People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 22 May 30, 2004 |
Some Questions The Mainstream Media Must Answer
ALL
along the election campaign and formation of the new government it is the
corporate media --- electronic and print --- that has been asking all the
questions, sometimes with unjustified peevishness and impatience, as if the
media enjoys an unqualified right to make people commit themselves before they
are ready to. The media must now answer some questions for a change.
WHOM MAINSTREAM MEDIA REPRESENT
Whose
interest was this so-called mainstream media unashamedly representing during
these past few crucial months? Can it lay claim to objectivity or advocacy of
popular will? No newspaper or news channel has even attempted to ask why and how
all the poll surveys and exit polls --- taken after
the voters voted --- turned out so wrong. It is hiding behind the general
surprise experienced by political parties themselves. In other words, it is
again reflecting and parroting those who were the subjects and objects of its
study! It is refusing to concede that its failure amounts to a professional
failure and cannot be equated with the failure of those who were participants in
the exercise of winning votes, and having a stake in the votes, could not have
been objective.
They
have not bothered to analyse their own pre- poll surveys and exit polls --- from
the point of methodology, suitability of samples selected, questions asked, and
questions not asked? After all, how could they have known what the Indian
people want or expect from their political leadership when they never asked
those crucial questions.
INCONVENIENT
No
poll survey asked the Indian voter what he/she feels about the Gujarat genocide,
the declining standards of livelihood, or even whether they agree at all that
India is shining and in what respect. Do they want a government that makes
people fight on religion, or do they wish for social harmony? Do people think
that the BJP government succeeded in ensuring social harmony? Did it prove to be
non discriminatory on grounds of religion and caste? Do people want a Hindu rashtra
at all, or are they at their wits end dealing with unemployment, displacement,
hunger, poverty and declining incomes? Do they want a government that is
sympathetic to the needs of the poor, and the common man? Had they asked any of
these questions they might have arrived at different answers altogether. But why
these questions never got asked tells us a lot about the state of the media
today.
No
doubt some in the media will say such questions are not valid because nobody
will say openly and frankly that they do not want social harmony or a government
that is unconcerned about the poor. But the point, which the media ignored is
that majority of the people in any country do not want a government that is
unconcerned about them, and missed seeing is that this majority was quite aware
that the BJP led government had been quite unconcerned about them.
MEDIA
It
is really amusing that something the media itself is so obsessed with, the stock
markets and sensex, found no mention at all in the pre poll surveys and exit
polls, and once the election results were out, we heard of nothing else from the
media. It seemed India would live or die with its sensex falls and stockbrokers,
so crucial were the stock market reactions! Desperate at their favourite
party’s defeat the corporate owned mainstream media came open with its hidden
agenda.
It
was a “Black Monday” as far as they were concerned—completely missing the
point that the majority of Indians were rejoicing and exulting at having thrown
out an unresponsive and anti people government. Even an amateur pollster would
have known that day that Muslims and Christians all over the country must be
justifiably relieved and even joyful at the fall of a government affiliated to
organizations openly committed to reduce them to second class citizenship. In
Gujarat significant defeats for the BJP must most definitely have eased the
pressure on Muslims. In Andhra the average citizen must have experienced triumph
and a sense of people’s power not experienced for sometime now. But on TV
screens it was all doom and apprehension, and one may add, a desperate hope that
it may somehow intimidate the newly elected parties to either shy away from
their proclaimed agenda of ensuring a “human face” for the reforms, or
somehow engineer such confusion that the new government formation may again
become difficult.
UNAMBIGUOUS
Fortunately
for us, the people’s verdict is unambiguous, and the non-NDA bourgeois parties
were quite aware of it. They knew if they fail the Indian people at this stage
of government formation, they are not likely to be given another chance in the
near future. But the media cannot be faulted for not trying its best to
camouflage the people’s verdict behind images of sensex falls and cries of
“Black Monday”. It kept saying that Left pronouncements have sent shivers
down the markets, and were not satisfied that Congress is committed to
“economic reforms” because its spokespeople also wanted to add the “human
face” angle. Even now Laloo Yadav’s emphasis on social responsibility of
railway is being seen as a let down, and he is being criticized for not being
concerned about profits.
MEDIA
Such
utter loyalty to concerns of the stock market and privatization lobbies begs the
question of media accountability. To whom after all did the mainstream media
hold itself accountable during this election campaign and formation of the
government. A more positive role envisaged for the media is certainly that it
must not simply reflect what is going on but must also play the role of an
educator. In this case the media not only failed to reflect people’s concerns,
it actually came out as campaigner for stock brokers and financial speculators
arguing strongly that the interest of these groups represent popular welfare and
the interests of the nation as well.
Will
the media now answer what a Left leader asked a television journalist during the
‘Hundred Hour’ show? Why should the reforms not include land reform? Why
should reforms not have a human face? And why should public sector enterprises
be sold if they are making profits? The media must answer these questions. As
things go, it has not even recognized the validity of these concerns or taken
cognizance that they can matter to a majority of Indians.