The Conservative Media: Donald Trump’s Dominance

The Conservative Media: Donald Trump’s Dominance



Donald ⁢Trump is the conservative​ media

Drake, a‍ rapper, wanted to ‌see his ​friend, the basketball superstar LeBron James, immediately⁢ after ‌the Miami Heat‌ won ​the 2013‍ NBA Finals.​ But a⁢ security guard refused ⁢him‌ entry into the champagne-drenched‍ celebration because he lacked press credentials.⁢ “I am media,” the Grammy winner reportedly responded. Three years later, ⁤Donald ​Trump successfully crashed a much bigger party: the Republican⁢ National Convention. Mr Trump, a⁣ walking‍ media institution, brushed⁣ aside early opposition from⁣ right-leaning news and opinion outlets and won the 2016 Republican presidential ⁢nomination. ⁢In ⁣the years since, conservative media either have conformed ⁤to his vision ⁢of politics‍ or tried and failed to persuade⁤ Republican voters to abandon it. This ‌dynamic has accelerated‌ as he ‍pursues his party’s⁤ nomination for a third time.

For‌ much of American history,‌ the dominant media institutions were ​partisan or ideological. ⁢George‍ Washington even complained of being “buffitted‍ in⁣ the public prints by a set of infamous scribblers”. But the media oligopolies that dominated much of the 20th century—big television and radio networks and print publications‍ with ‌enormous circulations—claimed to⁣ bring Americans ⁤balanced, non-partisan, objective ‌reporting. American conservatives were highly ⁤sceptical ⁣of‍ the arrangement.

“There ⁣was ‌no⁣ conservative media. It was basically a wasteland. And anything that even remotely expressed‍ any kind of conservative point of view was sort​ of relegated‌ to a smattering of columnists,” says Laurence Jurdem, a historian ⁣at Fairfield University and Fordham College and author of ⁢a book on conservative media before Ronald ‍Reagan.‍ “Everything sort of changed ⁣with‍ National Review.”

2023-12-14 04:29:45
Source from www.economist.com
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