The Lesson of Livni’s Resignation: Don’t Believe Media Reporting on Israel (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Evelyn Gordon 05/01/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/05/01/lesson-of-livni-resignation-and-media/
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Former opposition leader Tzipi Livni’s resignation from the Knesset
today offers a good opportunity to reflect on just how unreliable
mainstream media reporting about Israel often is.
Just two months ago, Newsweek and The Daily Beast put Livni on their
lists of “150 women who shake the world,” describing her as “one of
the most powerful women in the country.” Yet while that was
undoubtedly true a few years ago, by the time the Newsweek list came
out in March 2012, Livni was almost universally regarded as a has-
been even by her erstwhile supporters.
In an editorial published later that month, for instance, Haaretz
mourned that in the three years since her “praiseworthy” decision not
to join Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government in 2009, “she
has not missed a single opportunity to make a mistake: She did not
function as an opposition leader, she did not offer an alternative to
the government’s policies and she did not lead her party wisely and
set clear policy.” In a poll published just four days after the
Newsweek list, the public ranked Livni dead last among 16 leading
Israeli political figures, behind even such nonentities as Histadrut
labor federation chairman Ofer Eini. And three weeks later, Livni’s
own party unceremoniously dumped her: She lost Kadima’s leadership
race by a landslide 25-point margin. Now, her political career in
ruins, she is even quitting the Knesset.
That Livni was a has-been by March 2012 was obvious to anyone who had
even cursory familiarity with Israel. Thus, either Newsweek and The
Daily Beast were completely ignorant of the Israeli reality, or they
deliberately disregarded the facts in order to promote their own
agenda: Livni, after all, is a darling of the international media,
because as Newsweek said in its profile, she is “a steadfast
proponent of the peace process” who has led final-status talks with
the Palestinians and supported the 2005 pullout from Gaza. Regardless
of which explanation is true, the bottom line is the same: Their
reporting on Israel can’t be trusted.
Nor is this problem unique to Newsweek. Indeed, Jonathan cited
another example just yesterday: The New York Times’s decision to
play up former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s verbal attack on
Netanyahu earlier this week as something that “may add to recent
pressure on Mr. Netanyahu to tack to the left.” Anyone with any
knowledge of Israel knows that Olmert has virtually no political
support, being widely viewed as both corrupt and incompetent. By
treating him as someone whose opinions actually matter in Israel, the
Times was either demonstrating cosmic ignorance or pushing its own
political agenda at the expense of the facts.
The media’s job is supposed to be informing the public. But when it
comes to Israel, it often seems to prefer misinforming the public. By
portraying has-beens like Livni and Olmert as important and
influential politicians, media outlets make it impossible for readers
to understand the real Israel – the one that elected Netanyahu in
2009 and seems likely to reelect him this fall. And it thereby
betrays its own calling.
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