LISTINGS |  EDITOR'S PICKS |  NEWS |  MUSIC |  MOVIES |  DINING |  LIFE |  ARTS |  REC ROOM |  CLASSIFIEDS | VIDEO
        
Media Log - Who killed Boston politics?


Wednesday, November 07, 2007


Who killed Boston politics?




Today's Globe story on the Boston City Council elections blames a bunch of different factors for yesterday's weak turnout: crappy weather, the lack of a preliminary election, a transient population, etc.

How about adding media apathy to the list?

Exhibit A is the invisible candidacy of Carlos Henriquez, who challenged longtime incumbent Chuck Turner in District 7. As far as I can tell, the Globe didn't do a single article about Henriquez; the Herald gave him a column (by Wayne Woodlief) and passing mention in a crime article by Michele McPhee. He did get some nice attention from Boston magazine, but it came immediately before the election. True, Henriquez was a long shot. But the press helped make his race basically invisible.

Exhibit B is John Connolly, Boston's newest at-large councilor. In 2005, the first Globe article mentioning Connolly ran on April 10. This year it came on October 7*. The first piece focused on Connolly, meanwhile, ran on the day of the election--and only because of some ill-advised anonymous attack pieces Connolly sent out the prior week. (The paper's ed page endorsed Connolly on October 30.) Granted, 2005 was a mayoral-election year, with a higher number of viable council challengers (Yoon, White, O'Malley) in the mix. But still.

I could go on, but you get the idea. The slow death of Boston politics isn't all the media's fault. But the press is definitely part of the problem.

*CORRECTION: I initially wrote--incorrectly--that the first article mentioning Connolly ran on election day. Thanks to Mike Pahre of the excellent Brighton Centered blog for catching my error.



Wednesday, November 07, 2007 2:17:51 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Get the stenographic public record of our City Council and make it available with the remarks and debate of the Councilors. That way people can extract and comment on the Councilors' words.
Wednesday, November 07, 2007 4:40:50 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
While I agree with the premise and don't think you should let the Boston Globe off the hook, I believe you have missed two earlier stories mentioning Connolly.

The City Weekly ran a story focusing on bullet voting October 7 which mentions Connolly in the story and the sidebar:

http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/10/07/ballot_query_to_bullet_or_not_to_bullet/?page=2

although the sidebar (candidate names, addresses, etc.) did not make it into the online version.

And the City/Region ran a story on B4 on November 2nd alongside their summaries (!!!) of candidate answers to a three-question questionnaire. The questionnaire did not appear in the online version. See it scanned at:

http://brighton-community.blogspot.com/2007/11/boston-globe-covers-city-council-race.html


An even stronger case can be made for the District 9 race. The Globe first mentioned candidate Schofield in their editorial endorsement on September 19. (All of the candidates I spoke to confirmed that they were never interviewed by the Globe prior to the endorsement.) The news desk only mentioned the candidates on September 26, the day after the preliminary election, on B2 of City/Region. And then there were two additional mentions of the names of the two final candidates prior to the election. At no time was a single issue or candidate position mentioned.

Is this a sign of local news in the age of Brian McGrory? Call him up and ask him why his news desk ignored city politics.

-Mike Pahre
Wednesday, November 07, 2007 7:44:10 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Thanks, Mike. I've changed the post to reflect your correction.
Adam
Thursday, November 08, 2007 10:50:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I entirely agree with your post, Adam. It's actually been driving me nuts -- in all of this news coverage about the low turnout, not once has someone mentioned the fact that the news outlets pretty much ignored this race from the get-go.

I feel like the Globe owes it to the voters to do at least one "profile" piece on each of the candidates running to represent the city at-large. Where else are you supposed to get information that will help you make your choice? The candidates' mail?

Melissa
Thursday, November 08, 2007 3:19:58 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
If Henriquez or Connolly had professed an alternative lifestyle during the campaign, they would have gotten a pull-out section of their own.
Aging Cynic
Comments are closed.
INFO

RSS 2.0
Atom 1.0
Send mail to the author(s)
The Phoenixs daily look at the news and how it's presented, both locally and nationally.

LINKS

RECENT
ADVERTISEMENT

ARCHIVE



CATEGORIES

EXCLUSIVE

TOOLS
Add to My Yahoo!

Subscribe with Bloglines

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Hype Machine

MP3 Blogs

del.icio.us/OnTheDownload

Add to Google








TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
   
Copyright © 2006 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group