The media obsesses
over whether Clinton might have sent an email containing confidential
information from her personal account while secretary of state, and
also wonders about whether Trump tells lies, pays any taxes, bribes
officials and assaults women. Anyone who reads these stories can see
that there is no equivalence here. But anyone who just reads the
headlines would be tempted to think otherwise. The very fact that
commentators think a renewed focus on these emails is ‘bad for
Clinton’ acknowledges that many people are indeed just reading the
headlines. That context matters.
Glenn Greenwald
suggests
that when Paul Krugman and others make similar points, they are
suggesting Clinton should have “a scrutiny-free march into the
White House”. But I think this misunderstands Krugman’s point.
Impressions matter, particularly just before an election. If the
media spend as much time discussing possible Clinton misdemeanors as
those of Trump the impression you give is that they are of equal
importance. By balancing things that are very different, you create an equivalence that is completely misleading. Failure to
take that into account still might have disastrous consequences.
I do not think this
is just a problem with the media. Whenever I talk about the false
accusation that Labour profligacy caused austerity, I get people
commenting that it is not really false because Labour did overspend.
This is true, and it was for this reason that I originally talked
about a myth based on a half-truth. A half-truth is a
statement that conveys only part of the truth, especially one used
deliberately in order to mislead someone. But in political terms that
concedes too much. If there hadn’t been a recession and the
Coalition had had to undo Labour's fiscal excess, I doubt if anyone
besides the IFS would have noticed and no one would not have called
that correction austerity.
Yet
even when I make this point, someone still objects that Labour bears
some responsibility because they should have seen the recession
coming, or that they were responsible for the lack of financial
regulation that allowed the global financial crisis to have such a
large impact on the UK. While those claims should be discussed in some contexts,
they are beside the point when discussing Conservative charges against Labour. When Conservatives
claim that Labour profligacy caused austerity, there is an implicit clause that says ‘and it would not have happened if we were in charge’. The
context is who would be better at managing the economy. If the
context was an article about the performance in absolute terms of the
Labour government those caveats would be appropriate (although both
can easily be challenged), but when the context is clearly about the
relative competence of Labour and Conservatives they are not.
When
a political party makes a claim, or for press coverage during an
election period, everything is relative. In a sense it is a bit like
voting. Anyone who says they cannot vote for X because X did or will
do something do not understand the game they are in. Voting is about
comparisons: not whether X is good in some absolute sense, but
whether X is better or worse than Y. So to say, as Ed Miliband
sometimes did in defending Labour against the profligacy charge, that
Labour perhaps were at fault for not regulating enough, he did
himself no favours because he was talking out of context. Compared to
the Conservatives he has nothing to apologise
for on that front.
We
can see this clearly if we think about consequences. The consequence
of the US media spending so much time on the relatively trivial issue
of emails is that US voters think they can trust Donald Trump more
than Hillary Clinton. The consequence of Ed Miliband apologising
about not regulating finance enough when defending Labour against
profligacy claims is to appear to concede that in some sense the
Conservatives were more competent than Labour. Context matters, and ignoring it has consequences.
Postscript (4/11/16) Since writing this I have been surprised by how many on the left seem happy to parrot the idea that the email affair is potentially serious. Here is Matthew Yglesias with a comprehensive account. It has also become clear that the latest news from the FBI tells us more about the FBI than Clinton.