ET Election Index: July 31, 2019
August 15, 2019·4 comments·Politics
By mid-2019, media coverage of the Democratic primary had crystallized around a single narrative frame: the election as a referendum on race, gender, and identity. This framing shaped which candidates received positive coverage, which faced skepticism, and which barely registered. The analysis reveals how narrative consistency in media, rather than candidate performance or policy substance, determined electoral attention.
• Sanders and Warren dominated positive coverage in July, but for different reasons. Sanders benefited from alignment with anti-corporate and anti-inequality messaging. Warren gained momentum by adopting similar frames, though her policy-focused approach meant she received less overall attention despite better sentiment. The media had decided these candidates fit the dominant narrative.
• Biden and Harris absorbed the heaviest negative coverage, but in different ways. Harris faced attacks on her law enforcement record and was portrayed as unelectable. Biden was simultaneously covered as progressive-skeptical and unable to address identity issues central to the primary. Both were harmed by the same narrative structure, just applied differently.
• The race, gender, and identity frame became self-reinforcing. Every major cluster in election coverage was defined by this language: asylum seekers, the black vote, the viability of women and gay candidates, rust belt politics. This wasn't accidental. It meant candidates who didn't emphasize these issues were treated as disconnected from the election's "zeitgeist."
• Warren's relative invisibility despite positive coverage points to a fundamental problem. She received favorable language but low attention because her policy expertise positioned her outside the dominant narrative. The data suggests she would need to prioritize identity-focused messaging to match Sanders' visibility, regardless of actual differences between them.
• The media landscape had created a self-fulfilling prophecy about electability. Candidates like Biden and Harris faced relentless skepticism about viability, while Sanders and Warren received coverage that reinforced their candidacy viability. The narratives weren't reflecting primary dynamics so much as shaping them, which meant undecided voters were consuming news already filtered through narrative preference.
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Comments
The Democrats are fiddling while Rome burns. We have a totally inept president who is destroying the country and everything it stands for, yet all the democratic field can talk about his race, gender, and identity. Sad.
BTW, Keril Sokoloff says in his recent RealVision interview with Raoul Pal that in his world wide travels the constant thread is that Trump will be reelected if only because there is no cohesive story running against him.
We (obviously) agree with that view.
And right on cue, Warren tries to defuse the kerfuffle around her identifying as Native American. You’re good!
Remarkable info Epsilon Theory has uncovered and interpreted. Bravo to Ben and Rusty.
Question though, if and as the MSM has IMO moved aggressively to taking sides and become fiat news, and further IMHO this (ugly) phenomenon becomes better understood by the general populace.
Doesn’t the “impact” of this “reporting” lose effect on common knowledge?
If so, how do you adjust?
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