Sunday, June 22, 2008

Obama public financing flip flop angers newspaper editors

He's just another Chicago politician...and it looks like other people are beginning to notice, even his pals in the media, as Politico reports:

But Obama's announcement Thursday that he would become the first candidate to opt out of the public financing program for the general election was a big deal for some of the nation’s most influential newspaper editorial boards, which have long been ardent champions of campaign finance reform and which had thought they’d found a kindred spirit on the issue.

Friday morning, scathing editorials in many top broadsheets characterized Obama’s move as a self-interested flip-flop, dismissed his efforts to cast it as a principled stand and charged that Obama wasn’t living up to the reformer image around which he has crafted his political identity.

The scolding could mark a turning point in what has been, on balance, fawning treatment of Obama, an Illinois Senator and the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, on editorial pages.

While the influence of editorial boards has diminished as the media has fragmented, they still carry weight with opinion leaders and undecided voters.

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3 comments:

Cal Skinner said...

The less money a candidate has to spend, the more influential are the newspapers.

Marathon Pundit said...

McCain's "surge" began with a sting of newspaper endorsements: Des Moines Register, Boston Globe, Boston Herald, New York Times...

Unknown said...

Newspapers are backbone of the country. So its a valuable to invest on Newspapers.
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