The media simply took the figures from the polls and fit them to their own framework.
So the story became one based solely around the fight for votes taking place within the right-wing camp while ignoring developments in the center and left. The media took a particular glee in trying to prove that Israelis were, by and large, political fanatics hellbent on burying any possible prospects for Middle East peace.
Too many commentators in the international press viewed the Israeli elections purely through the prism of Israel’s relations with the Palestinians. Too many commentators treated the perceived preferences of the Israeli voters with scorn or outright contempt.
Some examples of recent coverage:
The Daily Telegraph, which featured a commentary from Peter Oborne, someone who believes in the presence of an all-powerful Israel lobby in the UK (including HonestReporting):
In light of the results, it looks like Oborne got this one wrong as well.
But not content with Oborne’s contribution, the Daily Telegraph published this the next day. Just what is the definition of a “hardline Zionist?”
For Sky News it was the “extremist right”:
Granted, not even the Israeli pollsters
predicted the surprise results that saw the centrist Yesh Atid party led
by former TV personality Yair Lapid emerge as the second largest party
behind a weakened Likud Beiteinu of Benjamin Netanyahu. And this when
the story was supposed to be about the rise of Naftali Bennett’s Habayit
Hayehudi (Jewish Home), a party to the right of Likud.
This obsession with the right prevented the
media from taking a balanced view of political developments that would
have called into question the presumption that the electorate had made a
dramatic rightward shift. On January 8, Foreign Policy’s Michael Singh saw the same polls as the media but drew very different conclusions that came very close to the reality:
What is noted less often, however, is
that left-wing parties have also gained. The same poll shows gains not
just for the Labor party, but for the far-left Meretz party as well as
social-justice-focused Yesh Atid (which did not previously exist), as
well as for Tzipi Livni’s “Movement” party. The losers are the
Likud-Israel Beitenu coalition, projected to lose nine seats, and the
centrist parties — Kadima, which had twenty-one seats but will cease to
exist, and Ehud Barak’s “Independence” party, which will not field
candidates with his retirement from the Knesset.
Despite this shifting within both the
left and the right, the polls indicate an absence of movement between
the two poles. The result, rather startlingly, is that despite the
churn, the right-left balance is forecast to remain precisely as it
currently stands. The data projects not a more right-wing Knesset, but a
more polarized one. It also projects a weaker position for Prime
Minister Netanyahu in coalition politics, which could well mean a more
right-wing government than that he currently heads, though — depending
on what deals he is able to cut — this is hardly a foregone conclusion.
In fact, Israelis did not make a dramatic
surge to the right at all, instead leaving the left-right blocs
virtually matched. Where the international media saw only extremism,
Israeli voters chose moderation. In the cold light of day, the Canadian Globe & Mail‘s
headline demonstrated the inability to break free from this fixation,
coming as it did after the exit polls had been announced So according to
this, every party classified as “right” is “hardline”:
And if you are looking for an even more dire prediction, how about this from MSNBC:
Some of the accompanying commentary from
MSNBC’s Rula Jebreal sounds more like it comes from a radical
Palestinian figure than a credible foreign policy expert with claims
such as: “And if anyone dares to criticize the [Israeli] government,
they are invariably accused of being anti-Semitic.”
This is the usual charge aimed at silencing
legitimate criticism of Israel’s detractors. Of course, not all
criticism of Israel is illegitimate and the anti-Semitism card is more
often than not played by critics of Israel attempting to dismiss
Israel’s defenders.
But if proof were needed as to the lack of
understanding of these elections from some in the international media,
look no further than The Independent:
Seemingly unnoticed by the journalist, this
Israeli election was fought on domestic and social issues which
relegated diplomatic issues to the background. That this was the case
certainly did not illustrate a lack of desire for peace on the part of
an electorate that has simply grown fed up of taking risks for peace and
receiving rockets on their cities in return. In fact, in addition to
Netanyahu, who has publicly endorsed a two-state solution, the other two
parties in the top three also support this.
Ultimately, there was a marked failure to
appreciate that, while other countries in the Middle East are holding
elections, there is still only one true and vibrant democracy in the
region.
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Labels: Democracy, Israel, News Media
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