Press Release

CONTACT: PEJ Director Tom Rosenstiel or Associate Director Mark Jurkowitz at 202.419.3650

PEJ: Press Coverage of the Character of the Candidates is Highly Negative and Neither Obama nor Romney Has an Edge

August 23, 2012-The portrayal in the news media of the character of the two presidential candidates in 2012 has been as negative as any campaign in recent times, and neither President Barack Obama nor Governor Mitt Romney has enjoyed an advantage over the other, according to a new study [1]by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism.

The study, [1]which examines the "master narratives" in the press about the candidates' character traits and records, finds that 72% of the Obama narrative, and 71% of the Romney narrative, has been negative. That makes this as negative as any campaign studied since PEJ began monitoring the master narratives in the press coverage of presidential campaigns in 2000. Only the 2004 race, shaped by the war Iraq and the Swift boat controversy, was comparable.

Just as telling, the press itself is a shrinking source of the master narratives about the candidates, and the campaigns are a growing source. Since 2000, the percentage of assertions about the candidates coming from journalists has dropped by almost half-from 50% to 27%. And the percentage of what the public hears coming from the campaigns and their allies has grown from 37% to 48%.

"The American news media in its coverage of the candidates appears increasingly to be a conduit of partisan rhetoric and less a source than it once was of independent reporting," said PEJ Director Tom Rosenstiel. "This may reflect the impact of shrinking newsrooms. But it probably also helps explain why the campaign feels so negative."

The No. 1 narrative about President Obama in the media is that his economic policies have failed. Fully 36% of the statements about his character and record make that case-more than twice the number (16%) that suggests he has helped the economy.

On the other side, the No. 1 narrative abut Romney is that he is a "vulture" capitalist who doesn't care about workers, which accounted for 14% of the statements about his character, followed closely by the idea that he is a wealth elitist (13%). 

"As the candidates try to re-introduce themselves to voters, the study shows that the press has delivered these voters a remarkably negative story for both Obama and Romney," said PEJ associate director Mark Jurkowitz. "The negative theme about Obama's economic record is winning out right now; at the same time, so is the argument that Mitt Romney is a callous business man and a wealthy elitist."

These are among the findings from the report [1], which identified and examined the most prevalent narratives involving each candidate's character and record during a 10-week period, from May 29 through August 5. In all, five of the six most prevalent master narratives in the press about Obama's character and record were negative in nature, and five of the six most prevalent themes about Romney were negative. The study analyzed more than 1,772 assessments of the candidates' character and record contained in more than 800 stories from 50 major news outlets. This is the fourth presidential campaign in which PEJ has measured the master narratives in the press about candidates.

The study is not an analysis of media bias; rather, as it has for four campaign cycles, PEJ is examining what the public is hearing and reading from all sources in the mainstream media-from the campaigns, journalists, outside analysts and others.

Among the findings of the study:

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The Project for Excellence in Journalism [2] tracks the transformation of journalism in a changing information landscape through its annual State of the News Media report and a series of special reports. As part of the nonpartisan, non-advocacy Pew Research Center, [3] it does not take positions on policy issues.