Media鈥檚 focus on 鈥榞affes鈥 helps Coalition

April 22, 2022
Issue 
Used with permission from Alan Moir, moir.com.au

No one is shocked anymore by suggestions that the Murdoch media is partisan in favour of the聽Liberal-National Coalition.

However in this election campaign, all the major media outlets 鈥 including the ABC 鈥 are helping tip the scales towards the Coalition.

The first week was dominated by exaggerated coverage of Opposition leader Anthony Albanese鈥檚 supposed day one 鈥済affe鈥 鈥 not knowing the exact current unemployment rate. He stumbled, tentatively gave a figure, apologised profusely, all the while looking like a school boy about to be marked down a grade.

This was hardly a political controversy. Nevertheless, the mainstream media obsessed over Albanese鈥 mistake, from every angle, thereby helping Prime Minister Scott Morrison鈥檚 case that Albanese is not up to the 鈥渢op job鈥.

The ABC鈥檚 David Speers went to town, Albanese鈥檚 鈥渂rain freeze鈥 made him look 鈥済enuinely ill-prepared鈥 and that reactions from Labor colleagues are 鈥渢oo colourful to print鈥.

This may be accurate, but the more important news to interrogate was Labor鈥檚 revelation, finally, that it would not commit to raising JobSeeker if it was elected.

Morrison also stumbled on day one, wrongly telling reporters that former education minister and Alan Tudge 鈥渋s still in my cabinet鈥.

Morrison鈥檚 failure to deal with allegations that ministers have committed rape and the broader problem of sexual violence and justice for women make this a newsworthy issue, but it was given scant attention.

Further, after weeks of compelling accusations from his colleagues that Morrison is a 鈥渂ully鈥 and a 鈥渓iar鈥, Morrison鈥檚 suitability to govern was hardly questioned in the same way. Gareth Parker鈥檚 Sydney Morning Herald on 鈥渢ough questions鈥 for Morrison about the Tudge revelation spent the first 16 paragraphs talking about Albanese鈥檚 鈥済affe鈥!

Unsurprisingly, polls on April 17 revealed a drop in support for Labor after almost 18 months of its growing lead. This was also reported in , trying to disguise the fact that Labor is still in the lead.

Given Labor鈥檚 鈥渟mall target鈥 strategy and the establishment media鈥檚 reluctance to promote third parties聽such as the Greens, it wants to generate the impression that there is a real contest. This helps attract audience interest and 鈥渆ngagement鈥 and, ultimately, is more lucrative.

The more fundamental reason, however, is the central role the corporate media plays in maintaining capitalist class rule. Even though democratic forms disguise the corporate dictatorship we all live under, an election every three to four years in a system that is rigged to keep the big parties in power means there is no real choice for ordinary people.

There are multiple structural and cultural features of the political system that guarantee big capital鈥檚 interests are protected. Clive Palmer鈥檚 spend of 聽on election advertising, enough to , is one of them.

The standard means of protecting billionaire interests is via a sophisticated network of pro-corporate institutions, of which the establishment media is a significant part.

That鈥檚 why those with an interest in justice need our own media. People-powered projects, like 一品探花, will never by themselves be able to counter corporate power, but reporting on ordinary people鈥檚 struggles for a better world, is an important antidote to the corporate spin.

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