CBS, NYT Ignore Own Poll Showing Obama Approval At 40%, Foreign Policy at Only 34%
On Wednesday, CBS and The New York Times made the point of omitting results from their own poll which show President Obama’s job approval at 40 percent and his approval on foreign policy at only 34 percent from the newscasts and print newspaper, respectively.
CBS This Morning and the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley only mentioned the latest CBS News/New York Times poll in regards to how 57 percent of Americans do not feel as though the President is being tough enough in dealing with the threat posed by the Islamic terrorist group ISIS. At the other end of the spectrum, only 31 percent of those asked said they approved of his handling of ISIS.
Both programs also cited Obama’s approval/disapproval rating on terrorism, but then moved on discussing proceedings on Capitol Hill from Tuesday about ISIS on CBS This Morning and criticism of the Obama administration from former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley.
On CBS This Morning, total air time on the poll was a scant 21 seconds while the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley mentioned the President’s unfavorable poll numbers on ISIS and terrorism for 27 seconds.
The print edition of The New York Times on Wednesday provided no coverage of the poll despite a story being published on the paper’s website dated on Tuesday. The article, entitled “G.O.P Gains Strength and Obama Gets Low Marks, Poll Finds,” detailed how “President Obama’s approval ratings are similar to those of President George W. Bush in 2006 when Democrats swept both houses of Congress in the midterm elections.”
Further, the article did mention President Obama’s 40 percent overall approval rating and mentioned that his overall foreign policy rating of merely 34 percent is a new record-low for him in that poll and his 41 percent approval rating on terrorism is both his personal worst and “significantly lower than” where President Bush stood in September 2006.
Similarly, CBS News relegated further details about the poll to its website and an article dated at 7:00 a.m. Eastern on Wednesday, including the comparison of Bush in 2006 and Obama in 2014.
Despite that statement comparing polling numbers of Bush and Obama, CBS News continues to provide cover for the Obama administration. As the Media Research Center’s Rich Noyes documented in a study published on September 8:
[P]olling news has practically vanished from the Big Three evening newscasts in 2014 as President Obama’s approval ratings have tumbled and the public opposes defining administration policies like ObamaCare.
In comparison, the study found that ABC, CBS, and NBC ran 52 stories on President Bush’s job approval rating in the sixth year of his presidency from January 1 to August 31, 2006 while running only two stories on President Obama’s during the same time period in 2014.
With thanks to my colleague Jeffrey Meyer, the relevant portion of the transcript that aired on September 17's CBS This Morning can be found below.
CBS This Morning
September 17, 2014
7:08 a.m. EasternCHARLIE ROSE: A CBS News/New York Times poll out this morning shows 57% of Americans do not think the president is being tough enough with ISIS. 41% approve of the way he is handling terrorism. That’s a new low for this poll. In May of 2011 after Osama Bin Laden was killed, 72% approved of the president’s handling of terrorism.
The relevant portion of the transcript discussing the CBS News/New York Times poll on the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley on September 17 is transcribed below.
CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley
September 17, 2014
6:42 p.m. EasternMAJOR GARRETT: Confidence in the President's leadership as Commander in Chief has never been lower. A new CBS News/New York Times poll found 57% of the country believes Mr. Obama has not been tough enough in dealing with ISIS. When it comes to fighting terrorism overall, only 41% approve of the President's performance. 50% disapprove, a steep decline from the 72% approval he had after the killing of Osama Bin Laden in May 2011.
— Curtis Houck is News Analyst at the Media Research Center. Follow Curtis Houck on Twitter.