“The media wants to beat up Mitt Romney,” Sean Hannity told his Fox News viewers this week, “which is driving me nuts.”

Me too, Sean. Much as I’d like to see Hannity driven nuts, I agree that we in the media have been far too rough on the Republican presidential nominee. In fact, I send this urgent appeal to my fellow members of the lamestream media: Please go easy on the guy — for our own sake.

First, Romney was pounded for his false and tone-deaf statements about the attacks on U.S. embassies in Libya and Egypt; in a weak moment, I joined in the criticism.

Then Politico came out Sunday night with an article titled “Inside the campaign: How Mitt Romney stumbled,” discourteously detailing all sorts of infighting and missteps.

Worst of all was Monday, when my friend David Corn had the temerity to post on Mother Jones a surreptitiously recorded video of Romney dismissing nearly half the country as moochers.

At this rate, Romney will surely lose the election — and for journalism, this would be a tragedy.

At these times of declining revenue, we in the media need to stay true to our core interests. As the old saying goes, we should “vote the story.” And the better story in this election is clearly a President Romney.

Romney’s hit parade — insulting the British, inviting Clint Eastwood to the Republican convention, flubbing Libya and now dismissing half the nation as parasites — may make good copy for the next seven weeks. But if we go easy on the man, we could have four years of gaffes instead of just seven more weeks. Admittedly, this may not be the best outcome for the country, or for the world. But in this race, there is no denying that one man will give us much better material.

President Obama has many talents, but he is not good copy. He speaks grammatically, in fully formed paragraphs. He has yet to produce a scandal of any magnitude. He is maddeningly on message, and his few gaffes — “you didn’t build that,” “the private sector is doing fine” — are inflammatory only out of context.

Romney, by contrast, showed his potential for miscues in his first presidential run (see: varmints, hunting of), but he truly blossomed in the gaffe department this cycle, when he became a one-man blooper reel:

“Corporations are people, my friend.”

“I like being able to fire people.”

“I’m not concerned about the very poor.”

“I’m also unemployed.”

“Ann drives a couple of Cadillacs.”

“Ten thousand bucks? $10,000 bet?”

“I have some great friends that are NASCAR team owners.”

“There were a couple of times I wondered whether I was going to get a pink slip.”

In addition, Romney frequently gives the media fresh opportunities to rerun the blooper reel with his attempts to explain the original mistakes. This goes back to his explanation for why he strapped his dog Seamus to the top of the family car: The dog “enjoyed himself” up there.

More recently, Romney offered this explanation for his claim that Obama was making America a less Christian nation. “I’m not familiar precisely with exactly what I said, but I stand by what I said, whatever it was,” he said.

Saying zany things and then standing by them: From a presidential nominee, this is newsworthy. From a president, it could be sensational.

Romney caused an international incident when he went to London and spoke of “disconcerting” signs that the Brits weren’t prepared to host the Olympics. Were he to do that as president, he could bring trans-Atlantic relations back to War of 1812 levels — and that would be a big story.

At home, likewise, he has caused consternation with his remark that 47 percent of Americans “believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it” and won’t “take personal responsibility and care for their lives.” If he governed that way as president, he could stir up social unrest not seen in half a century — and that, too, would be quite a story.

Usually, reporters have little trouble recognizing our self-interest. For all of Newt Gingrich’s complaints about media bias during his primary candidacy, reporters fantasized about a Gingrich presidency.

We should do the same now as we consider prospects for a Romney presidency: gaffes in news conferences, diplomatic slights or ham-handed attempts to placate conservatives in Congress. This is exactly the man our industry needs.

I’m from the mainstream media, and I approved this message.

Dana Milbank is a columnist for The Washington Post. His email address is danamilbank@washpost.com.

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15 Comments

  1. “I’m running for office, for Pete’s sake – I can’t have illegals”
    “This anonymous clan of slack-jawed troglodytes has cost me the election”

  2. The President of the United States is supposed to be Commander in Chief, not Clown in Chief. We have already had that with 8 years of GWB.

  3. Dana sums up perfectly why our country is in serious trouble. Instead of discussing the important issues of the day, the media wants to focus on things they consider to be gaffes or politically incorrect. Just imagine if the media had always been this shallow and immature. Abe Lincoln was a professional failure with terrible teeth, FDR was a cripple, JFK was a womanizing pill popper, Reagan was an actor, Obama was mentored by communists and terrorists.  

    1. It is not just a gaffe and politically incorrect to call the 47% of the country who pay no federal income tax moochers. It is political suicide. The biggest problem with the 47% quote for Republicans is that it’s just too big a number to work well as a dog whistle to stand in for various “others.” When the plutocrats and their enablers spout that statistic, it shows that they despise working class and older Americans too, and have just been playing them for dupes and fools the entire time.

  4. Isn’t it pathetic how the same people who screeched about Obama not being vetted, now want us to go easy on Romney and not ask of him the same things we’ve asked of candidates for decades? We’re beat up on Romney because we want to see the routine tax returns? We’re beating up on Romney because we want specific details about his proposals? We’re beating up on Romney because he says one thing in private and another in public? We’re beating up Romney because we point out when he’s engaging in hypocrisy? Come on. The right wing commentators are pathetic with this — he wants to lead the country and he can’t stand up to any bit of scrutiny? Here’s your sign. 

    1. The media can go at Romney hammer-and-tongs, so long as they apply the same instruments to Obama. But if all they’re going to do is carp about Romney’s real or imagined character flaws whilst maintaining the fiction of St. Barack – and ignoring the real issue of Obama’s miserable performance – then they can’t expect a lot of respect except from the Obama cult.

      Incidentally, you overuse “pathetic.” Still, not bad for an AI program.

      1. Blah, blah, blah. You’re not operating in reality. When Romney can’t stand up to scrutiny, it’s because there is some sort of magical liberal media bias. When we ignore the stupidity from the fringe right (like your ridiculous comment about Obama campaign flag graphic), it’s because of that magical liberal media bias. It’s screeching victim when there is no victim. You want the Obama campaign flag graphic to be a national story, but then scream bloody murder when people laugh that the Romney campaign includes the typo “Amercia” in their iPhone app. It’s just this double standard and yeah, it is PATHETIC.

      2. There’s a real character flaw in a candidate who calls 47% of the nation freeloaders. When coupled with the quotes in the story above it gives a clear picture of how Romney views working Americans.

  5. Great tongue-in-cheek.  But, sorry Dana, I’d rather promote ultimate idleness on your part (as well as R&R) rather than put up with four years of R&R garbage.

  6. Tonight I watched in horro Sean Hannity showing video of our Ambassador in Libya being tortured. How could you be so insesitive? No warning. I think you have just undone all the good you have been trying to do in one felt moment. You now are not any better than MSNBC… they resort to that kind of knee jerk reporting. I will never watch, or listen to you on the radio again. I’m a conservative and I want Mitt Romney elected. Now I will listen to all the “good” others have to impart… How horrible of you! I have called Fox News, I can’t believe you would stoop so low…
     

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