From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject Proposals to Ease Covid’s Blow on the Hardest Hit All but Ignored by Corporate Media
Date June 3, 2020 2:35 PM
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FAIR
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Proposals to Ease Covid’s Blow on the Hardest Hit All but Ignored by Corporate Media Julie Hollar ([link removed])


Pew: About a Third of Americans Say They Won't Be Able to Pay Some Bills This Month

Ability to cover expenses during the Covid crisis varies greatly by race, class and gender. (Pew, 4/21/20 ([link removed]) ).

As rent deferrals are ending in many states, leaving renters on the hook for the back payments, nearly a quarter of all households are at risk of eviction or foreclosure, according to one estimate (Washington Post, 5/31/20 ([link removed]) ).

The poor and people of color are the hardest hit, not just by the novel coronavirus but also by the economic fallout: More than half of lower-income adults say they or someone in their household has lost work, while only 32% of upper-income adults say the same. Meanwhile, the vast majority of those low-income households don't have emergency funds to weather such hard times. And more black and Hispanic households report having lost work and lacking emergency funds than white households (Pew Research Center, 4/21/20 ([link removed]) ).

It's easy enough to find reporting in major US news outlets describing the hardships many Americans are facing. But lamenting inequality is one thing, and acknowledging—or, God forbid, highlighting—efforts to rectify it are very much another for corporate media (see, e.g., FAIR.org, 4/10/20 ([link removed]) ), who all but ignore serious, popular proposals that would prioritize those hardest hit, including communities of color and the poor.

There are plenty of ideas out there for measures that would truly help people, particularly those hardest hit by the crisis. The People's Bailout, for instance, endorsed by hundreds of progressive groups and almost 100 members of Congress, calls ([link removed]) for Congress to adhere to five principles in crafting Covid-19 relief packages:
1. Health is the top priority, for all people, with no exceptions.
2. Economic relief must be provided directly to the people.
3. Rescue workers and communities, not corporate executives.
4. Make a down payment on a regenerative economy while preventing future crises.
5. Protect our democratic process while protecting each other.

Among their more specific demands, the People's Bailout calls for regular direct cash payments; free and accessible testing, treatment and PPE; and a halt to evictions, foreclosures, and water and electricity shut offs.
WaPo: Activists planned to shut down D.C. for Earth Day. The pandemic beat them to it.

FAIR found just two mentions of the "People's Bailout ([link removed]) " in major media outlets—both in Washington Post coverage of Earth Day (4/21/20 ([link removed]) , 4/22/20 ([link removed]) ).

Since the beginning of the pandemic, there have been only two mentions of the People's Bailout in leading national news outlets, both in the Washington Post's coverage of Earth Day (4/21/20 ([link removed]) , 4/22/20 ([link removed]) ). In a Nexis search, FAIR found no mentions at all in the New York Times, LA Times, USA Today, NPR or the TV news networks.

Or take the April 13 letter ([link removed]) to Congress signed by a long list of national, state and local organizations, including Oxfam America, the NAACP and the AFL-CIO, calling for $500 billion in unrestricted aid to state, local, territorial and tribal governments—which are required to balance their budgets in the face of unprecedented shortfalls—in addition to payroll guarantees, continued unemployment insurance payments, another round of cash payments (regardless of immigration status), stronger worker protections and full funding for frontline workers' health and safety. (See CounterSpin, 4/17/20 ([link removed]) .) Not a single leading network or newspaper reported on this letter.

These aren't wild ideas; even the bipartisan National Governors Association called for $500 billion in aid to states. But their call has gotten far less attention than Trump's top "economic relief" priority: a suspension of payroll taxes, which would provide little in the way of economic relief (particularly to the unemployed, who are no longer paying such taxes), but would seriously endanger the Social Security program it funds (Reuters, 3/11/20 ([link removed]) ), and it has gotten little support on either side of the aisle. And yet, in the seven weeks since the NGA put out its call, the outlets ran only 35 stories that mentioned it, while Trump's payroll tax cut proposal netted 95 mentions.
Vanity Fair: Who You Calling Sleepy Joe?

In an interview (Vanity Fair, 5/13/20 ([link removed]) ), Joe Biden called for "rent forgiveness and...mortgage forgiveness" as a response to the Covid crisis—a proposal that was noted by almost no other major media.

In an interview with James Hamby on Good Luck America, a documentary series on Snapchat (also published in Vanity Fair, 5/13/20 ([link removed]) , where Hamby is a contributing writer), presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden made a startlingly progressive appeal for rent forgiveness:

There should be rent forgiveness and there should be mortgage forgiveness now in the middle of this crisis. Forgiveness. Not paid later, forgiveness. It’s critically important to people who are in lower-income strata.

It was a remarkable position for the self-consciously centrist ([link removed]) candidate to take, and yet there was virtually no coverage of it in the country's major news outlets. FAIR found one brief mention in the 22nd paragraph of a New York Times article by Carl Hulse ([link removed]) (5/15/20 ([link removed]) ) about potential blowback from Republicans' resistance to further economic recovery measures.

That article is instructive about which recovery measures are even allowed in the media debate. The piece, which quotes a handful of Democratic and Republican members of Congress, informed readers:

Members of both parties concede that the $3 trillion measure that Democrats were speeding through the House is several bridges too far, considering its giant cost and the underpinning of progressive policies on immigration and other issues that could never clear the Republican-controlled Senate.

It's worth pointing out, too, that while Hulse describes Republican resistance as "born of spending fatigue and policy divisions," less Timesian assessments could occasionally be found elsewhere, as at Bloomberg (5/19/20 ([link removed]) ): “Republicans are concerned that providing more assistance to states and individuals would slow movement by governors to lift business restrictions."

Of course, to many both inside and outside of the party, that Democratic bill is not ambitious enough, as it included almost no key progressive demands—such as a federal paycheck guarantee program, ongoing direct monthly payments, an eviction and foreclosure moratorium, and an expansion of Medicare and Medicaid (Sanders.senate.gov, 5/14/20 ([link removed]) ; Intercept, 5/15/20 ([link removed]) ).

But Hulse's piece is typical of corporate media, relying heavily on government (and corporate) sources, and marginalizing voices that should be crucial to the national conversation. As a recent FAIR study (5/22/20 ([link removed]) ) of the networks' Sunday morning political talkshows found, the guests given a platform to shape the discussion around both public health and economic strategies during the early weeks of the Covid-19 pandemic were overwhelmingly government officials; independent public health experts, and especially public interest groups, were sidelined. And by sidelining those voices, media sideline real solutions to the inequality they feign to care about.
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Featured image: New York Times photo (4/12/20 ([link removed]) ) of Floridians waiting in line to sign up for unemployment benefits.
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