The Media Research Center has long had a bee in its bonnet regarding stories about conservatives in which the conservatives are accurately labeled as “conservatives.” Matthew Balan — a former MRC “news analyst” who’s now freelancing for the MRC’s NewsBusters blog — pushes this again in an Aug. 30 post:
The Washington Post followed the example of AP and The New York Times with a Thursday article that played up the role of conservative Catholics in a controversy involving a former Vatican diplomat’s recent “testimony” against Pope Francis.
Long-time Post religion reporter Michelle Boorstein narrowed her scope and focused exclusively on the involvement of an “influential…conservative Catholic” media in the issue. Boorstein emphasized that “conservative Catholic media outlets have become power players by conveying the anti-Francis point of view.” She also zeroed in on the role of “powerful Italian conservatives” in breaking the story.
The correspondent used the “conservative” term a total of 30 times in her write-up. (For a contrast, see Boorstein on April 5, in which she couldn’t find a liberal/leftist label for Vermont ice cream barons Ben & Jerry, or “Black Lives Matters supporter DeRay McKesson,” or the socialists at Sojourners magazine.)
First: The Post story about the church is specifically about political factions inside the Catholic Church, and it’s absurd for Balan to be offended that conservatives are accurately labeled as such. Second: The story referencing Ben and Jerry, Mckesson and Sojourners is in a story about fighting racism — unless Balan is conceding that fighting racism is now solely a “liberal” or “leftist” cause these days.
Balan went on to huff that the Post reporter noted that “the reporting from these conservative ‘power players” were akin to “the way in which Breitbart News and Drudge Report have served as media conduits for the brand of conservative American populism led by President Trump.” If the Post can easily identify how a ‘tight-knit’ ideological network can unite to remove a powerful leader, certainly they can understand how conservatives see them and their fellow liberal ‘power players’ at ‘media conduits.'” Of course, Balan’s just parroting the anti-media attack from his former employer.
Then — ironically for a website that fearmongers about George Soros for supporting liberal causes — Balan complained that the Post story highlighted the role of financier Timothy Busch in conservative Catholic politics and even likening him to the Koch brothers, “controversial siblings involved in right-of-center politics in the U.S.”
“Right-of-center”? The word you’re looking for is “conservative,” Matt.
Two days earlier, Balan complained that “The Associated Press and the New York Times both tried to spin a Catholic archbishop’s recent exposé about the Church’s sex abuse scandal as an ideological attack on Pope Francis from the right.” Again, Balan doesn’t dispute the ideological battle; he grouses about (arguably accurate) labels.