The Fox candidates

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Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
174
106
How much could this influence the timing of their candidacy? I can see the benefit of getting face time on TV and being paid for it. OTOH, I can also see the benefit of deciding/committing to run at the earliest possible moment. The longer you're on the sidelines thinking about it, the more staffers, donors, endorsers etc will be scooped up by other candidates. Until they decide/commit to running, they can't be on other networks either (or out giving campaign speeched), that's no advantage.

I can surely see the conflicts if you're running yet remain on TV. However, if you must quit once you decide to run, it's resolved. I watch a lot more news etc than teh average person, I haven't noticed any of these people now campaigning while still on Fox.

That fact alone has sparked buzz in political and media circles, particularly as it applies to Palin, a major ratings draw. Can she remain on Fox’s payroll if, while not formally a declared candidate, she’s visiting early primary states and assembling a presidential campaign in 2011?

In spite of the author's assertion, that's not campaigning. That's all the normal part of figuring out IF you're going to run, is support there etc.

OTOH, if she IS now assembling (and I assume he means hiring staffers etc) a campaign that means she's decided she's going to run and should quit the Fox job.

Jeebus, for the longest time incumbants have been able to get all kinds of free face time on TV (while also being paid for it via their government salary) just by virture of their holding an office (just call a press conference for any old thing etc). Non-incumbants don't get this. Nobody considers this abuse of their position.

I don't see any real problem until it's shown that somebody has tried to be 'cute' and campaign for an office but use the excuse 'not really' because I haven't formally filed (completed the paperwork).

Fern
 
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werepossum

Elite Member
Jul 10, 2006
29,873
463
126
Wait.. so you are saying MSNBC and CNN should determine when Fox should terminate employees?

Yes - but only sarcastically. Damn the law, we KNOW she's campaigning so she has to go!

Are newspapers who endorse a candidate a conflict of interest as well?
Only if they refuse to endorse the liberal candidate. The beauty of the system is in its simplicity.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,824
6,372
126
Ah, the wisdom of Canada, where Al Jazeera is an impartial news outlet but FoxNews is a propaganda outlet. MSNBC (96 percent edge to Obama) is perfectly okay, but FoxNews (6 percent edge to Obama) is a right wing distortion machine! Only if all news outlets lean horizontally to the left and sing the same anti-hymn can the world be balanced and democracy be saved.

I especially like how the leftwing media is constantly talking about how these potential candidates are such jokes and now complaining that they can't interview them. I guess slamming them with liberal smear book authors doesn't bring in the ratings.

Fail
 

Throckmorton

Lifer
Aug 23, 2007
16,829
3
0
Are newspapers who endorse a candidate a conflict of interest as well?

Yes, I think it's clearly a conflict of interest. Why do newspapers endorse candidates?? Doesn't that fly in the face of journalistic objectivity and neutrality?

Why would a newspaper admit their bias? That just defies logic.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,418
6,533
136
When they announce their bid for the presidency they should quit working for Fox. What other answer is there? Should Fox fire them on spec?
 

CrackRabbit

Lifer
Mar 30, 2001
16,642
62
91
So deal with it.

What is your "solution" to the "problem"?

Your motives here are transparent. You're concerned that the evil Republicans may get an edge over the just and good Democrats. Just say it and I'll respect you for it. Don't keep pussy-footing around it.

The solution is they should quit.

I am not as shallow as you make me out to be and it looks like my motives are much less transparent than yours. If a former Dem congresscritter was working for MSNBC as a commentator or had their own opinion show and started to consider a political office run I would feel the same way.

It simply looks like a conflict of interest that could be resolved easily.
I'm sure Fox would quickly hire them back if they decided not to run.
 

BoberFett

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
37,562
9
81
Does this really matter?

The kind of people who watch Fox News are going to vote for the Republican candidate no matter who they are.

People who hate Fox News are going to vote for the Democrat candidate no matter who they are.
 

Deudalus

Golden Member
Jan 16, 2005
1,090
0
0
The bigger issue, IMO, is the intermingling of Politics and Media into what is simply a "News" organization designed to be a Propaganda outlet. How long before MSNBC(or some other Organization) ends up doing the same? Fox is destroying the whole concept of a Free Press.

Did you really just saw how long before MSNBC becomes a biased propaganda outlet?

How long until grass turns green and water turns blue?
 

feralkid

Lifer
Jan 28, 2002
16,940
5,038
136
Yes, I think it's clearly a conflict of interest. Why do newspapers endorse candidates?? Doesn't that fly in the face of journalistic objectivity and neutrality?

Why would a newspaper admit their bias? That just defies logic.




Candidates are endorsed by the EDITORIAL staff.

They are free to be subjective, biased, flatulent, cantankerous or any other damn thing they want to be.