Análisis de la cobertura informativa del proceso electoral

By Daniel Politi, Slate Magazine

USA Today leads with a poll showing that a majority of Americans across racial lines think race relations in the country will improve if Sen. Barack Obama becomes president. Black Americans are most optimistic, as 65 percent think Obama’s election would improve race relations, a feeling that is shared by 54 [...]

Análisis de la cobertura periodística del proceso electoral

 
By Lydia DePillis, Slate magazine

The Washington Post leads with news that U.S. and Iraqi negotiators have given up trying to reach a comprehensive, long-term agreement on troop levels—similar to what the United States has in place with countries like Japan and South Korea—and are now working on a “bridge” document that will get U.S. forces [...]

Análisis de la cobertura periodística del proceso electoral

By Roger McShane, Today’s Papers

The LAT leads with a report on Barack Obama’s move to the center on many issues, while the WP fronts his appearance with Hillary Clinton in Unity, N.H.
LAT cites Barack Obama’s “tougher stance on Iran, mild reaction to expanded gun rights and malleable view of free trade” as proof that the [...]

Análisis de la cobertura periodística al proceso electoral

By Daniel Politi, Today’s Papers

All the papers lead with Sen. Barack Obama claiming the Democratic nomination yesterday. Everyone goes high with, either in the headline or the lead sentence, the historic nature of the news as Obama has now become the first black candidate to lead a major party ticket in a presidential contest. After [...]

Análisis de la cobertura periodística del proceso electoral


Análisis de la cobertura de prensa del proceso electoral

By Daniel Politi

The WP’s Robert Novak says Sen. John McCain “is not about to disarm” in his campaign against Sen. Barack Obama and notes that for the next few months, “Republicans will explore the mind-set of this young man who is a stranger to most Americans.” Not surprisingly, that means Americans can expect to hear [...]

Análisis del tratamiento periodísitico del proceso electoral

By Daniel Politi, Slate Magazine

The New York Times leads with word that Sen. John McCain is likely to rely on the Republican National Committee “to an unprecedented degree” to fund his campaign. The presumptive Republican nominee hasn’t been able to keep up with the Democratic contenders in terms of fundraising, so he will be looking [...]

Análisis de la cobertura periodística del proceso electoral

By Daniel Politi, Slate Magazine

The Washington Post and USA Today go big with the rescue efforts in China but devote their lead spots to Sen. Hillary Clinton’s overwhelming victory over Sen. Barack Obama in the West Virginia primary. Clinton trounced Obama by more than 40 percentage points in what everyone says was one of the [...]

Llegando a conocer a John McCain

Por Karl Rove, publicado en The Wall Street Journal,
 
It came to me while I was having dinner with Doris Day. No, not that Doris Day. The Doris Day who is married to Col. Bud Day, Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, fighter pilot, Vietnam POW and roommate of John McCain at the Hanoi Hilton.

Peligra apoyo a Hillary

El Universal, Notimex
 
En nota fechada en NY se informa que los 2.5 millones de dólares que recaudó el concierto del cantante británico Elton John hace dos semanas, podría no utilizarse en la campaña de la candidata demócrata Hillary Clinton, pues violaría la ley.

Análisis del tratamiento periodístico del proceso electoral

 
 
 
By David Sessions, Today’s Papers, Slate Magazine

The WP tops its A1 with a study of Sen. John McCain’s “volcanic temper,” which the presumptive Republican presidential nominee explains alternately as a lifelong character flaw and as the fuel of his fire for political reform. The unflattering piece charts the infamous temper from its early days on [...]

Los medios acusados de parcialidad contra Clinton

Por Edward Luce, publicado en Financial Times
 
The US media have abandoned all pretence at neutrality in the Democratic presidential contest and are heavily biased towards Barack Obama and against Hillary Clinton, according to Ed Rendell, the governor of Pennsylvania.

Latinos hacia la Casa Blanca

Alejandro Meneses, El Universal
 
WASHINGTON.— La red televisora pública en español HITN anunció el lanzamiento del primer programa que tratará exclusivamente temas de importancia para la población hispana en Estados Unidos de cara a las elecciones de noviembre.

“¿Quién podrá monitorearnos?”.

·         En el noticiero de noticiero de López Dóriga (R. Fórmula), José Fonseca comentó:  Los senadores que con tanto entusiasmo impulsaron la reforma electoral, ayer estallaron contra el IFE.

Televisa y Banamex promueven voto latino en Estados Unidos

 David Aguilar Juárez, El Universal          
Grupo Televisa y Banamex participan en la promoción del voto latino en Miami y en otras ciudades de gran presencia de la comunidad hispana en Estados Unidos a través de las campañas “Ya es hora, ¡ciudadanía!”, y “Ve y vota”. 

A New Hope

 JANN S. WENNER (respaldo de la revista Rolling stone a Obama)
The tides of history are rising higher and faster these days. Read them right and ride them, or be crushed. And then along comes Barack Obama, with the kinds of gifts that appear in politics but once every few generations. There is a sense of [...]

 By Daniel Politi, Today’s Papers, Slate Magazine
The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and the Wall Street Journal’s world-wide newsbox lead with, and everybody else fronts, a look at the state of the Democratic presidential race after Sen. Hillary Clinton’s victories this week. No one doubts that winning three out of the four primaries on [...]

Clintons K.O. Their Favorite Foe: The Media

Por David Von Drehle, publicado en Time
It’s a simple fact of Clinton family politics: they do better in a scrape. Combat brings them to the balls of their feet. They spring their leaks in calm seas — whether it’s Bill botching his first term as governor of Arkansas, or Hillary’s failure to pass health care [...]

Obama Garners More Media Attention

 Sarah Nassauer para The Wall Street Journal
In the competition for media coverage, Sen. Barack Obama came in No. 1 last week and received the most coverage during a single week of any candidate this year, according to research released today by the Project for Excellence in Journalism.

Segundo supermartes: ¿el día de Obama?

Juegos de Poder, publicado por Excélsior

La televisión está llena de comerciales a favor de Barack Obama. Hice un conteo de un par de horas en uno de los canales más populares y me encontré que había cinco anuncios a favor del candidato afroamericano por cada uno de Hillary Clinton. Hace un mes que estuve en [...]