During the 2006 election cycle, I chided Providence Phoenix News Editor Ian Donnis about his labeling of Senator Lincoln Chafee as a moderate, despite a voting record and issue stands that were demonstrably liberal. I attributed the labeling choice to the fact that a garden-variety liberal might actually seem moderate to someone who spends his typical day with Phoenix staffers. Exhibit A in support of the assertion that the overall Phoenix political scale some Phoenix staffers use a political scale that is leftward-shifted comes from this week’s Phillipe and Jorge’s column on former President Gerald Ford. Any historian or political writer will tell you that President Ford was the archetypal Republican moderate. Through the filter of the Phoenix Phillipe and Jorge, this of course means that President Ford was a conservative…
Bob Woodward’s interviews revealed Ford as a traditional conservative Republican who was appalled by the hard-right swing of his party….
The Bush administration’s incompetents have no vision. They are tone-deaf to real progress and imaginative thinking. Despite his conservative leanings, Jerry Ford seemed to have a far more open mind….
Inequity is here, and the path of tax cuts for the rich, and eat sh** for the poor and middle classes, is the status quo. Jerry Ford was a conservative who knew better. Where are his likes today?
Seriously though, this labeling stuff does matter. Labeling choices in political writing are the canaries in the coal mine, warning when other perceptions of a political writer might be a bit off. The important perception in this weeks P&J’s column in need of some serious critical scrutiny, more subtle and important than the ideological taxonomy, is the idea that the contemporary Democratic party agenda is somehow based on "imaginative thinking". Look at the Democratic agenda on the most important domestic issues facing the United States…
(*)I'm not including Senator Ron Wyden's universal healthcare proposal which I have recently written about in the unimaginative category, but it's not a mainstream Democratic position.
CORRECTION:
I’ve been counter-chided (politely and fairly) by Ian Donnis, who suggests that Anchor Rising has demonstrated enough familiarity with the Rhode Island political scene & RI media outlets to realize that Phillip and Jorge are opinion columnists whose choice of conventions has no bearing on the Phoenix’s news reporting.
Mr. Donnis is correct. I wouldn’t attribute a position to “the ProJo” or the New York Times; I would specify the “ProJo Editoral Board”, or the name of a specific columnist. It was unfair of me in the above post to attribute any positions to the Providence Phoenix staff as a whole, and I've corrected the original post to remove my mistake.
First off, Phillippe and Jorge are COLUMNISTS. We all know they lean to the left. We all know the Phoenix runs somewhat to the left of the ProJo. It's nothing to get one's knickers twisted about.
And oh, by the way, they skewer bipartisan - re: Captain Blowhard, Milkshake Matty, the Prince of Darkness...just a sampling of Democrats they've savaged.
Second, from some observations of talk show universe this week, it seems like there's been a conservative backlash against Jerry Ford. He was quite conservative on fiscal and foreign policy issues, yes (and he gave a damn about the federal deficit, which Dubya obviously doesn't). But he also believed in keeping government off our backs AND out of our bedrooms. It was the conservatives who succeeded Ford who ignored the latter.
I don't understand why this site gives that oversized porn and pot advertisement this much ink.
Posted by: Greg at January 4, 2007 3:05 PMSimple, Greg, it's a conspiracy. (wink)
Seriously, though, the Phoenix, specifically Ian Donnis, has shown a willingness to take the opinions expressed hereabouts as both serious and sincere.
Though we may disagree over various public policy issues, the Phoenix, (vice, say the ProJo) is willing to actually engage in a dialogue. I'd rather debate someone whom I know may actually participate in a discussion than have a one-way discussion with the wall of silence that is the ProJo (at least when it comes to bloggers) all the time.
Besides, such dialogue, though you may deem it worthless, is actually important in honing one's arguments. Sometimes, minds can even be changed.
Posted by: Marc Comtois at January 4, 2007 3:37 PM