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judahblumbergs judahblumbergs
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6 years ago
Using specific examples, demonstrate the changing nature of the relationship between the press, the public, and the modern presidency.
 
  What will be an ideal response?

Question -2-

When did national security directives emerge?
 
  A)in the aftermath of the Cold War
  B)after World War I
  C)following World War II
  D)in the late 1980s

Question -3-

Why was the outcome of the Democratic National Convention in 1968 considered to be tainted?
 
  A) Many believed that Humphrey had won only because he leveraged support from the unaccountable party machine.
  B) Many believed that McGovern won only because he entered into a corrupt bargain with McCarthy supporters.
  C) Many believed that McCarthy should have won because he had the backing of labor and party elites in spite of his low level of public support.
  D) Many believe that Humphrey should have won because he had the support of young activists and intellectuals who were the core of the party.

Question -4-

In the mind of President Johnson what would showing weakness in Southeast Asia imperil?
 
  A) New Deal programs
  B)Civil Rights Act
  C)Executive Order 8802
  D) Great Experiment programs

Question -5-

Evaluate the statement that the Watergate scandal has fundamentally transformed presidential-media relationships in the United States. Use examples to support your claims.
 
  What will be an ideal response?
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wrote...
6 years ago
(Ans. #1)

a. Discuss how the guarantees of the First Amendment have given rise to a free and independent press that not only monitors and critiques government but also helps citizens sort through the clutter of the news, something that is particularly important given the low levels of political knowledge among the populace, as indicated by the works of Phillip Converse and Walter Lippman.
b. Show how the task of covering the president is more complicated than most people think in part because of the informational advantages held by the executive branch, how that has fostered the rise of aggressive posturing by journalists such as Dan Rather and Sam Donaldson in the 1980s and 1990s and David Gregory during the Bush administration, and how this was all precipitated in part by the Watergate scandal during the Nixon administration.
c. Illustrate how in the context of this adversarial environment, presidents work diligently to manage the press, including working hard to exploit the press for possible gain, as illustrated by the Bush announcement of the 2002 farm bill on farm-only radio stations and Obama's efforts to manage press coverage of an unpopular policy initiative by speaking only to autoworkers directly.
d.Describe how the growing staff, including the Office of Communications and the Office of Media Affairs, required for media management has created opportunities and drawbacks for modern presidents, who both use leaks and try to control leaks by their staff to manage the flow of information into the public sphere.
e. Demonstrate the challenges presented to modern presidents by the changing nature of the media, focusing on how the proliferation of media has led to a decline in gatekeepers, making it much more difficult to ensure that a targeted audience will listen to his or her message,and on how the decline of viewers of television and the rise of polarized media have significantly limited the ability of the president to change the minds of viewers.

(Ans. #2)

C

(Ans. #3)

A

(Ans. #4)

B

(Ans. #5)

a. Explain that the Watergate scandal involved a media investigation, led by Washington Post reporters Woodward and Bernstein, into the arrest of five men for trying to burglarize the Democratic Party headquarters, which eventually led to Nixon stonewalling congressional investigations, threatening the Washington Post, and eventually resigning from office.
b.Identify that although this was not the first presidential scandal to receive media coverageearlier ones included the impeachment of Andrew Johnson and the Teapot Dome scandalWatergate, more than any other, drove a wedge between the president and the press.
c. Analyze how Watergate demonstrated the professional rewards to be gained by exposing scandal and how that led to a change in the norms of White House news coverage,bringing media deference to an end, increasing revelation and amplification of scandals by the media (such as Ford's pardon of Nixon and the Iran-Contra scandal), and making the shortcomings of a president's personal life fodder for news coverage.
wrote...
6 years ago
Great answers! <3
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