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Electronic Journalism - Political Influence

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== Shaping Politics ==
Electronic_Journalism

Politicians have always relied on information relayed back to them from society via various forms of media to aid them in their decision making. Events that have shaped our world; from the Cuban Missile Crisis, to the war in Iraq, to the children overboard scandal - all have been by-products of decisions made by politicians. Most of these decisions have been based on or influenced by information gathered by the media. In the past 5 years alone technology that was once a pipe dream has become a reality, greatly aiding journalism and society in its ability to transmit real time information from a breaking event on the other side of the world to the home or the parliamentary office. This frequency of news being transmitted from remote areas around the world has affected politics in several ways: primarily the use of new media technologies such as satellite, digital, and wireless technologies have enabled journalists’ instantaneous transmissions, giving politicians relevant, real-time information on developments in world affairs. However, the question of ethics is raised in such cases where politicians are relying on this timely information to stir outcry and shift public opinion. (Neuman, J 1996: Online)

Global Information Systems and Political Campaigns

In Politics and the Press, Pippa Norris describes how media has transformed political campaigns in the United States from the premodern campaign (1948), to the modern campaign (1960s-80s) to the postmodern campaign (1990s-present).

“In the last decade we can identify the transition from this familiar world to the postmodern campaign as marked by several related developments: the fragmentation of audiences and outlets, with the shift from network television towards more diverse news sources including talk radio, local television news, and newer media like the Internet… the move towards a permanent campaign with continuous feedback provided by polls, focus groups and electronic town meetings to inform routine decision making, not just campaigns.â€? (Norris P, 1997 : 6)

However Norris also notes that these forms of new media technologies such as global television, which allow a family in, say, Peru, to watch every detail of the US Presidential campaign, raised questions of morality and stirred many debates, beginning in its early stages in the 1980s:

“The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Ograniations’s (UNESCO’s) director pronounced global information flows ‘one of the greatest forms of inequality in the contemporary world.’ Even more condemnatory, Third World media critic Mustapha Masmoudi declared ‘the flagrant quantitative and qualitative imbalance in North-South communications equal to nothing less than ‘a violation of national territories and private homes, and a veritable form of mental rape.’â€? (Norris P 1997 : 23)

Public Relations

There is an abundance of plausible theories regarding the affect media has on politics and vice versa; in the postmodern world public relations is an activity at play which offers politicians the ability to influence mass media. However the question can then be raised, concerning whether or not the employment of public relations simply proves the extent to which the media is shaping politics.

“Demonised in the populuar media, the performance of ‘spin’ is widely regarded as in intrinsic feature of the modern media landscape – and just as likely to be employed to promote the Olympics, a new political party or a brand of underwear.â€? (Cunningham, S, & Turner, G, 2002 : 217)

Recently, the Queensland government came under fire for use of Public Relations firm Rowland Communication. The PR firm was offering ‘embattled’ electricity firm Energex briefings over the internet to help them improve their image in the media. However, details of the arrangement were leaked to the media stirring a public outcry at the fact that the government had employed the media liaisons at a cost of $500 an hour. (Odgers, R, and Wardel, S, The Courier Mail: “Energex Calls in the Spin Doctors, 26 August 2004) This example of politicians using tax payers’ money to help them deal with the media raises various ethical concerns. This is just one example of politicians attempting to disseminate what they consider to be news. New media technologies have made it infinitely easier for politicians to monitor the media and respond to it: with the thousands of online news groups to the multitude of satellite television channels (Mark Jurkowitz, 2003: Online) the question is posed: who is controling who?

Brigid Andersen 16:36, 20 Oct 2004 (EST)

Bibliography

  1. Cunningham, S & Turner, G, 2002 The Media and Communications in Australia Allen and Unwin, Crows Nest
  2. Jurkowitz, M, 2003 The Boston Globe Media Colomn Knight Ridder Tribune Business News http://proquest.umi.com.gateway.library.qut.edu.au/pqdweb?index=9&did=000000383771311&SrchMode=1&sid=1&Fmt=3&VInst=PROD&VType=PQD&RQT=309&VName=PQD&TS=1094639725&clientId=14394
  3. Neuman, J, 1996 The Media’s Impact On International Affairs, Then and Now John Hopkins University Press, http://www.ceip.org/infostudygroup/neuman.html
  4. Norris, P, 1997, Politics and the Press Lynne Rienner Publishers, Colorado
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