collective activities, 
such as attending public meetings or taking a leadership role in 
grassroots organizations, by up to 40%.39 This staggering figure 
reveals just how toxic the environment has become for political 
parties, which rely on such public, collective activities to build a 
strong base and organization. In addition, TV gives the illusion that 
the citizen is involved in the community and with others, even though 
they are not. This creates a kind of remote-control politics in which 
viewers feel engaged with their community but are not actually being engaged.40
How Media-Centered Elections Tend To Increase Cynicism and Decrease Turnout
        Voter turnout has declined not only as political parties have 
weakened but also as parties have been supplanted by the mass media. 
The problem is that the media does not have the same goals or 
attributes as parties. The media does not energize the electorate and 
give them reasons to vote, the way parties once did. In fact, with 
the rise of attack journalism and intensely negative coverage of 
candidates, the press has mainly given citizens reasons not to vote.41
Attack Journalism
        The negative way reporters cover candidates, known as attack 
journalism, emerged out of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal. 
Whereas campaign coverage of presidential candidates was 25% negative 
in 1960, by 1972 it became 40%. In 1980, negative coverage reached 50 
% and has hovered around 60 % since 1988.42
        This negative coverage has led to a decrease in satisfaction 
the public feels about the candidates. In 1936, the Gallup 
organization began asking voters how satisfied they were with the 
presidential candidates. From that time through the 1960s, every 
candidate, except Barry Goldwater, was perceived favorably. Since the 
advent of media-centered elections in the late 1960s, almost half the 
presidential candidates have had an unfavorable rating.43
        The media is often accused of having an ideological bias. 
Some on the left charge the media is too sympathetic with 
conservative causes, while those on the right assail the media for 
showing its liberal leanings. Studies of the media have found that 
neither of these biases is particularly pronounced.44 However, one 
bias that plagues many media outlets is an excessive concern for the 
negative. For example, in the 2000 election, much of Bush's coverage 
suggested he was not intelligent. There were nine claims of this kind 
for every opposite claim. Similarly, much of Gore's coverage 
suggested he was not truthful. These claims outnumbered rebuttals by 
seventeen to one.45 Negative coverage is not limited to presidential 
candidates but also affects governance. When policy programs fail, 
they receive far more attention than when they succeed.  When public 
officials misbehave, the coverage far outweighs when they triumph. 
When a president's approval rating drops, it receives far more 
coverage than when it rises. 46
        The impact of negative coverage has been considerable. The 
problem, neatly defined, is this: while audiences filter the news 
through their personal experiences, attitudes, and social network of 
family, friends, and acquaintances, it is the media that supplies 
them with most of the raw materials upon which they will make 
decisions and form attitudes about political leaders and 
institutions. If the raw material is negative and not informative 
about issues worth voting on, voters will gradually disengage from 
the process.47
        While Vietnam was a major factor in adversarial reporting, no 
single event had a greater impact than Watergate. Watergate not only 
made a deep impression on reporters that public officials would 
continuously lie, but the scandal became a kind of myth that helped 
to define journalism. This myth was that a corrupt government had 
temporarily overtaken American democracy, but that the press, the 
watchdogs of freedom, had shed light on this corruption and saved 
democracy. The press believed it had a constant obligation to protect 
the public from those who seek to lie or manipulate. While the 
watchdog role was previously established, Watergate gave it a new 
urgency. Politicians would no longer be taken at their word. 
Reporters would assume that authorities could not be trusted. Their 
accounts would be subject to intense scrutiny.48
        The political scientist Larry Sabato noted that the Watergate 
scandal "had the most profound impact of any modern event on the 
manner and substance of the press's conduct. In many respects 
Watergate began the press's open season on politicians in a chain 
reaction that today allows for scrutiny of even the most private 
sanctums of public officials' lives."49 Sabato also observed that, 
coupled with Vietnam and the civil rights movement, Watergate 
re-oriented journalism from mere "description" to "prescription" – or 
helping to set the campaign's agendas by concentrating on the 
candidates' flaws and certain social problems. As a result of 
Watergate, a new generation of reporters entered journalism that as a 
group mistrusted authority, while disdaining "politics as usual." 
This group now manages newsrooms across the nation.50
        The inevitable result of this change in journalism is that 
many in the press are in Sabato's words, "not merely skeptical of the 
pols, they are contemptuous of and corrosively cynical about them, 
and some reverse the usual presumption of innocence into 'guilty 
unless proven otherwise.' Partly, this is an understandable reaction 
to their own earlier naivete and betrayal."51 The problem is that 
while skeptical coverage may have begun as a way for the Fourth 
Estate to hold politicians accountable, it soon became an end unto 
itself. Criticism became the starting point in the search for and 
shaping of news stories.
	Five consecutive presidents after Nixon received a preponderance of 
bad press, with Clinton's coverage the most negative. Congress also 
suffered negative coverage.52 Studies show press coverage was 
steadily negative after the early 1970s, irrespective of which party 
was in control or what may or may not have been accomplished. One 
scholar found that between 1972 to 1992, allegations of personal 
impropriety rose from 4 % to 17% – one in every six stories. Federal 
agencies also received harsh coverage: the State Department's 
coverage was only 13 % positive, while the Justice Department's 
coverage was a paltry 10 % favorable.53
	Content analyses examining media coverage of government have yielded 
startling numbers. In the general election of 1992, negative coverage 
was not reserved merely for the candidates Bush, Perot, and Clinton. 
More than 80 % of network news stories on the Democratic Party were 
negative; 87 % of references to the Republican Party were 
unfavorable. Congress received a staggering 90 % negative news. It 
would be hard to imagine a more unfavorable statistic, but the 
federal government received 93 % negative coverage during this time.54
        This avalanche of negative coverage fueled public mistrust 
and dissatisfaction. In 1964, 76% reported they trusted the national 
government to do the right thing "most of the time"; by 1994, only 
21% had this level of trust, the lowest level ever recorded. The 
"Harris Confidence Index" which measures citizens' confidence in 
their leaders, fell by more than half between 1966 and 1997.55 As the 
political journalist David Broder put it: "Cynicism is epidemic right 
now. It saps people's confidence in politics and public officials, 
and it erodes both the standing and standards of journalism. If the 
assumption is that nothing is on the level, nothing is what it seems, 
then citizenship becomes a game for fools, and there is no point in 
trying to stay informed."56
        Many studies have shown a correlation between the negative 
coverage surrounding presidential candidates and the negative image 
of these candidates held by voters. Other studies have documented a 
link between negative news and poor impressions of Congress and other 
federal agencies.57 (Please see Figure 2 in the Appendix, which shows 
that as negative coverage increased, so did voters' unfavorable 
opinions about candidates.)
        Sabato attributes some of the rise in negative coverage to 
the loosening of libel laws. He writes that for many years, a 
reporter would demure from writing a story critical of a politician's 
character for fear of a libel suit. The chilling effect of libel laws 
were lifted in 1964 when the Supreme Court ruled in New York Times 
Co. v. Sullivan that merely publishing a defamatory falsehood would 
not make one liable. To win a libel suit, the public official would 
have to prove "actual malice," a requirement that soon included all 
public figures. The "actual malice" rule has made it very hard for 
officials to win in court. One comprehensive study found that the 
Sullivan standard had made only one in ten plaintiffs prevail. Many 
scholars believe that the loosening of the libel law, therefore, has 
emboldened the media to investigate and report on a candidate's 
"character" or private life.58
	A common charge the media makes is that candidates will say anything 
to get elected. The press often gives the impression that candidates 
change their position as they address different groups, or make 
promises they do not intend to keep. Many studies have shown, 
however, that candidates do by and large keep their promises, or they 
at least try to enact the legislation they spoke about in the 
campaign. Exhaustive studies comparing winning candidates' campaign 
promises with what they did as president have shown this undoubtedly 
to be the case. Each study spanned at least seven presidencies and 
all reached the same conclusion. Michael Krukones, for example, 
compared campaign speeches and performance as president of eleven 
recent presidents and found a very high crossover rate. Jeff Fishel 
of American University compared the promises and performances of 
presidents from Kennedy through Reagan and found most promises were 
kept. The same can be said for party platforms. The political 
scientist Gerald Pomper's detailed analysis of party platforms in 
nine presidential elections found that victorious candidates do try 
to implement their policy commitments.59
	Still, the belief persists that candidates will say anything to get 
elected, and that their campaign promises are mere rhetoric. This 
belief is particularly harmful because it goes to the heart of what 
an election is all about: examining what is wrong in America and what 
policy needs to be implemented to improve the country's position.
The Rise of Interpretive Journalism
	Clearly, adversarial journalism has helped fuel public cynicism. 
Yet, the last several decades have seen another important development 
in journalism: interpretive journalism. An interpretive style of 
reporting seeks to explain as well as describe. In the old style, the 
reporter transported the audience to the scene of an event and 
described what happened. In the new interpretive style, the 
journalist analyzes, informing the audience not merely "what" but 
"why." This change in style gradually, but undeniably, shifted 
control of the news to the journalists. While newsmakers' actions 
would constitute the headlines and story leads, the story itself 
would be shaped by the journalist's interpretation imposed on events. 
This meant that the newsmaker was no longer at the center.60
	In practical terms, this increasingly meant that the public would 
not really hear the candidates for very long before being interrupted 
by a reporter. In 1968, when presidential candidates appeared on 
television, they were usually speaking. The average "sound bite" – or 
the period of uninterrupted speech by a candidate on television news 
– was over 40 seconds. By 1988, the average was less than 10 seconds. 
In many cases, the candidates were only pictured, while the 
journalist talked over them. In 2000, for each minute that Gore and 
Bush spoke on the evening newscasts, the journalists covering them 
spoke 6 minutes. Incredibly, the two candidates received a mere 12% 
of election coverage, while anchors and correspondents consumed 
three-fourths of the time.61
	The story is no less dramatic for newspapers. In 1960, the average 
continuous quote or paraphrase of a newsmaker's words in articles 
appearing on the front page was 20 lines. By the 1990s, the quote or 
paraphrase had slipped to seven lines.62
	One of the effects of this shifting coverage has been to make it 
difficult for the candidate to speak to the public. It is hard to get 
your message out, when constantly interrupted and interpreted by the 
press. Yet an even more important effect is that interpretive 
reporting opened the floodgates for a new way to cover campaigns: 
emphasizing strategy, infighting within the campaign, and so-called 
horse-race coverage. Interpretive reporting is not harmful in and of 
itself, but it has ushered in a new kind of reporting that has 
overemphasized these aspects to the detriment of covering important 
policy issues and what is at stake in the election.
Media's Obsession with Gaffes, Strategy, and Horse Race Leads to 
Uninformed Public
	In spite of a more educated citizenry and a proliferation of mass 
communication, research shows that Americans are no better informed 
on public affairs today than they were 50 years ago.63 With so many 
more channels of information and education available, how could this 
be? An important reason is that the media fails in its job of 
informing the public, in explaining the important issues of the day 
and why they matter. Of course, one cannot assign all the blame to 
the media. After all, learning requires an attentive student and 
citizens must make an effort to learn, which includes staying current 
with the news. But in this section I will show that the media's 
constant attention to unimportant matters -- namely, gaffes/scandals, 
strategy, and the horse race -- leads to an uninformed and ultimately 
uninvolved public.
        Gaffes tend to make for continuous news coverage. One study 
found that more than 50 % of gaffes received extended coverage 
(meaning that one story lasts for at least two consecutive days) 
compared with 15 % of policy stories. Nightly newscasts offered 
extended coverage to over 65 % of gaffe stories versus 10 % of policy 
stories.64 Gaffe stories covered in moderation can be entertaining 
and may even lend color to the election coverage. However, they are 
covered to such a degree that the reporting tends to cheapen the 
campaign. Through excessive coverage, journalists not only report the 
news, but often create it.  A good example of this, of course, is the 
now notorious Howard Dean "scream" speech in which Dean, in trying to 
rally his troops after a loss in the Iowa caucus, exclaimed the 
states his campaign would win and let out a scream. The media smelled 
blood and went on a "feeding frenzy" from which Dean never recovered.
        Given that coverage of public affairs has already receded to 
make way for softer news (such as features, celebrity news, etc.), an 
overemphasis on gaffes takes away time that could be spent explaining 
the policy differences between the candidates and what is at stake.
Strategy Coverage of Elections
        In addition to gaffe/scandal coverage, attention paid to 
campaign strategy has soared.65 Many critics cite the beginning of 
this change with Theodore White's The Making of the President, 1960. 
Prior to 1960, most Americans had little acquaintance with the 
backstage of politics, and how campaigns were waged. White's skillful 
narrative brought to light presidential candidates, John F. Kennedy 
and Richard M. Nixon, wrestling with important ideas and for 
America's future. It marked the first time the public was invited 
into the inner workings of a campaign. Yet it was also an upbeat book 
that basically looked up to the candidates. The immense success of 
this book inspired a trail of imitators, culminating in Joe 
McGinnis's The Selling of the President. While following the 
structure of White's book, McGinnis's portrayal of the Nixon campaign 
took an opposite perspective. The tone was irreverent, as the author 
described advertising experts who could as easily have been promoting 
toothpaste. The Selling of the President showed a presidential 
candidate who scorned the very public he would address in his 
speeches. The book suggested the campaign chose positions largely 
because they would be effective weapons against its main opponent, 
Hubert Humphrey.66
        McGinniss's book had an enormous impact on campaign 
reporting, particularly in the tendency to contrast what a politician 
says with what the reporter believes. James Fallows writes:
"Twenty-five years after The Selling of the President, the day-in, 
day-out coverage of politics owes much more to McGinnis's model than 
to Theodore White's. TV reports during a presidential campaign 
usually end with a "kicker" contrasting what the politician says with 
what the reporter thinks is really true.... Newspaper and 
newsmagazine stories during the campaign emphasize the chess game 
that strategists are playing as they choose issues to emphasize and 
create attractive photo opportunities. None of the coverage puts much 
weight on the possibility that the candidate really believes what he says."67

	The problem is not that occasional strategic reporting is harmful. 
The problem occurs when the strategy paradigm – viewing the campaign 
through backstage strategic decisions and tactics -- becomes the 
dominant window through which reporters perceive and describe the 
campaign. Journalists see politics as a competitive struggle for 
power, and therefore they interpret campaign events through that lens 
– the "strategic game."68 As I will show, this "strategic game" lens, 
when excessively used by the media, tends to help fuel public 
cynicism about politicians and elections in general.
	The "strategy game" dominates many reporters' thinking and is 
reflected in the questions they ask candidates or politicians. 
Fallows points out that during and after the 1992 Presidential 
election, it was evident how different the questions of ordinary 
people (whether in town hall forums, callers on radio/TV talk shows, 
etc.) were from those posed by reporters at press conferences. The 
citizens overwhelmingly inquire about the "what" of politics: how 
will you change the healthcare system? What is your plan to reform 
welfare? In contrast, reporters ask strategic questions, focusing on 
the strategy and tactics of the campaign, such as:  How will you 
contest charges that you flip-flop?69
Different Schemas
	Patterson notes that the differences in outlook between reporters 
and voters are really differences in schemas. He explains: "A schema 
is a cognitive structure that a person uses when processing new 
information and retrieving old information. It is a mental framework 
the individual constructs from past experiences that helps make sense 
of a new situation."70 In other words, schemas are mental tools the 
mind uses to deal with complexity. Without schemas, the world would 
be too overwhelming to process.
	For political journalists today, the dominant schema is that 
politics is a strategic game. This means that when reporters learn of 
new information during an election, they often interpret it using 
their schematic framework, which is that candidates are always 
competing for advantage (regardless of the situation) and they play 
either well or badly.  In contrast, voters possess a different schema 
that views politics as a way of selecting leaders and resolving 
citizens' problems. From the voters' perspective, policy issues, 
leadership traits, and policy debates are the important aspects of 
presidential politics. Patterson refers to this as "governing schema."
	In contrast, reporters' game schema dominates coverage on all things 
political. Fallows points out that the primary impulse of most media 
is to present every public issue as if its "real" meaning were the 
attempt by parties and candidates to gain an advantage over their 
rivals."71 This implies there is always a "real" story behind the 
presumed story. The "real" story, of course, is who is winning the 
strategic game. This relentless focus on the cynical game of politics 
undermines public confidence by insinuating that the political sphere 
is mainly a forum in which ambitious politicians struggle for 
dominance, rather than an institution where citizens can solve their 
collective problems.
	In illustrating this point, Kathleen Hall Jamieson and Joseph 
Cappella cite the example of a New Hampshire town hall meeting in 
1995 between President Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich. It was a 
cordial meeting between the Speaker of the House and President before 
an audience of senior citizens in which they discussed a range of 
issues. They disagreed, but cordially. Clinton said of the speech: 
"It wasn't a contest; it was a conversation." Gingrich remarked, "I 
think just having your leaders chat rather than fight is a good 
thing."72 In regard to this friendly forum, the authors ask about the 
press: "When offered an alternative form of discourse, what does the 
press do? The answer is, in large part, "Fall back on the language of 
game, war, and conflict and frame the substance strategically."73
	Scholars like Cappella and Jamieson have argued that strategy 
coverage consists of several characteristics: winning and losing as 
the dominant concern; the language of wars, games, and competition 
dominate; campaigns become stories with performers, critics, and 
audience (also the voters); great importance placed on performance, 
style, and perception of candidate; heavy focus on polls and where 
candidates stand.74
	This coverage influences politicians to offer conflict-driven, 
sound-bite oriented discourse to the media. If they do not play this 
game, they may not be covered at all. The press then claims they are 
merely reporting what is said to them. Jamieson and Cappella argue 
that "each now feeds the other with politicians providing a menu that 
includes what the press seems most likely to cover and the press 
arguing that it simply is reporting what it is being offered."75 They 
call this mutually reinforcing process a "spiral of cynicism."
	Another consequence is that the media's version of the campaign does 
not coincide with the voters' concerns. When the press does 
communicate stories of substance, it is too often buried beneath the 
strategic coverage. This change in election news from a "governing 
schema" to a "game schema" has so powerfully influenced political 
reporting, it is like a silent revolution. Figure 3 in the Appendix 
demonstrates how in the early 1960s, most election stories were 
framed with the "policy schema." A particular issue and where the 
candidates stood on it was the heart of the story. In the last two 
decades, however, elections stories are most often framed within the 
"game schema."76 As the chart shows, even newspapers like the New 
York Times have dramatically increased their "game schema" coverage, 
while scaling back on their "policy schema" coverage.
Excessive Horserace Coverage
	The mass media has come to supplant the traditional role political 
parties once played. As such, it is incumbent upon them to inform 
voters, explain what is at stake, and what their options are. Voters 
look to the media for information . The press, however, devotes an 
enormous amount of time to covering the horserace aspect of 
elections. Superficial horserace reporting – an emphasis on who's 
ahead, who's behind, and who's gaining – has become the norm. 
Incredibly, of 7,000 print news stories studied between Labor Day and 
Election Day, 57% of the coverage was devoted to the so-called 
horserace. Only 10 % focused on policy issues. Network news fared no 
better: two and a half times more horserace stories aired than 
stories covering policy.77
	The focus on horserace news can be seen as well in governance. 
Bartholomew Sparrow points out in Uncertain Guardians that not even a 
week after Clinton's second inauguration, a slew of articles appeared 
as to who might run for president in 2000.78
	Critics point out that reporters are drawn to horserace coverage and 
not policy issues because journalists are usually generalists, not 
familiar with the complexities of many issues, and not prepared to 
write stories on them. Laziness is also a factor. It is easier to 
report on the latest poll than to explain issues. Yet, there is a 
more insidious reason: the horserace fits reporters' cynical view of 
politics. Reporters are trapped in their "game schema."
	The problem with horserace reporting, of course, is that it diverts 
attention from issues. Sparrow observes that it "sidesteps discussion 
of the purposes of the different candidates and the implications of 
their winning, of the impact of legislation's passing, and of the 
philosophies and potential consequences of the nominees."79 Viewers 
come away from this coverage not understanding why they should care 
about the election, or what their options are. More practically, 
horserace coverage is often irrelevant because polls change, and how 
well candidates do today often means little in how they will fare in 
the months ahead.
Media Coverage Tends To Increase Cynicism and Decrease Voter Turnout
	There is little question that the media spends disproportionate time 
on horserace and gaffe/scandal coverage and that their reporting is 
often harshly adversarial, steeped in strategy coverage or "game 
schema." What is the impact of this coverage?
        The press spending as much time as it does on horserace 
coverage and gaffe/scandals diverts attention from what is really 
important in the election: what policy issues are in play; how the 
candidates differ in their philosophies and intentions regarding 
these policies; above all, what is at stake for the average citizen 
in the election, and what citizens' options are. The cumulative 
effect of horserace and gaffe/scandal coverage is to make it more 
like theater and entertainment and less about big ideas and the 
future of the country. This leaves citizens with less respect for 
their democracy and perhaps less will to participate.
        Public discourse is largely informed by what is in the news. 
Years of agenda setting research has shown that while the media does 
not influence what people think or do, it has a critical role in 
shaping what people think and talk about.80 If people are immersed in 
an environment of soft news, with much of the public affairs coverage 
devoted to superficialities such as the gaffes/scandals, strategy, 
and the horse race, civic life suffers.
Election Coverage Fuels Public Cynicism
        Yet the impact of adversarial and strategy ("game schema") 
coverage is more damaging, for it tends to fuel public cynicism and 
mistrust in the political process, which leads to declining voter 
turnout. In the "game schema," which dominates election coverage, the 
campaign is less a struggle over the future of the country than a 
contest between two power-hungry candidates. Journalists or voters 
cannot take candidates at their word because the promises they make, 
the pledges they offer, are interpreted as little more than ploys. 
Reporters, therefore, take it upon themselves to warn the public that 
politicians may be changing their position out of convenience or to 
pander to an audience.81
        Journalists' mistrust of the candidates tends to rub off on 
the public and help fuel public cynicism. One startling example of 
rampant cynicism is a Time magazine survey that found in 1964 that 60 
% of the public generally believed the government would do the right 
thing. By 1994, 10 % did. By the same token, a New York Times/CBS 
News poll conducted in August, 1995 found that 79 % of the public, 
the highest figure in decades, said the government was run by a few 
big interests looking out for themselves. Fifty eight % said that 
"people like themselves had little to say about what the government 
did," indicating low levels of efficacy.82
        But do the media cause this cynicism and declining mistrust? 
Of course, it is always difficult to prove causality, but many 
studies suggest at least a correlation. For example, one study of 94 
newspapers conducted by University of Michigan researchers indicated 
that print coverage may have this effect. They found that those 
readers who in an experiment were exposed to a higher degree of 
criticism directed at politicians and political institutions were 
more distrustful of government and possessed higher levels of 
cynicism.83 Another study examining the 1960-1992 period found that 
negative images of presidential candidates increased in measured 
proportion with an increase in negative coverage of these 
candidates84. A third study found a strong link between negative news 
and negative impressions of Congress and other government agencies.85
        Kathleen Hall Jamieson and colleagues at the University of 
Pennsylvania conducted experiments that show strategy-based stories 
activate cynicism in the reader or viewer. After testing how people 
reacted to news framed strategically (emphasizing the "game" schema) 
versus a more straightforward manner, she writes: "If any conclusion 
is supported by the pattern of findings, it is that strategy frames 
for news activate cynicism. This conclusion holds in the campaign 
study and in the study of health care reform. The effect is not 
large; sometimes it is only marginally significant. But the pattern 
of differences is consistent. The effect occurs for broadcast as well 
as print news, and when the two are combined, the combination is additive."86
        Is the public's cynicism justified? That is, can it be that 
what we are calling public cynicism is actually realism? Of course, 
there is plenty of self-interest in government to go around, but most 
studies show that most cynical accounts distort the truth. For 
example, as described above, presidents, for the most part, keep 
their campaign promises. Jeff Fishel's study examined the promises 
and performances of presidents from Kennedy through Reagan, and found 
that most pledges were acted upon.87 A second study showed that 
members of political parties try to implement their party platforms. 
Political scientists Ian Budge and Richard Hofferbert found positive 
relationships between postwar (1948-1985) election platforms and 
governmental outputs.88 These and other studies show that "healthy 
skepticism that long characterized public attitudes toward 
[government institutions] has degenerated into corrosive cynicism."89
        Adversarial journalism is not the only factor driving down 
public trust in government. After all, scandals, corruption, policy 
failures, and incompetence also contribute. Moreover, one has to look 
at the larger context. In the past several decades, changing 
lifestyles and a different ethos have also contributed to a decline 
in respect for authority and political institutions.90 Journalism has 
been a powerful force – but only one force – contributing to this decline.
Public Cynicism Leads to Declining Voter Turnout
        But does public mistrust of government lead to a decline in 
voter turnout? Many studies suggest it does. Conducted over the 2000 
presidential election at Harvard University, the Vanishing Voter 
survey stands as one of the most comprehensive surveys ever conducted 
in why people do or do not vote. The survey found that 81 % of 
respondents agreed with the statement, "most political candidates 
will say almost anything to get themselves elected." Believing that 
candidates cannot be trusted discourages people from voting and 
getting more politically involved. The Vanishing Voter survey found 
that respondents who thought candidates say whatever it takes to get 
elected were 10 percentage points less likely to vote than the other 
respondents. They were also far less likely to participate in the 
campaign.91 In other words, beliefs do matter. If voters believe 
politicians will not keep their word, they fail to see the point in 
voting or otherwise getting involved. Ironically, candidates usually 
deliver on their campaign promises, or they at least try (but may 
fail to win passage through Congress).
        As Election Day 2000 neared, The Vanishing Voter survey asked 
non-registrants and likely nonvoters why they would not vote. 
Respondents were asked to choose from a list of possible reasons 
including "because I've been so busy I probably won't have time," 
"because I don't have any way to get there," "because I moved and 
haven't registered at my new location" and "because I'm not a U.S. 
citizen." What came out on top of the non-registration list and 
second on the nonvoter list was the reason "Disgusted with politics." 
Specifically, 38 % of non-registrants and 37 % of nonvoters cited 
"disgust with politics" as the principal reason for not voting.92
        In an attempt to establish a link between political 
dissatisfaction and voting, respondents in the Vanishing Voter survey 
were asked this question: "Do you agree or disagree that most 
politicians are liars or crooks?" to identify levels of mistrust. 
Forty-four percent agreed that "most politicians are liars or 
crooks." In analyzing the results, Harvard researchers found that 
this particular group was 13 percentage points less likely to vote 
than those who disagreed that most politicians are liars or crooks. 
Moreover, the finding was statistically significant even when income, 
education, and age were accounted for.93
        This 13 % may represent a new kind of non-voter, one who is 
disillusioned by politics and unmotivated to become involved. This 
new non-voter likely came forth from the relentless negative news and 
"game strategy" that has permeated election coverage the last several 
decades and induces cynicism. The Vanishing Voter survey found that 
many in this group sometimes discuss politics and keep up with the 
news. They do not differ from others in any substantial way except 
one: disgust with politics, and this leads many to not come to the polls.
The 'Miscast Institution'
	The media has replaced the traditional role political parties once 
played in vetting candidates for office and providing information to 
the voter, among other activities. Many critics charge that the media 
is simply not set up to handle these new tasks. The media has become, 
in the words of one author, a "miscast institution."94 In contrasting 
the role of the media with the role of political parties, Patterson 
notes that whereas parties are driven by their traditions and 
constituent interests, the press is driven by the never ending search 
after the Now.95 Indeed, Walter Lippmann wrote 83 years ago that the 
press and political institutions perform separate, yet critical roles 
for democracy. While democracy cannot thrive without a free press, 
the press cannot be expected to perform the role of political 
institutions.96 Yet, this is what has happened during the last several decades.
	For democracy to thrive, citizens need an institution that can 
inform and organize electoral opinion. This institution needs 
"incentives that cause it to identify and organize those interests 
that are making demands for policy representation. And it must be 
accountable for its choices, so that the public can reward it when 
satisfied and force amendments when dissatisfied."97
        The problem is that the media possesses none of these 
attributes. Whereas the party has a built-in motivation – the 
opportunity to gain political power – to give voice to interests and 
forge them into a winning coalition, the press lacks this incentive. 
The main motivation of the press is the discovery and reporting of 
compelling stories. In addition, the press is not politically 
accountable. Whereas voters hold political parties accountable 
through elections, the public has no comparable authority over the 
press. Journalists are never elected to their positions. Of course, a 
group of people may threaten to stop supporting a media outlet, but 
rarely does an outlet go out of business this way.98
Conclusion
        This paper has addressed the question of why voter turnout 
has declined sharply since 1960. In spite of rising levels of 
education, no discrimination at the polls, and easing of registration 
requirements, voting levels have dropped from 73% in 1960 (in the 
non-South) to 54% in 2000 and 60% in 2004. To shed light on this 
mystery, I argued that the main reason turnout has dropped is because 
in the past 45 years, the mass media has come to supplant the 
traditional roles political parties once played in informing and 
mobilizing voters. In essence, the mass media has become the nation's 
de facto political party, yet it is not suited to assume this new 
responsibility of voter education and mobilization.

APPENDIX
Figure 1: Trends in Presidential Voting, 1828-1996, Outside South and South
Source: Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone, p.32.

Figure 2: Relationship between Election Coverage and Voter Opinion of 
Presidential Nominees, 1960-1992

Source: Thomas Patterson, Out of Order, p.23



Figure 3. Schematic Framework of Election Stories on the New York 
Times' Front Page, 1960-1992
Source: Thomas Patterson, Out of Order, p.74



Endnotes


1 Curtis Gans, Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, 2005.
2 Ibid.
3 Thomas Patterson, The Vanishing Voter (New York: Random House, 2003).
4 Martin Wattenberg, Where Have All the Voters Gone? (MA: Harvard U. 
Press, 2002).
5 Anthony Shadid, "Iraqis Defy Threats as Millions Vote," The 
Washington Post, January 31, 2005, A1.
6 Wattenberg, Where Have All the Voters Gone?
7 Ibid.
8 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
9 Ibid.
10 Ibid.
11 Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American 
Community (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000).
12Theodore  Lowi, Benjamin Ginsberg, and Keneth Shepsle, American 
Government: Power and Purpose (New York: W.W. Norton & Co, 2002),  p 427.
13 Ibid.
14 Watternberg, Where Have All the Voters Gone?
15 Ibid.
16 Ibid.
17 Lowi, Ginsberg, and Shepsle, American Government: Power and Purpose.
18 Ibid.
19 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
20 Ibid.
21 Ibid.
22 Ibid.
23 Ibid.
24 Putnam, Bowling Alone.
25 Martin Wattenberg, The Decline of American Political Parties, 
1952-1996 (MA: Harvard University Press, 1998).
26 Ibid.
27 Ibid.
28 Lowi, Ginsberg, and Shepsle, American Government: Purpose and Power.
29 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter, p.25.
30 Richard Davis, The Press and American Politics (New Jersey: 
Prentice Hall, 1996).
31 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
32 Roderick Hart, Campaign Talk: Why Elections Are Good for Us (New 
Jersey: Princeton University Press, 2000).
33 Robert Shogan, Bad News: Where the Press Goes Wrong in the Making 
of the President (Chicago: Ivan R Dee, 2001).
34 Ibid.
35 Ibid.
36 Wattenberg, The Decline of American Political Parties, 1952-1996, p.74.
37 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
38 Putnam, Bowling Alone.
39 Ibid.
40 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
41 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
42 Ibid.
43 Ibid.
44 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
45 Ibid.
46 Joseph Cappella and Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Spiral of Cynicism 
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1997).
47 Thomas Patterson, Out of Order (New York: Vintage Books, 1994).
48 Larry Sabato, Feeding Frenzy (New York: Free Press, 1993).
49 Sabato, Feeding Frenzy, p. 61.
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid, p.63.
52 Sabato, Feeding Frenzy.
53 Ibid.
54 Ibid.
55 Ibid.
56 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter, p.75.
57 Ibid.
58 Sabato, Feeding Frenzy.
59 Patterson, Out of Order.
60 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
61 Ibid.
62 Ibid.
63 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
64 Ibid.
65 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
66 James Fallows, Breaking the News (New York: Pantheon Books, 1996).
67 Fallows, Breaking the News, p.61.
68 Patterson, Out of Order.
69 Fallows, Breaking the News.
70 Patterson, Out of Order, p.56
71 Fallows, Breaking the News.
72 Cappella and Jamieson, Spiral of Cynicism, p.5.
73 Cappella and Jamieson, Spiral of Cynicism, p.10
74 Ibid.
75 Ibid, p.10
76 Patterson, Out of Order.
77 Sabato, Feeding Frenzy.
78 Bartholomew Sparrow, Uncertain Guardians (Baltimore: The Johns 
Hopkins University Press, 1999).
79 Ibid, p.47.
80 David Protess and Maxwell McCombs. Agenda Setting: Readings on 
Media, Public Opinion, and Policy Making (NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1991).
81 Patterson, Out of Order.
82 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
83 Ibid.
84 Ibid.
85 Davis, The Press and American Politics.
86 Cappella and Jamieson, Spiral of Cynicism, p.159.
87 Ibid.
88 Ibid.
89 Cappella and Jamieson, Spiral of Cynicism, p.25.
90 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter.
91 Ibid.
92 Ibid.
93 Patterson, The Vanishing Voter. The correlation between the 
mistrust measure ("most politicians are liars or crooks") and voting 
(measured by intention to vote in pre-election surveys and reported 
voting after the election) was .139, which is significant at the .001 
level. When income or education is controlled, the correlation is 
.111, significant at the .001 level. With age controlled, the 
correlation increases to .143, also significant at the .001 level.
94 Patterson, Out of Order.
95 Patterson, Out of Order.
96 Walter Lippmann, Public Opinion (New York: The Free Press, 1922).
97 Patterson, Out of Order, p.36.
98 Ibid.

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