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- <text id=92TT2594>
- <title>
- Nov. 23, 1992: Election Day Fraud On Television
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Nov. 23, 1992 God and Women
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 84
- Election Day Fraud On Television
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Democratic National Committee Chairman Ron Brown was
- beaming as he bounced into the CNN Washington bureau (where I
- work part time). And rightly so. It was midafternoon on Election
- Day, and exit polls showed that Bill Clinton was going to win
- big. But before going on-air, Brown sobered up. "I'd better not
- seem too happy," he said. "The polls are still open." Brown
- soon appeared on TV screens around the world expressing
- cautious optimism to an interviewer who knew as well as Brown
- did that the result was a foregone conclusion.
- </p>
- <p> Bush deputy campaign director Mary Matalin was interviewed
- on CNN a few minutes after Brown. Her eyes said it was all
- over, but her mouth soldiered on. Reports of high voter turnout
- were very encouraging for hopes of a Bush upset, she insisted.
- </p>
- <p> The drama that had you glued to your TV the evening of
- Nov. 3 was a fraud perpetrated by a vast conspiracy. Virtually
- everyone you saw on-screen -- reporters, analysts, candidates
- and their handlers -- knew what everyone else was waiting to
- hear, yet pretended ignorance. Not just that Clinton would win,
- but by what margin in which states. And the Senate and
- governorship results too. All available at the punch of a
- computer button hours before they were reported to viewers.
- </p>
- <p> The New York Times editorialized afterward that "the four
- networks deserve unstinting praise for threading a careful path
- between sensationalism and censorship." In fact, election-night
- broadcasts were an orgy of both vices, as all the networks
- generated false tension while suppressing the very information
- that would dissipate it.
- </p>
- <p> And why? Because otherwise sane people believe -- against
- all logic -- that it somehow undermines democracy to project
- the result of an election before some people have voted. The
- networks are not to blame. Under pressure from Congress and
- sundry goody-goodies, they have agreed not to "characterize the
- outcome" in any state until the polls (the real polls) have
- closed in that state. This hasn't satisfied some Westerners, who
- complain about announced results from the East before polls have
- closed in the West.
- </p>
- <p> This year all four networks called the Clinton victory at
- 10:48 p.m. Eastern time -- 7:48 p.m. in the West where polls
- closed at 8 p.m. -- thereby denying Westerners 12 precious
- minutes during which to vote in ignorance. Meanwhile, newspapers
- -- including the New York Times -- had hit the streets as early
- as 10:30 p.m. with CLINTON VICTORY headlines.
- </p>
- <p> Self-censorship inevitably blurs into outright deception
- as network anchors pretend the race hasn't been decided. "The
- only way Bush can win now is by carrying states X, Y and Z,"
- they say, knowing full well that Bush can't carry states X, Y
- and Z and cannot win even if he does. Or they drop little hints
- of the true outcome -- "The smell of change is in the air
- tonight, Peter" -- as if these insights derive from years of
- experience and exquisitely sensitive journalistic nostrils
- rather than from cold, hard numbers on a computer screen in
- front of them.
- </p>
- <p> The exit polls do provide a way of hint dropping: "While
- we don't yet know who will carry Georgia, Dan, it's interesting
- to note that Clinton is running strongly there among people both
- under and over five foot six." Or they provide grist for
- tautological insights: "People who say that Bill Clinton
- reminds them of Jack the Ripper seem to be voting against
- Clinton in large numbers tonight, Tom."
- </p>
- <p> What's the point? I have news for people voting late in
- the evening on the West Coast. It is virtually certain that the
- election result is settled by the time you vote. This is true
- whether or not that result is reported on TV. In fact, even
- those, like me, who voted early in the morning on the East
- Coast could do so with confidence that the election result would
- be determined despite our particular vote, if not before it.
- </p>
- <p> But if reporting the result on TV leads people not to
- vote, however nutty their reason, isn't that a bad thing? Well,
- even studies purporting to show that early reporting reduces
- voter turnout don't claim that this affects the actual result
- -- in the main race or in subsidiary contests. And that's only
- logical. Why should knowing the outcome discourage voters for
- the loser more than voters for the winner, or vice versa? High
- voter turnout is desirable for its own sake, I suppose. But
- surely, deceiving people into exercising their right to vote is
- high-mindedness gone badly astray.
- </p>
- <p> Some argue that exit polls shouldn't be reported because
- they may be wrong. But aren't other citizens able to handle
- this possibility as well as the journalists and politicos? The
- main difference between exit polls and other polls is that exit
- polls are more likely to be accurate. Fear that they are right,
- not fear that they are wrong, is what upsets people.
- </p>
- <p> The New York Times recommends "extending daylight time for
- two weeks in the West," keeping East Coast polls open until 9
- p.m. and requiring Western polls to shut at 7 p.m. The aim of
- this Rube Goldberg contrivance would be a uniform poll closing.
- Thus, to save Westerners from the alleged danger of a devalued
- vote at, say, 7:30 p.m., they will be denied the right to vote
- that late at all. And even this won't solve the censorship
- problem, since the networks know the results long before the
- polls actually close.
- </p>
- <p> I have a better idea. Why don't we grow up? Voting is an
- act of democratic faith. You do it even though you know that
- elections are never determined by one vote. If you can't stand
- the thought that your vote doesn't "matter" in that sense, you'd
- better not vote at any hour in any time zone.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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