Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

Shallow, Shallower, Shallowest

Fostering informed debate about sound regulatory policy to protect health, safety, and the environment is one of the Center for Progressive Reform’s fundamental objectives. Presidential candidates, on the other hand, like to focus on the issues that get them elected, not necessarily the issues that are important.

Unfortunately, the media is increasingly complicit in avoiding genuine issue discussions. Weekend before last, GOP candidate Carly Fiorina appeared on ABC’s Sunday public affairs talk show, “This Week,” and in response to an essentially political question about Paul Ryan from the usually fine ABC journalist Martha Raddatz, Fiorina veered into regulatory policy. Here’s ABC’s transcript:

RADDATZ:  I want to start off with Paul Ryan. He was a congressional staffer, elected to the House at age 28. Is he too much of a Washington insider to change so-called business as usual in Washington?

CARLY FIORINA (R), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Well, we'll see. But I think everything you heard Paul Ryan say is that he intends to lead the Republican caucus to providing solutions. And I think that's what people want. You know, when I'm out here on the campaign trail, people want to see results. Leadership is about producing results. It's not about talking, it's about producing results.

And so one of the things that I would encourage Congress to do is pass the zero-based budgeting bill that has been languishing in Congress for too long, pass the REINS Act, which gives Congress the authority, the accountability, to oversee every new regulation that has an impact of greater than $100 million, and pass a border security bill so that we can finally secure our border.

Those are things that would be producing results. The American people would see it. And I think it would advance the ball tremendously.

RADDATZ: Let's talk about the CNBC debates…. 

Without prompting, Fiorina embraced the REINS Act, a perfectly ridiculous piece of anti-regulatory legislation intended to undercut implementation and enforcement of all manner of environmental, health and safety laws, by blocking regulations from going into effect unless they have been approved by a majority vote of both houses of Congress soon after promulgation. CPR’s Sidney Shapiro, Noah Sachs, and James Goodwin have explained why the bill would effectively paralyze the vital work of writing regulations to implement duly enacted laws. Fiorina’s embrace of it warrants a follow-up from Raddatz — perhaps a slightly less loaded version of, “Why do you think making it impossible for EPA to protect the environment or OSHA to make workplaces safe would be a good idea?” But Raddatz was having none of this policy business, when there was a perfectly good political fight to talk about.

That typifies the media’s coverage of campaigns these days. The media’s focus on the horse race at the expense of substance is a longstanding problem with its campaign coverage. But something about this campaign feels even shallower still. In the not too distant past, the media made an effort to play the very important role of holding candidates’ feet to the fire when they said ill-informed things or took risible positions. And if any television program is designed for feet-to-fire holding, you’d think it would be a Sunday morning network public affairs show like “This Week.”

But the media spent most of early November picking over the bones of CNBC’s GOP debate, focused not on the issues the candidates discussed, but on whether the poor dears were unkindly treated by the moderators. In all candor, I find myself in rare agreement with Ted Cruz, who fairly chastised the CNBC panelists for asking a number of questions designed to incite one candidate to attack another, or to explain why their campaigns should continue despite low poll numbers.

But Cruz and his colleagues misdiagnose the problem when they say that it’s a function of media bias against the GOP. The shallowness of some of the debate questions is representative of a larger disinterest by the media in making sure campaigns inform voters about the candidates’ views on the issues. CNBC stirred the pot because it wanted viral moments to come from the debate, not because it had it in for any of the candidates. They’re interested in eyeballs and clicks, and the ad revenue they generate, not in information. That’s also why the media is all too happy to focus on the post-debate whining instead of say, Marco Rubio’s distortion during the debate of Hillary Clinton’s recent testimony before Congress.

That’s a huge loss. If the only information voters get is about the tit-for-tat of the campaign or about the horse race, that’s all they’ll have available to make their voting decisions. If the media instead signaled to voters that issues mattered by actually covering them, voters would certainly follow suit. It might cost them a ratings point or two, and they might not get as many clicks, but we’d all be better served.

Showing 2,821 results

Matthew Freeman | November 9, 2015

Shallow, Shallower, Shallowest

Fostering informed debate about sound regulatory policy to protect health, safety, and the environment is one of the Center for Progressive Reform’s fundamental objectives. Presidential candidates, on the other hand, like to focus on the issues that get them elected, not necessarily the issues that are important. Unfortunately, the media is increasingly complicit in avoiding […]

Daniel Farber | November 4, 2015

Law Schools Doing Good

How Law Schools Serve the Public Most people probably think of law schools, when they think of them at all, as places that train future lawyers.  That’s true, and it’s important, but law schools do a lot more.  Faculty scholarship makes a difference — law review articles laid the foundation for many of the ideas now guiding […]

| October 27, 2015

EPA Cracks Down on Stormwater Pollutants in Rhode Island

Here in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, polluted runoff from impervious surfaces, such as roofs, driveways, parking lots, and a vast network of roads, is a huge problem.  In fact, while pollution from wastewater treatment plants has decreased significantly since EPA established the Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) several years ago, and while overall […]

Daniel Farber | October 22, 2015

Addressing Externalities: A Modest Proposal

How to make health and safety a personal priority for industry officials. According to economists, firms have little reason to take into account the cost of externalities — that is to say, the harms their activities may impose on others. The traditional solutions are damage remedies or taxes to transfer the financial cost to the […]

Erin Kesler | October 21, 2015

Steinzor to Senate Subcommittee: What’s the Cost of Preventing an Asthma Attack?

This morning, CPR Member Scholar and University of Maryland School of Law professor Rena Steinzor testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on Superfund, Waste and Regulatory Oversight for a hearing focused on, “Oversight of Regulatory Impact Analysis for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Regulations.”  In her testimony, Steinzor noted the limitations of “Regulatory Impact […]

Evan Isaacson | October 19, 2015

Pound-Wise and Penny-Foolish in the Chesapeake Bay

It’s a staple of the right-wing assault on government that “bloated” government programs, like those intended to protect the environment, are a burden to taxpayers. In my home state of Maryland, the numbers demonstrate otherwise. The percentage of taxpayer dollars spent by the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) is tiny and getting tinier.  In […]

Evan Isaacson | October 15, 2015

Too Little and Far Too Late, EPA Releases a Disappointing eReporting Rule

Last month, the Environmental Protection Agency finalized a long overdue rule that was designed, according to EPA’s description, to move the agency “into the 21st Century.” Since many of the rules’ provisions still will not be in effect more than two decades after the turn of the century, this rulemaking plays right into the hands […]

Dave Owen | October 14, 2015

The Irony of the Sixth Circuit’s Clean Water Rule Stay

Last week, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a nationwide stay of implementation of the new Army Corps/EPA Clean Water Rule.  This sounds like a very big deal, and the state plaintiffs who won the stay will no doubt describe this as a major victory.  Those proclamations will conceal, however, a few […]

Matthew Freeman | October 9, 2015

The Media Is Missing the Most Important Part of the VW Scandal

Courtesy of the New York Times, here’s a bit of reporting that is emblematic of the way the press has covered the Volkswagen emissions-cheating scandal: Volkswagen said on Tuesday that the scandal would cut deeply into this year’s profit. And the company’s shares plunged again, ending the day 35 percent below the closing price on […]