Why War?
why-war.com
Please make a donation to keep this site alive.
-- We need only $30/month to stay online.

Analysis: Progressive Domestic Think-Tanks See Drop

Michael Dolny | Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting | August 1, 2003

"This year’s survey is consistent with our observations of think tank citations after September 11, 2001: a decline in visibility of domestic policy think tanks, an increase in exposure for foreign policy think tanks, and an increasing focus on centrist to conservative voices, leaving progressives out of the debate. Given the events so far in 2003, there is every reason to believe that these trends will continue."

The center-right slant in media citations of think tanks continued in 2002, with conservative groups receiving 47 percent of last year’s citations, centrists 41 percent and progressives 12 percent--the least representation for the left since 1998.

The top 25 think tanks in 2002 received 25,897 citations in major newspapers and broadcast transcripts, according to a search of the Nexis media database. This is an 8 percent decrease from 2001, bucking the trend of increasing think tank citations since the survey began in 1996.

The centrist Brookings Institution maintained the top spot, garnering about one-sixth of the survey’s citations, while another center-oriented group, the Council on Foreign Relations, leapfrogged several think tanks to finish in second place. The Heritage Foundation, in third place, was the highest-ranking conservative think tank, while the ninth-place Economic Policy Institute was the most prominent progressive think tank.

The decline in think tank citations may seem surprising, given that the year was filled with big news stories, including the continuing aftermath of September 11, the war in Afghanistan and the build-up toward the attack on Iraq. However, over half of the decline can be accounted for by the relative drop in citations of one think tank, the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), whose declaration of a recession in 2001 was cited extensively.

Besides NBER, the decline in citations was most notable among think tanks with a domestic focus. These came from across the political spectrum, from conservative think tanks like the Cato Institute and Family Research Council, centrist think tanks like NBER and the misleadingly named Progressive Policy Institute, and left-leaning think tanks like the Urban Institute and Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. (Exceptions to this trend included the conservative Manhattan Institute, the centrist Public Policy Institute of California and the progressive Center for Public Integrity.)

Meanwhile, think tanks with a concentration on international issues gained ground. The centrist Center on Foreign Relations increased citations by 55 percent. Right-leaning foreign policy think tanks, such as the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, also increased in exposure.

While this trend was evident among centrist and conservative think tanks that examine foreign policy issues, it did not extend to similar progressive think tanks. The two progressive think tanks in this survey with the most interest in international issues, the Center for Defense Information (CDI) and the Institute for Policy Studies, declined in media exposure, 39 percent and 10 percent respectively. CDI declined 28 percent in citations from major newspapers in 2002, but dropped a precipitous 59 percent in the electronic media.

This finding should not surprise long-time Extra! readers. FAIR has repeatedly documented the near invisibility of anti-war voices in mainstream broadcast media during times of crisis--including during the 1991 Persian Gulf War (5/91), the bombing of Yugoslavia (Extra! Update, 6/99) and the most recent attack on Iraq (5=6/03). This year’s survey is consistent with our observations of think tank citations after September 11, 2001: a decline in visibility of domestic policy think tanks, an increase in exposure for foreign policy think tanks, and an increasing focus on centrist to conservative voices, leaving progressives out of the debate. Given the events so far in 2003, there is every reason to believe that these trends will continue.

Michael Dolny is a visiting lecturer in sociology at California State University, Stanislaus.

Citations of Think Tanks in Media

Think TankPolitical OrientationNumber of Media Citations 2002Number of Media Citations 2001% change
Brookings Institutioncentrist4,3084,2412%
Council on Foreign Relationscentrist2,5701,65755
Heritage Foundationconservative2,3252,2553
American Enterprise Instituteconservative1,8581,931-4
Center for Strategic and International Studiesconservative1,8241,6878
Cato Institutecons/libertarian1,8142,538-29
RAND Corporationcenter-right1,4031,23014
Carnegie Endowmentcentrist1,1671,1710
Economic Policy Instituteprogressive851891-4
Family Research Councilconservative7261,183-39
Urban Institutecenter-left6531,234-47
National Bureau of Economic Researchcentrist6061,976-69
Hudson Instituteconservative603885-32
Center for Public Integrityprogressive58042935
Manhattan Instituteconservative57345526
Hoover Institutionconservative523585-11
Washington Institute for Near East Policycenter-right49240123
Center on Budget and Policy Prioritiesprogressive442558-21
Public Policy Institute of Californiacentrist44033930
Milken Institutecentrist4364768
Institute for International Economicscentrist387390-1
Freedom Forumcentrist354395-10
Center for Defense Informationprogressive347571-39
Institute for Policy Studiesprogressive331366-10
Progressive Policy Institutecentrist284343-17


Number of Media Citations by Ideology

Number of Media Citations20022001
Conservative or Right-Leaning 12,141    47% 13,150    47%
Centrist 10,552    41% 10,988    39%
Progressive or Left-Leaning 3,204    12% 4,049    14%
Total
25,897    100%
28,187    100%

Source: Nexis database on major newspaper and radio and TV transcripts.

Note: The numbers for the Heritage Foundation were adjusted to correct for false positives. Approximately 25 percent of the time in 2002 and 29 percent of the time in 2001, the words "heritage foundation" appeared in Nexis without referring to the Washington-based think tank.

www.fair.org/extra/0307/thinktanks2002.htmlE-mail this article
This website is a tribute to Why War?, one of the nation's first and most innovative post-9/11 student antiwar organizations. Born on October 22, 2001 at Swarthmore College, we were a handful of freshmen and sophmores who vocally opposed the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere. And now, seven years later, we are retiring this website as we focus our efforts on new directions. We hope that it continues to serve future activists and we remain confident that humanity is on the verge birthing a better world.