Roger Ailes, Fox News CEO. (photo: MediaBistro)
How Fox News Is Destroying the Republican Party
27 January 12
More and more despondent conservatives are expressing alarm over  the unfolding Republican primary season and what they see as the  party's dwindling chances of defeating President Obama in November.  Spooked at the general elections prospects facing frontrunners Mitt  Romney and Newt Gingrich (especially Gingrich), members of the so-called  Republican Establishment seem to want to reboot the election season and  try their nominating luck again.
Sorry, it's too late.
If the current state of concern transforms into a  larger, enveloping blame game, Fox News chairman Ailes ought be a  looming target. True, conservatives in recent years have shown virtually  no interest in critiquing, let alone trying to rein in, Ailes' empire.  Still, it's becoming increasingly clear that Fox's programming and the  radical, fear-based agenda it's setting for Republicans is now doing  lasting damage to the Grand Old Party.
That's because Fox News isn't simply offering a  rightward take on the day's events, or innocently providing  Republican-friendly commentary, of course.  It's leading an exhausting,  day-in, day-out attack campaign against Obama, Democrats and all their  liberal allies. (Real or imagined.) Its relentless, paranoid crusade  falls well outside the mainstream of American politics, which is why the  Republican primary season, so proudly sponsored by Fox News, is shaping up to be such an  embarrassment.
Make no mistake, kingmaker Ailes has made sure his channel's profoundly un-serious stamp permeates this year's GOP contest. For more and more spooked Republicans though, it's a stamp of failure and looming defeat.
For Ailes and company, that slash-and-burn formula  works wonders in terms of super-serving its hardcore, hard-right  audience of three million viewers. But in terms of supporting a serious,  national campaign and a serious, national conversation? It's not  working. At all.
As Fox News has moved in and essentially replaced the  RNC as the driving electoral force in Republican politics today, and  with Ailes ensconced in his kingmaker role, candidates have had to bow  down to Fox in search of votes and the channel's coveted free airtime.  That means campaigns have been forced to become part of the channel's  culture of personal destruction, as well as its signature self-pity.
The truth is, the Republican Establishment all but  ceded control of the party, or at least the public face of the party, to  Fox News (and Rush Limbaugh) in January, 2009. Party leaders,  demoralized by John McCain's electoral landslide defeat, faded into the  background and obediently followed Fox News' often-hysterical lead as  Rupert Murdoch's cable channel unveiled an unprecedented effort to  demonize and delegitimize the newly elected president.  (In the Fox-led  world, it's conventional wisdom  that Obama's a foreign, race-baiting  Marxist who undermines Israel and is determined to destroy the American way of life.)
With Fox News at the irresponsible helm, the  conservative movement in America, including the emerging Tea Party,  became first and foremost a media movement, and one that gleefully cut  ties with common sense and decency.  (See: Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh.)
As blogger Andrew Sullivan noted this week:
The Republican Establishment is Rush Limbaugh, Roger Ailes, Karl Rove, and their mainfold products, from Hannity to Levin. They rule on the talk radio airwaves and on the GOP's own "news" channel, Fox.
With media outlets setting the conservative agenda, as  well as raising campaign funds and boosting GOP candidates, it was Fox  News that quickly transformed itself into the Opposition Party. It was  Roger Ailes who, officially or unofficially, began to wear two hats:  Program Director at Fox News, Chairman of the RNC.
In terms of whipping up bouts of anti-Obama hysteria,  the crass Fox approach enjoyed some short-term success. However, that  same media movement is now three long and rhetorically repetitive years  into its Obama crusade and trying to nominate a presidential candidate  via an extended national campaign.  According to more and more worried  conservatives, the results on display are disastrous.
Of course, conservatives should have thought that  through before handing over the reigns to Ailes and his misinformation  minions. Indeed, none of this is unexpected. It's all entirely  predictable. It's what happens when a mainstream political movement  embraces a radical media strategy like the one being promoted by Fox  News; the movement marches itself off a cliff.
Conservative leaders themselves have freely adopted  Fox News' profoundly un-unprofessional rhetoric about Obama, claiming  just this week he's "pro-poverty" and his politics are "almost  un-American." That's the Fox-ification of the GOP.
As Andrew Sullivan noted this week, the current GOP  "purges dissidents, it vaunts total loyalty, it polices discourse for  any deviation."  That sounds a lot like Fox News.
Two years ago, despondent conservative and former Bush  speechwriter David Frum, noting the sweeping power that Ailes was  accumulating, observed that, "Republicans originally thought that Fox worked for us, and now we are discovering we work for Fox."
As the Republican primary unfolds, I wonder if more and more poll-weary conservatives would like to fire their new boss.
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