Anti-vaccine protests hold lessons for journalists covering rallies against shelter-in-place orders
https://www.elkgrovenews.net/2020/05/anti-vaccine-protests-hold-lessons-for.html
By Richard M. Carpiano and
Dorit Rubinstein-Reiss, Special to CalMatters |
Great
job, California! Your high, continued support for social distancing
and sheltering-in-place have helped reduce COVID-19’s spread and lay the
groundwork for state and federal plans to slowly re-open society.
But not
everyone is celebrating. Rallies protesting stay-at-home measures recently
occurred in several state capitals, including Sacramento, and in smaller California
locales like Encinitas, Huntington Beach and San Clemente.
Given the
rallies’ focus, it is unsurprising that many protesters neither practiced
social distancing nor wore masks. Protesters’ signs and other symbols –
clothing, flags – revealed ideological factions distinct from the shared
objection to stay-at-home orders including anti-vaccine and pro-gun rights
activist, and COVID-19 pandemic denialists and conspiracy theorists.
Appropriate
coverage of these rallies by the press is important. A key tenet of the Society
of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics is
to “provide context” and “take special care not to misrepresent or
oversimplify” a story. But doing so requires overcoming challenges that the
press and public must be mindful of.
As
academics who study anti-vaccine activism regarding proposed legislation, we
offer four lessons for responsible media coverage of these new stay-at-home
rallies. Attention to these issues can ensure the public has a complete,
accurate accounting of such events.
1. How
Big Is the Protest? Many events in California have been small –
fewer than 300 people. Yet, like anti-vaccine rallies, photos and videos can
misrepresent crowds as larger than they actually are, especially when
photographers capture up-close action. Images of car-based protests can amplify
this effect since vehicles occupy more space than people. Therefore, it is
essential that any protest coverage includes a crowd estimate, even if a
ballpark figure.
2. How
Representative Are the Protesters? Extensive coverage risks
mis-portraying protesters as a representative sample of the public. This can
create public misunderstanding and mislead politicians to believe they must
support these groups, unaware that they represent a sliver of constituents.
Though each protester may represent multiple, similarly-minded citizens who
stayed home, that is also not always the case.
Also,
with stay-at-home orders, more people could attend such rallies than in usual
times. For example, a recent Monmouth University poll found
81% of Americans believe the outbreak measures taken by their state government
have either been appropriate or not gone far enough. Therefore, protest
coverage should include data showing real views of the public.
3. False
Balance Coverage? False balance is the inaccurate portrayal of
“two sides of a story” as equally valid. As with anti-vaccine protests,
political or general assignment journalists – not science journalists – often
cover shelter-in-place protests. These reporters may adeptly present the
political context, but miss public health aspects, such as debunking science
denialists’ untrue statements. The resulting coverage may end up presenting a
false balance instead of clearly distinguishing scientific facts from
protesters’ opinions. Therefore, protest coverage should include correction and
input from public health experts.
4. Who’s
Involved? Finally, coverage should discuss the event organizers and their
broader political goals. Many seemingly “grassroots” citizen rallies are
sponsored and promoted by organizations with broader, alternative – even
sometimes profit-minded – goals. During recent New Jersey vaccine legislation
protests, news coverage presented angry protesters as popular opposition, even
though national anti-vaccine figures and organizations helped lead protests,
and offered legislation testimony. For
some shelter-in-place protests, journalists have highlighted the organizers.
For example, NBC discovered that
a family-run network of pro-gun groups was behind five of the largest Facebook
groups that promoted state-specific anti-quarantine rallies in a cookie-cutter
fashion.
Some may
argue that the press should not cover these rallies if they are so small and
unrepresentative. But protest is as important an American tradition as freedom
of the press, and it is journalists’ responsibility to inform the public of
even small groups’ discontent. However, information must be presented in a
contextual, fact-based way. The public has a right to know who the protesters
really are, how many they really are and what they have to gain from their
protests.
_____
Richard
M. Carpiano is a professor of public policy and sociology at the University of
California, Riverside, richard.carpiano@ucr.edu. Dorit Rubinstein-Reiss is
a professor of law at the University of California, Hastings, reissd@uchastings.edu. They
wrote this commentary for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture
committed to explaining how California's Capitol works and why it matters.
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