For Immediate Release: Dan Gabriel (703) 683-5004 - Thursday, December 16, 1999
Vol. 3, No. 46
Years After Homelessness Vanished from Network News, Reporters Pick Up Issue to Hit Hillary Foe
The Homeless Resurface As A Liberal Prop
Habitual news
watchers remember the networks' panicked reports on exploding homelessness in the 1980s.
For example, CBS This Morning anchor Charles Osgood relayed on April 19, 1989:
"It is estimated that by the year 2000, 19 million Americans will be homeless unless
something is done, and done now."
On August 8, 1989, CNN anchor Lou Waters topped that wild estimate with a Rutgers
University report: "There now are up to 40 million Americans living on the knife edge
of homelessness, just one paycheck, one domestic argument from the streets."
In 1990, a partial count by the Census Bureau estimated only 230,000 homeless
Americans. But the networks pushed the homeless story hard and blamed hard-hearted
Republicans. Once Democrats took the White House, the problem disappeared. In a 1996 study
of the evening news programs of ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN, we found:
Under Bush, there were 44 TV stories on homeless-ness in 1989, 71 in 1990, 54 in 1991,
and 43 in 1992. The average was 52.5.
Upon Clinton's arrival in 1993, the numbers slowly dropped off: 35 in 1993, 32 in 1994,
and just nine in 1995, for an average of 25.3.
Of the 76 stories in the first three years of the Clinton era, not a single one
attached the problem to the Clinton administration. As ABC's Judy Muller explained during
Clinton's glitzy first inauguration in 1993: "The Republicans were criticized for
their show of wealth in the face of need. The Democrats seemed to have avoided that
criticism. Perhaps because President Clinton has promised to help those less
fortunate."
Since 1995, MRC analyst Jessica Anderson discovered the pattern of homelessness
avoidance continued: eight stories in 1996, ten in 1997, and only four in 1998. Until last
week, the 1999 network total was only six.
But TV reporters rediscovered the issue in New York, where Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani, the
expected opponent to expected Senate candidate Hillary Clinton, instituted a policy of
jailing homeless people who refuse to present themselves for shelter and other services.
On December 8, ABC's World News Tonight crusaded against Giuliani's effort to
improve the city. A woman praised a court decision against what she called Giuliani's plan
"to take children from the arms of their mothers." [See box.]
That night on the CBS Evening News, Dan Rather also took a shot at Giuliani as
he summarized a HUD study of homelessness (assisted by the liberal Urban Institute):
"Overall, this study found that programs to help the homeless do work, even as New
York City has begun arresting some of the homeless."
CBS reporter Wyatt Andrews claimed "the homeless remain as prominent as ever on
America's city streets." But the homeless only achieve prominence on TV when they're
serving a political purpose. -- Tim Graham
L. Brent Bozell III, Publisher; Brent Baker, Tim Graham, Editors;
Jessica Anderson, Brian Boyd, Geoffrey
Dickens, Mark Drake, Paul Smith, Brad
Wilmouth, Media Analysts; Kristina Sewell, Research
Associate. For the latest liberal media bias, read the
CyberAlert at
www.mrc.org. |
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