D. Domke et al., NEWS MEDIA, CANDIDATES AND ISSUES, AND PUBLIC-OPINION IN THE 1996 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN, Journalism and mass communication quarterly, 74(4), 1997, pp. 718-737
There are two primary goals with this research. First, we examine whet
her news media were biased in coverage of the candidates or issues dur
ing the 1996 U.S, presidential campaign, as Republican Party candidate
Bob Dole and others claimed. Second, we use an ideodynamic model of m
edia effects to examine whether the quantity of positive and negative
news coverage of the candidates was related to the public's preference
of either Bill Clinton or Dole. The model posits that a candidate's l
evel of support at any time is a function of the level of previous sup
port (as measured in recent polls) plus changes in voters' preferences
due to media coverage in the interim. This model allows exploration o
f whether news media coverage, alone, could predict the public's presi
dential preference in 1996. Using a computer content analysis program,
12,215 randomly sampled newspaper stories and television transcripts
were examined from forty-three major media outlets from 10 March to 6
November 1996. Findings reveal both remarkably balanced media coverage
of the two principal candidates, Clinton and Dole, and a powerful rel
ationship between media coverage and public opinion.