Quick
count shows limits of media owners’ clout
Agus Sudibyo ; Executive
director of Matriks Indonesia,
which focuses
on social and media research in Jakarta
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JAKARTA
POST, 14 April 2014
Until
now the media, especially television, has been regarded as being extremely
influential in boosting the electability of presidential candidates or
political parties, and anxiety has been raised over the role television
channel owners who intensively campaign through their media outlets. Indeed
these political campaigns, disguised as news and other forms of current
affairs, by election contestants who are media owners, were seen as
abrogating public space for private interests and not conducive to efforts to
improve the role of the press as an open space for public discourse in a
democracy.
However
we should not overestimate media influence. The quick-count results of the
April 9 legislative elections have clearly disproven the argument that media
owners contesting the elections are guaranteed public support. The Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) has topped the poll, although its
leaders do not own any media channels.
The Golkar Party whose leader Aburizal
Bakrie has a media group came second despite intensive use of his television
channels and online media, mainly TvOne and Vivanews. These two parties are
followed in the quick-count results by parties that don’t own media outlets:
The Democratic Party, the National Awakening Party (PKB), the Prosperous
Justice Party (PKS), the National Mandate Party (PAN) and the United
Development Party (PPP). The leaders of the NasDem Party and the Hanura Party
have media groups — but rank outside the big five in the unofficial election
results so far.
Can we
conclude that campaigning in your own media outlets does not increase the
electability of your political party? What do the quick-count results show
regarding media owners as election contestants?
First,
the media still has significant influence over people’s political choices.
However political parties and their contenders cannot merely appear in one or
two television channels; they need to have positive exposure in news and
commercials across several different outlets.
This is
what did not happen during the election campaign this year. No electoral
contestant who was a media owner dominated the majority of media, which on
the national level is dominated by five or six large media groups. There were
at least four television owners who used their media to campaign for the
legislative and presidential elections.
On the
other hand several media outlets showed flexibility, in accepting commercials
from all parties and also reporting on all parties’ campaigns. The effect was
the diffused influence of television coverage to different political parties,
and the significance for each party was not enough to boost its electability
beyond loyal supporters.
Second,
appearing continuously on your own media outlets is not in itself a strategic
advantage for the political party without taking into account the reaction of
other media. Blasting campaigns full of self praise neutralizes the intended
effect of boosting electability, if other media outlets choose to portray the
candidate or party in a more negative light.
In this
context our public space is saved by the reality of competition among the
media or media groups regarding their public discourse and news tendencies.
Democracy
has not been able to stop the arbitrary abuse of media owners of their media
channels. However democracy creates considerable plurality among media
industry owners; it is the competition among them which creates the checks
and balances.
Some
media outlets may be less critical of the political parties owned by their
boss. But many other outlets will be highly critical, without sharing the
burden of economic and political ties, apart from the factor of competition.
Therefore
dependency on one or two media outlets is counter-balanced by the
independence of other media outlets toward the same political organization.
The political dependency of one or two media outlets remains a problem
regarding how they should function. However the plurality of media actors is
at least a benefit of democracy which brings diversity of information,
perspectives and political leanings within a system of media freedom.
Third,
electability is determined by many factors. In determining their political
choices, people do not only judge how often they see a political party
represented on television. They also take into account what they know of its
achievements, its leaders or campaigners, their experience and the leaders’
ability etc. Many voters are merely transactional, opting for the parties
making the highest contributions.
Fourth, this all shows the public as
relatively independent, absorbing but not always accepting the media messages
regarding political contestants, as they filter information from diverse
sources. They take into account core ties like ethnicity and faith; quite
apart from credibility and quality.
People
are not merely blank canvases that can be painted upon by the media. They are
competent in giving feedback; therefore one would need to reconsider the view
that citizens are merely passive media consumers. ●
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