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post
April 30, 2019

Zero Percent of Elite Commentators Oppose Regime Change in Venezuela

Teddy Ostrow
New York Times cartoon featuring Nicolas Maduro

 

NYT: As the Crisis in Venezuela Grows, the Options Narrow

From the beginning, elite media have worked strenuously to narrow the options available for consideration (New York Times, 4/3/19).

A FAIR survey of US opinion journalism on Venezuela found no voices in elite corporate media that opposed regime change in that country. Over a three-month period (1/15/19–4/15/19), zero opinion pieces in the New York Times and Washington Post took an anti–regime change or pro-Maduro/Chavista position. Not a single commentator on the big three Sunday morning talkshows or PBS NewsHour came out against President Nicolás Maduro stepping down from the Venezuelan government.

Of the 76 total articles, opinion videos or TV commentator segments that centered on or gave more than passing attention to Venezuela, 54 (72 percent) expressed explicit support for the Maduro administration’s ouster. Eleven (14 percent) were ambiguous, but were only classified as such for lack of explicit language. Reading between the lines, most of these were clearly also pro–regime change. Another 11 (14 percent) took no position, but many similarly offered ideological ammo for those in support.

The Times published 22 pro–regime change commentaries, three ambiguous and five without a position. The Post also spared no space for the pro-Chavista camp: 22 of its articles expressed support for the end to Maduro’s administration, eight were ambiguous and four took no position. Of the 12 TV opinions surveyed, 10 were pro-regime change and two took no position.

(The Times and Post pieces were found through a Nexis search for “Venezuela” between 1/15/19–4/15/19 using each paper as a source, narrowed to opinion articles and editorials. The search was supplemented with an examination of each outlet’s opinion/blog pages. The TV commentary segments were found through Nexis searches for “Venezuela” and the name of the talkshow during the same time period, in the folders of the corresponding television network: NBC News/CBS News transcripts, ABC News transcripts, and PBS NewsHour. Non-opinion TV news segments were omitted. The full list of items included can be found here.)

Corporate news coverage of Venezuela can only be described as a full-scale marketing campaign for regime change. If you’ve been reading FAIR recently (1/25/19, 2/9/19, 3/16/19)—or, indeed, since the early 2000s (4/18/02; Extra!, 11–12/05)—the anti-Maduro unanimity espoused in the most influential US media should come as no surprise.

This comes despite the existence of millions of Venezuelans who support Maduro—who was democratically elected twice by the same electoral system that won Juan Guaidó his seat in the National Assembly—and oppose US/foreign intervention. FAIR (2/20/19) has pointed out corporate media’s willful erasure of vast improvements to Venezuelan life under Chavismo, particularly for the oppressed poor, black, indigenous and mestizo populations. FAIR has also noted the lack of discussion of US-imposed sanctions, which have killed at least 40,000 Venezuelans between 2017–18 alone, and continue to devastate the Venezuelan economy.

Many authors in the sample eagerly championed the idea of the US ousting Maduro, including coup leader Juan Guiadó himself, in the Times (1/30/19) and Post (1/15/19), and on the NewsHour (2/18/19).

The Times made its official editorial opinion on the matter crystal clear at the outset of the attempted coup (1/24/19): “The Trump administration is right to support Mr. Guaidó.” Followed by FAIR’s favorite Times columnist, Bret Stephens (1/25/19):

The Trump administration took exactly the right step in recognizing National Assembly leader Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s constitutionally legitimate president.

It’s generally a nation’s supreme court that has the final say on who is constitutionally legitimate, but in this case they can apparently be overruled by a foreign government—or a foreign newspaper columnist.

The Post editorial board also joined Team Unelected President (1/24/19):

The [Trump] administration’s best approach would be to join with its allies in initiatives that would help Venezuelans while bolstering Mr. Guaidó.

NYT: What My Fellow Liberals Don’t Get About Venezuela

The New York Times (4/1/19) neglected to mention that, unlike most of her “fellow liberals,” Joanna Hausmann is the child of an official in the Venezuelan coup government.

The Times even produced an opinion video (4/1/19) with Joanna Hausmann, “a Venezuelan American writer and comedian,” as she is described in her Times bio. Between sarcastic stabs at Venezuela’s “tyrannical dictator” and cute animations of “Ruth Bader Ginsburg in workout clothes”—Hausmann’s self-described “spirit animal”—come more serious declarations about the nation’s political situation:

Juan Guiadó is not an American right-wing puppet leading an illegitimate coup, but a social democrat appointed by the National Assembly, the only remaining democratically elected institution left in Venezuela…. Let’s provide humanitarian aid and support efforts to restore democracy.

Odd that the Times didn’t find it necessary to note a blaring conflict of interest: Hausmann’s father is Ricardo Hausmann, Juan Guaidó’s appointed Inter-American Development Bank representative. Mint Press News (3/19/19) bluntly described him as the “neoliberal brain behind Juan Guaidó’s neoliberal agenda.”

It would be ludicrous to think the Times would withhold as blatant a connection to Maduro if one of his aides’ daughters made a snarky opinion video calling Juan Guaidó a would-be “brutal dictator”—even if our theoretical commentator was “an independent adult woman who has built a popular following on her own,” as Times opinion video producer Adam Ellick said in defense of the omission. Such a crucial relationship to a powerful Chavista politician would never go undisclosed—in the unlikely event that such a perspective would be tolerated in the opinion pages of an establishment paper.

These are just a few of many media pundits’ endorsements of Guaidó—someone whose name most of the Venezuelan population did not even recognize before he declared himself interim president. Put more accurately, they are endorsements of a US-backed coup attempt.

One of the more muddled regime change endorsements came from Rep. Ro Khanna’s Post op-ed (1/30/19), in which he says no! to military intervention, no! to sanctions, yet yes! to… “diplomatic efforts”:

The United States should lend its support to diplomatic efforts to find some form of power-sharing agreement between opposition parties, and only until fair elections can take place, so that there is an orderly transition of power.

“Diplomatic” is a reassuring term, until you realize that US diplomacy, as FAIR’s Janine Jackson explained on Citations Needed podcast (3/20/19), is “diplomacy where we try to get other countries to do what we want them to do”—in this case, effecting a “transition of power” in another country’s government.

WaPo: Is Venezuela Where Trump Finally Stands Up to Putin

By viewing Venezuela through the lens of Russiagate, Fareed Zakaria (Washington Post, 3/28/19) was able to present backing an attempted coup as a pro-Resistance™ position.

Francisco Rodríguez and Jeffrey D. Sachs (New York Times, 2/2/19) envision similar efforts for a “peaceful and negotiated transition of power,” and Khanna made sure to characterize Maduro as “an authoritarian leader who has presided over unfair elections, failed economic policies, extrajudicial killings by police, food shortages and cronyism with military leaders.”

In other words, Maduro the Dictator must be overthrown—but don’t worry, the US would be diplomatic about it.

Those that didn’t take explicit positions nonetheless wrote articles blaming all or most of Venezuela’s woes on Maduro and Chávez. Economics wiz Paul Krugman (New York Times, 1/29/19) gave his spiel:

Hugo Chávez got into power because of rage against the nation’s elite, but used the power badly. He seized the oil sector, which you only do if you can run it honestly and efficiently; instead, he turned it over to corrupt cronies, who degraded its performance. Then, when oil prices fell, his successor tried to cover the income gap by printing money. Hence the crisis.

Note that Krugman failed to mention the 57 percent reduction in extreme poverty that followed Chávez’s replacement of management of the state-owned oil industry (which has been nationalized since 1976, long before Chavismo). Nor does he acknowledge the impact of US sanctions, or any other sort of US culpability for Venezuela’s economic crisis.

Caroline Kennedy and Sarah K. Smith (Washington Post, 2/5/19) did not explicitly blame Maduro and Chávez for Venezuela’s “spiral downward,” but similarly ignored evidenced US involvement in that spiral. There are only so many places where you can point fingers without naming names.

Dictatorship-talk—writers lamenting the horrific and helpless situation under an alleged “dictator”—characterized many of the ambiguous and no-position articles. In the Post (1/24/19), Megan McArdle asked:

You have to look at Venezuela today and wonder: Is this what we’re seeing, the abrupt end of Venezuela’s years-long economic nightmare? Has President Nicolás Maduro’s ever-more-autocratic and incompetent regime finally completed its long pilgrimage toward disaster?

By simply describing the declining situation of a country (Times, 2/12/19, 4/1/19) and using words like “regime” (Times, 2/14/19), “authoritarian” (Post, 1/29/19) and, of course, “dictatorship” (Post, 1/23/19; Times, 2/27/19) in reference to government officials, commentators create the pretext for regime change without explicitly endorsing it.

The Sunday talkshows and NewsHour also couldn’t find a single person to challenge the anti-Maduro narrative. They did find room, however, for three of the most passionate advocates of regime change in Venezuela: Sen. Marco Rubio (Meet the Press, 1/27/19), Donald Trump (Face the Nation, 2/3/19) and Guaidó himself (NewsHour, 2/18/19).

Other TV regime change proponents included Florida Sen. Rick Scott (Meet the Press, 2/3/19), 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls Peter Buttigieg (This Week, 2/3/19) and Amy Klobuchar (Meet the Press, 3/17/19), Sen. Tim Kaine (Face the Nation, 3/17/19), and Guaidó-appointed, Mike Pence-approved “chargé d’affaires” Carlos Vecchio (NewsHour, 3/4/19).

But leave it to Nick Schifrin of the NewsHour (1/30/19) to bring on “two views” of the US intervention question that are both pro-regime change and pro-US intervention. View No. 1 came from Isaias Medina, a former Venezuelan diplomat who resigned from his post in protest against Maduro. Medina made the unlikely claim that 94 percent of the Venezuelan population—or 129 percent of the population over the age of 14—support US intervention to overthrow the Maduro government:

Not only I, but 30 million people, support not only the US circumstance, but also the Latin American initiative to restore the rule of law, democracy and freedom in Venezuela.

NewsHour: Will US Intervention in Venezuela Help or Harm Its People?

The PBS NewsHour (1/30/19) had a debate over intervention in Venezuela where the “anti” side saw the US’s goal as “assist[ing] the Venezuelan people [to] promote a peaceful transition in Venezuela.”

View No. 2, the ostensibly anti-regime change take, came from Benjamin Gedan, who served on the Obama administration’s National Security Council as director for Venezuela and the Southern Cone. When asked if he supported Trump’s moves to sanction Maduro and possibly use US troops to oust him, Gedan responded:

I think both of those steps are problematic. I think the sense of urgency that the United States administration has shown is absolutely correct…. The question is, how can we assist the Venezuelan people [to] promote a peaceful transition in Venezuela, without harming the people themselves, or fracturing the coalition that we have built over two administrations?

In other words, how can we overthrow the Venezuelan government without destroying the country—or “fracturing the coalition we have built”? The US has many options on the table, but none of them involve not pursuing the overthrow of Maduro.

In the “no position” camp for TV news, New York Times chief Washington correspondent David Sanger (Face the Nation, 1/27/19) noted that the problem with US support for Guaidó is one of  “both history and inconsistency”:

Our history in Latin America of intervening is a pretty ugly one, and the inconsistency of not applying the same standards to places like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, where the president has embraced strong men, I think may come back to make the United States look pretty hypocritical, not for the first time.

Sanger indulged in the popular “hypocrisy takedown”: The problem, as presented, isn’t that the US disrupts democracies, destroys economies and kills people, but rather that it does so inconsistently. While vaguely acknowledging the US’s horrific track record of Latin American interventions, and Trump’s cherry-picking of governments worthy of regime change, Sanger didn’t take the logical next step of calling for the US to keep its hands off Venezuela. Instead, he called Maduro’s supporters—defined as “China, Russia and Cuba”—“not a great collection,” and failed to push back against the claim that Maduro “fixed the last” election. Without a formal declaration, Sanger did all the ideological preparation for foreign-backed regime change.

That elite media didn’t find a single person to vouch for Maduro or Chavismo, and that almost all the opinions explicitly or implicitly expressed support for the ouster of Venezuela’s elected president, demonstrates a firm editorial line, eerily obedient to the US government’s regime change policy.

This isn’t the first time that FAIR (e.g., 3/18/03, 4/18/18) has found a one-sided debate in corporate media on US intervention. When it comes to advocating the overthrow of the US government’s foreign undesirables, you can always count on opinion pages to represent all sides of why it’s a good thing. And the millions of people who beg to differ? Well, they’re just out of the question.


Featured image: New York Times cartoon by Patrick Chappatte (1/31/19) featuring Nicolás Maduro and Juan Guaidó.

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Filed under: Narrow Spectrum of Debate, Venezuela

Teddy Ostrow

Teddy Ostrow

Teddy Ostrow is a freelance writer, editor, factchecker and former intern at FAIR. You can follow him on Twitter at @teddyostrow.

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Comments

  1. AvatarHelga I. Fellay

    April 30, 2019 at 5:00 pm

    The author looks very young and probably hasn’t been paying attention. The New York Times and the Washington Post have been shown, for quite some time, to be the worst mouthpieces of US/Israeli propaganda, no better than CNN or MSNBC, as well as the talk radio and PBS NewsHour. Among the independent journalists and non-corporate online publications still in existence in spite of severe efforts at censorship and suppression, all of them support the legitimate president of Venezuela, and the illegitimate US puppet Guaido is being ridiculed, both in Venezuela and elsewhere. Before getting your BA, Teddy, I recommend you search the web for better information. What you wrote about above, everybody with two connected brain cells has known about for years.

    • AvatarIan

      April 30, 2019 at 5:26 pm

      This is the most condescending comment I think I’ve ever read.

    • Avatargpcus

      May 1, 2019 at 9:22 am

      Helga, while we definitely agree where the NYT and WP stand, I think you leave in a parallel reality… there is not any “independent journalists and non-corporate online publications still in existence” left: you must hunt hard for it on the web, and filter it from a lot of background noise. I guarantee you. And we are not talking about “elite commentators”, so I assume, in your parallel reality, you didn’t understand the spirit of the article at all.

  2. AvatarDoug Tarnopol

    April 30, 2019 at 5:01 pm

    This was done by an intern? Hire him immediately–well, after the BA. This kid–what could he be, 21, 22?–does far better work than many three-time Pulitzer-Prize-winners I could name.

    • AvatarJohn Wheat Gibson, Sr.

      May 3, 2019 at 9:10 pm

      Yep!

  3. AvatarWondering Woman

    April 30, 2019 at 5:19 pm

    Oh my, our American- for -sale -said to – be -journalists:
    How strange you are in deciding that Venezuela’s legally elected president, Maduro must be overthrown because the America oil companies want his oil and they want it NOW!
    Well, let’s see——- previously when Americans on the east coast couldn’t afford heating, the prior Venezuelan president , Chavez supplied it for them. Humanitarian work for Americans from Venezuela !
    BUT—American newspapers tell tales and so therefore, Maduro must be vanquished. Gosh, have you hear all the tales about Trump? I bet a lot more Americans would rather that you take Trump down, rather than a sovereign country that is not our enemy!
    So, let’s see, Freedom of the Press, means that American news can create lies on a daily basis, but if you think , dear reader, that your personal gasoline bills or heating bills will go down, if Maduro is thrown from power and America grabs the oil—–forget-about-it! After 18 years of losing wars, American government, maybe it’s time to stop this silliness and focus on repairing the weirdness of your own nation!
    –

  4. AvatarAlec

    April 30, 2019 at 6:13 pm

    The big elephant in the room in an academic setting regarding this article would be the statement “who was democratically elected twice by the same electoral system that won Juan Guaidó his seat in the National Assembly”. The first election for Maduro is widely accepted to be a fair election with 80% voter turnout however, as pointed out by “The Electoral Integrity Project” a co-op of Harvard and University of Sydney. The second election of Maduro was wrought with widespread reports of fraud low voter turnout, assumed threats of loss of government aid to individuals and claims by the independent company responsible for the voting machines of discrepancies in votes with their figures in the millions of votes that were counted towards Maduro that weren’t cast in the first place. I appreciate the dissenting opinion for good journalism however I believe that to leave out this point doesn’t accurately reflect the problem or Juan Guaidó’s position in regards to his claim to interim president based on Venezuela’s constitution.

    • AvatarEmersberger

      May 1, 2019 at 7:41 am

      Alec, The US refused to accept the results of 2013 election that first brought Maduro to office and the opposition made “widespread allegations of fraud”. In fact, Capriles led violent protests that killed several people attempting to overturn the results. The “Integrity” group you cite is so terrible they claim Chavez “manipulated” the 2004 referendum that he won by almost 20 points. Nobody but the most extremist members of the opposition impugns that election. Looks like you’re also taking a unproven claim from Smartmatic about a turnout figure in the 2017 constituent assembly elections (in which the opposition refused to run candidates for the 600 positions up for grabs) and serving it up as a claim about the May presidential 2018. Maduro’s allies won 6 million votes in the Oct 2017 governor elections which the opposition did contest. Anti-Maduro analysts Francisco Rodriguez and Dororthy Kronic) said less then 1percent of that tally could be attributed to any kind of alleged unfair practices by the government. Seven moths later Maduro won 6 million votes. Falcon, the 2nd place finished won about 2 million. Guaido didn’t even run in that election and if he had would have done even worse than Falcon. You have to resort to moon-landing level conspiracy theories to say it was stolen from Falcon and even he can’t allege that. BTW the US threatening invasion and strangling the economy with sanctions is also criminal savage electoral interference. Good luck finding any debate about any of these in op-ed pages of US newspapers in the US.

      • AvatarP

        May 2, 2019 at 2:05 am

        Well said!

      • AvatarChris

        May 3, 2019 at 2:59 pm

        Excellent takedown. I’d say the election in America was much closer. Maybe someone should hire Blackwater to Merc the crap out of the US? :)

  5. AvatarJan O

    April 30, 2019 at 6:19 pm

    And did you catch the BBC Newshour this morning? Razia Iqbal was so furious she almost wept when her interviewee told her that the latest coup attempt she was so fatuously reporting on had failed…it was almost funny. If it weren’t such an old and tragic story.

  6. AvatarVince Milum

    May 1, 2019 at 8:22 am

    I had two tweets regarding your article — one trumpeting it, the other (mildly) disputing:

    https://twitter.com/ReasonedMind/status/1123559728116850688

    https://twitter.com/ReasonedMind/status/1123431736787046400

    • AvatarVince Milum

      May 2, 2019 at 7:36 am

      Like Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, The American Conservative Magazine has come out against US intervention in Venezuela:

      https://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/war-with-venezuela-is-unnecessary-illegal-and-wrong/

      • AvatarTony

        May 2, 2019 at 8:43 am

        Unlike Joe Biden!

  7. AvatarSimjam

    May 1, 2019 at 11:47 am

    The “Intelligence Community” has a longstanding relationship. Would love to see someone factually describe this relationship.

  8. AvatarTony

    May 2, 2019 at 8:39 am

    “The New York Times (4/1/19) neglected to mention that, unlike most of her “fellow liberals,” Joanna Hausmann is the child of an official in the Venezuelan coup government.”

    I think we may have been here before:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nayirah_testimony

    • AvatarChris

      May 3, 2019 at 3:03 pm

      We have to stop the babies from being thrown out of incubators… Yep, we have been here many times. Only later do the rubes find out they’ve been lied to, again.

      “Falsehood flies, and truth comes limping after it, so that when men come to be undeceived, it is too late; the jest is over, and the tale hath had its effect: like a man, who hath thought of a good repartee when the discourse is changed, or the company parted; or like a physician, who hath found out an infallible medicine, after the patient is dead.” ~ Johnathan Swift (1710)

  9. AvatarJamie

    May 2, 2019 at 1:45 pm

    Wrong: Tucker Carlson of FOX Nes and Kennedy of Fox Business News Oppose intervention. Tucker get’s higher ratings than the neoliberal punks on MSNBC and CNN he goes up against.

    The author can’t accept that conservative news is the only sane place to discuss Venezuela.

    • AvatarChris

      May 3, 2019 at 3:32 pm

      Let’s try not to muddy the water with the false left/right nonsense… The United States has 1 Corporate Fascist Party, with 2 social issue wings. Tulsi Gabbard was on Fox just yesterday, and the Fox host was selling the war with every breath she had, while lying about Guaido being “elected”, when that is sheer nonsense.

      I do grant Tucker Carlson has been right about several things lately, and I respect (and give due credit) to any journalist getting things right these days… However, continuing the left/right fallacy isn’t helpful, and just allows this type of propaganda land more often than not, due to the internal divide the mass media instills, by design. The clip is below… You can’t say Fox is doing it better here. Sorry.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KWogUKdWjhg&t=6s

  10. AvatarFred

    May 2, 2019 at 8:40 pm

    What percent of elite commentators are willing to enlist and fight on the front lines of all these regime change wars?

  11. Avatarrafe Husain

    May 3, 2019 at 5:58 pm

    Media writers get paid to follow the official story line

  12. AvatarJohn Wheat Gibson, Sr.

    May 3, 2019 at 9:05 pm

    These corporate media whores (apology to honest sex workers) want to keep their paychecks. They remember what happened to Phil Donahue.

  13. AvatarKevin

    May 5, 2019 at 8:17 pm

    Maduro is the democratically elected legitimate leader of Venezuela. Any interference with that is an attack on that country and only an idiot like Donald Trump would think he could get away with it. It does make him look like maybe he forgot his instructions from Russia on this one though.

    What the author is clearly exposing is a sad truth that seems to persist in spite of its revelation. The American Media is wholly complicit in every major war crime that the United States government perpetrates. We are fed a steady diet of misinformation curated and cultivated by those who have traded their integrity for access and comfort in a profession that they bring shame to. The failure of the will and morality of those “Journalists” is our undoing.

    Thank goodness for FAIR and reporters like Teddy. It doesn’t give me hope because this has been the case since I was a Journalism student in the 80’s but it does let me know I am not alone in a dark world of ignorance. Keep the light shining!

  14. Avatarhemn

    May 14, 2019 at 4:47 pm

    Hello
    I am hemn ghahremani. I am living in Iran
    I am a painter and cartoonist.
    I want to work with your magazine
    In the field of political and social cartoons

  15. Avatarrrr

    July 28, 2019 at 7:08 pm

    My question is why is Amy Goodman and Democracy Now not listed? She may not be an elitist but she does hold her own and I would rank her above any of the commentators mentioned in regards to FAIR reporting, and Democracy Now is known for its fairness so why not include them as maybe the only highly respected news organization.

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