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Within the span of 24 hours, the New York Times provided more evidence that the paper treats the two political parties differently, especially when it comes to Democratic and Republican leaders facing crisis. In this case, it’s President Joe Biden grappling with the U.S. troop withdrawal in Afghanistan, versus Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose state became a global epicenter for Covid this summer.
The Times showed how it’s willing to normalize atrocious behavior by Republicans while holding Democrats to unfair standards.
On Sunday, the paper published a striking whitewash of DeSantis’ nearly criminal actions regarding Covid this year. Eying a White House run in 2024, and hoping to tap into the GOP’s anti-science base, DeSantis has played politics with public health. He’s tried to bar schools from mandating masks, stood in the way of hospital vaccine mandates, and demanded cruise lines allow unvaccinated passengers to set sail. He even placed one million orders of hydroxychloroquine in tribute to Trump. And now the state is paying a steep price for his cavalier governance.
“The viral load in Florida is so high right now, there are only two places on the planet where it’s higher,” Dr. Jonathan Reiner recently told CNN. “It’s so high in Florida that I think that if Florida were another country, we would have to consider banning travel from Florida to the United States.”
Yet reading the Times’ Sunday article you’d think DeSantis, who is referenced just four times in the lengthy piece, was a bit player in this man-made drama. You’d think the Sunshine State’s descent into mass Covid death was some kind of unavoidable, twist of fate. “Exactly why the state has been so hard-hit remains an elusive question,” the Times reported, naively throwing up its hands.
The daily also engaged in misinformation when it claimed Florida under DeSantis “emphasized vaccinations” and “made a strong push” to innoculate people. “Florida State Representative, here. This is ridiculous,” tweeted Democrat Omarji Hardy, responding to the Times. “There was not anything resembling a "strong push" for vaccinations in Florida.”
The Times piece didn’t bother quoting a single DeSantis critic, even though just days earlier Miami Mayor Dan Gelber had announced unequivocally that DeSantis’ policies “are literally killing people.”
Compare that brand of kid-glove analysis to the Times page-one piece by White House correspondent Peter Baker on Saturday, who suggested the Afghanistan troop withdrawal was entirely Biden’s doing, the president used questionable judgement, and Biden’s responsible for U.S. loss of life.
Unlike the DeSantis piece, the Time’s Biden article was overflowing with quotes from his critics, eager to second guess. In fact, the first person Baker quoted was someone who worked on President George W. Bush’s Iraq War team; the war that doomed U.S. to failure in Afghanistan. One week earlier, Baker had been on the front page with another Afghanistan piece, implying Biden was incompetent and lacked empathy, two descriptions the paper won’t apply to DeSantis.
Over this weekend, the Times also published a nasty opinion piece, which called the evacuation of 120,000 people from the Kabul airport “incompetent,” and suggested Biden, whose late son served in the Iraq War, does not “value” men and women who serve our country.
The Times POV couldn’t be clearer: DeSantis is trying his best, Biden’s in over his head.
The Times’ Sunday DeSantis whitewash, which was widely criticized online, represents a larger pattern by the newspaper to run interference for the Republican governor this year. Three weeks ago, the Times again tried to normalize DeSantis’ dangerous behavior, suggesting that outlawing mask mandates and threatening to withhold pay from teachers during a pandemic might be the new normal [emphasis added]:
If, however, Florida comes through another virus peak with both its hospital system and economy intact, Mr. DeSantis’s game of chicken with the deadly pandemic could become a model for how to coexist with a virus that is unlikely to ever fully vanish.
Amazing — if DeSantis’ policies don’t obliterate Florida’s healthcare system and its economy, then maybe he’s creating a new model. That Times article also failed to quote a single DeSantis critic, in a look at how the controversial Republican was managing the pandemic.
The newspaper actually began covering for DeSantis back in April when the Times published a front-page valentine, typing up his press office spin about how Florida was “booming” and he had somehow figured out how to carve out a Covid-free region for the Sunshine State. “In a country just coming out of the morose grip of coronavirus lockdowns, Florida feels unmistakably hot,” the Times gushed.
All three DeSantis stories were written by the paper’s Miami bureau chief Patricia Mazzei. Why would she seemingly go out of her way to provide cover for DeSantis as he eyes a likely presidential run? My guess is it has to do with access and maintaining cordial relations with DeSantis’ communications team, which I guarantee was thrilled with the latest Times dispatch from Florida.
If and when DeSantis runs for president, journalists who are covering him now likely want to be assigned to his campaign, which would then serve as their ticket out of Florida. That’s how the Beltway media game is played — scores of reporters who covered George W. Bush in Texas were rewarded with campaign assignments and then re-assigned to cover him in Washington, D.C.
Fact: It’s not too late for the Times to fix its Florida coverage.
📺 EXTRA STUFF:
I joined CNN’s “Reliable Sources” yesterday to discuss the media’s coverage of Afghanistan:
🎧 FUN STUFF — BECAUSE WE ALL NEED A BREAK
The Killers, “Quiet Town”
I know I just highlighted the band’s new album last week, but I spent the whole weekend listening to this glorious, churning new rock track, so I’m back to sing the praise of The Killers, the pride of Las Vegas, where the band members met and formed.
But the quiet town in this song is Nephi Utah, population 7,000, the hometown of lead singer Brandon Flowers. Here, he looks back lovingly (community compassion), while also detailing the town’s deep bruises (opioids). The whole guitar-driven chapter is wrapped in a Springsteen storytelling vibe that takes flight.
The first crop of hay is up
School let out and the sun beats down
Smoke billows from a Sunday train
That cries away from a quiet town
🎙 Click here to listen to the music that’s been featured on PRESS RUN, via a Spotify playlist.
Click hereto listen via Apple Music.
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