A
Gallup poll released late last week
confirms that few Americans trust the media and about three times as
many see the press as liberally biased as opposed to pro-conservative.
Far more Democrats express confidence in the media than Republicans,
but even a slight plurality of Democrats describe the press as
liberally biased (21%) rather than having a conservative bias (20%).
For the media, Gallup’s news is not good: Only ten percent of
Americans say they have a “great deal” of trust in the media, while
“about 2 in 10 Americans (18%) have no confidence in the media at all —
which is also among the worst grades Gallup has recorded.” Three out of
four Republicans (74%) and nearly half of independents (45%) join
one-fifth of Democrats (21%) in seeing the press as “too liberal.”
Among the key findings, as written up by Gallup’s Lymari Morales in an October 1 report:
-- “Americans’ views about bias in the news are also
fairly steady over the past few years. Currently, 45% say the media are
too liberal, while 15% say too conservative and 35% say they are just
about right. None of these percentages have budged more than three or
four points since 2005.”
-- “Currently, 58% of Democrats say they have a great deal or fair
amount of trust in media reporting and accuracy, compared to 39% of
independents and 36% of Republicans.”
-- “Republicans are slightly more likely than they were last year to
say they have a great deal or fair amount of trust, though 27% say they
have no trust at all, compared with 21% of independents and 6% of
Democrats.”
-- “Who does trust the media? In addition to Democrats, nonwhites and
those with a high school education or less place the most trust in the
media, followed by liberals, women, and Americans 18 to 29. In all
other demographic groups, less than a majority say they have a great
deal or fair amount of trust in the media.”
-- Gallup’s bottom line: “Taken together, the findings underscore the
challenge facing the media as they struggle with economic difficulties
and increasing competition from emerging platforms.”
From 2001 through 2009, Gallup has asked the same question: “Now
thinking for a moment about the news media: In general, do you think
the news media is too liberal, just about right, or too conservative.”
Each year, the number of Americans saying the media are too liberal has
outnumbered those seeing a pro-conservative bias by about a
three-to-one margin. The chart shows that the percentage seeing liberal
bias always far exceeds those perceiving a conservative bias:
A week before the Gallup survey was released, a poll from Sacred
Heart University found that five out of six Americans (83.6%) regard
the national news media as “very or somewhat biased,” and nearly nine
out of ten (89.3%) say the media were a strong factor in electing
Barack Obama as President last year.”
Details.
Earlier in September, the Pew Research Center released poll results
showing that “the public’s assessment of the accuracy of news stories
is now at its lowest level in more than two decades of Pew Research
surveys,” with nearly three-quarters (74%) saying “news organizations
tend to favor one side in dealing with political and social issues.”
Details.
For many more related polls, check the “
How the Public Views the Media” section of the MRC's Media Bias Basics.
—Rich Noyes is Research Director at the Media Research Center.