The year was 1920. A huge crowd gathered downtown to listen to a loud
speaker. The city was Pittsburgh. The reason for the crowd? It was
election night. Voters heard over KDKA that the Republicans, after eight
years of President Woodrow Wilson, were returned to office with a ticket
of Senator Warren G. Harding, of Ohio, and Governor Calvin Coolidge, of
Massachusetts. It was the dawning of the radio era. So few homes had
receivers that the only way most people could hear the returns was to
assemble downtown. By 1924, the year Coolidge was nominated for
President, President Harding having died on a West Coast trip, there was
limited broadcasting from the two conventions and much greater coverage
of the election itself. Coolidge remarked that he was President in the
right era inasmuch as he had a good radio voice.
Prior to the advent of radio voters had to wait for the wire services to
report on developments from the States. Sometimes it took days before
the results of the Presidential election were clear. Radio changed all
of that. Radio was it until giving way to television, after World War
II. Some rudimentary television was broadcast at the conventions of
1948, which re-nominated President Harry S. Truman and nominated New
York Governor Thomas E. Dewey but it was 1952 before the networks really
began to cover the conventions and the elections. I still remember the
late Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen (R-IL) pointing his accusatory
finger at the Eisenhower delegates, while leaning down from the podium,
saying in his mellifluous voice, "Thou shall not steal." Dirksen had
accused the Eisenhower campaign of stealing delegates from the Taft
campaign by challenging already seated delegates. It was dramatic and
conveyed a scene which only television could produce.
Then in 1960 television, in addition to playing its now customary role
at the conventions (the three networks all covered the conventions,
including the platform debates), televised the Nixon-Kennedy debates.
Those who listened by radio thought Nixon had won the debates. Those who
watched the debates on television thought, by a landslide, that Kennedy
had won. That is because on television viewers saw Nixon's ill-at-ease
body language. They also saw Nixon's heavy beard and the perspiration on
Nixon's forehead. The radio listeners could not see any of those and
upon the basis of audio only believed Nixon had prevailed. Millions more
watched television. There were two additional debates but they were
watched by far fewer viewers.
Post-election survey research indicated that the first televised debate
was the one which influenced the majority of voters. Televised debates
have now been part of the political process. Three Presidential debates
have been scheduled before the election and in addition there will be
one Vice Presidential debate.
Talk-radio came into its own following deregulation in 1987. A
talk-radio show appeared at the 1988 conventions but there were few
national broadcasts. By 1992 talk-radio came on its own. Dozens and
dozens of local and national talk-radio shows broadcast from the
conventions. This year the number of local and national radio talk-shows
broadcasting from the national conventions nearly doubled. It is almost
expected that talk-radio stations will broadcast from the national
conventions, cover the debates with commentaries and offer special
election coverage.
Now cable television is playing an increasing role as well. Fox News
Network built a huge pavilion at both conventions. It brought 400
employees to Denver and 500 to St. Paul. A similar number was brought by
CNN. MSNBC brought a smaller number. CSPAN was the only network to
broadcast all proceedings as they were. The total cable viewership
exceeded 30 million. The three regular broadcast networks confined
their coverage to one hour each night in addition to originating their
regular news programs from the conventions.
This is the year that the Internet came into its own. There were rows of
bloggers voicing their views, left, right and center. The number of
bloggers was almost comparable to the number of talk-radio outlets. If
the left were to succeed in shutting down talk-radio at least
temporarily there would be no way that the Internet could be shut down
without violating the Constitution.
Basically it will be possible to turn the Internet into television. From
the time that the telegraph first brought national news to local papers,
communication has become easier and more abundant. The left may think
that it will be able to suppress information by killing talk-radio. Even
were the Supreme Court to uphold the so-called Fairness Doctrine should
the Doctrine be re-imposed, which is highly doubtful, it would take a
complete perversion of the Constitution to kill the Internet. And so
long as free people have access to real information there will be some
hope for the survival of this Republic.
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