logo

Media Misleads as Ron Paul Gets His First Win in Virgin Islands

image
Created: 13 March, 2012
Updated: 21 November, 2022
3 min read

Now on his second bid for the Republican Party's presidential nomination, Ron Paul has secured his first ever victory in a state or territory's presidential nominating contest, a milestone for the Texas congressman and champion of limited government, individual liberty, and the Constitutional rule of law.

Over the weekend, in the U.S. Virgin Islands caucus, Ron Paul took first place with 29% of the vote, Mitt Romney was a close second with 26%, and Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich statistically tied for last with a 6% and 5% finish, respectively.

Those are the results reported by the Virgin Islands GOP on their website at this page, though the results were taken down in the middle of the day Monday and replaced with a note from the V.I. GOP and a more detailed breakdown of the delegate count after the territory's caucus. The original text can still be read at Slate on Dave Weigel's blog where he copy/pasted it in his report on the contest before it was taken down.

But despite originally reporting what was clearly a Ron Paul victory in the U.S. Virgin Islands, the GOP chair announced that Mitt Romney was the winner of the territory's nominating contest because the governor took more delegates than the Texas congressman. The Associated Press then uncritically announced that Mitt Romney was Saturday's winner with the headline, "Romney Wins Virgin Islands GOP Caucus," and their report was parroted by the rest of the mainstream media, including USA Today, NPR, The Sacramento Bee, The San Francisco Chronicle, CBS News, Yahoo! News, and many others.

Ron Paul supporters, including his official campaign blogger, Jack Hunter, are crying foul. Up until now, the media has hardly taken notice of the delegate counts as compared to its coverage of who wins each caucus' presidential preference contest, and as a universally-applied and accepted convention, when a major news source reports "(Candidate) wins (state or territory)," they have always meant the candidate won the presidential preference poll at that state's nominating contest, not the most delegates.

Because of this, the AP's Virgin Islands headline seems awfully deceptive and abusive of its audience's trust. Everyone expects and understands headlines like this to mean what they have always meant this entire primary season; otherwise the media is not comparing "like" with "like." Instead it's cherry-picking results to suit an agenda. As the Paul blogger claims at the link above, the media abruptly changed its rules in its coverage of the Virgin Islands caucuses, and just so happened to abruptly change them when Ron Paul won the contest that the media has been using to call each state's victor this entire time up until now-- the presidential preference contest. It's just a little more than curiously suspicious.

At this point, after the mainstream media's bias against Ron Paul has been scientifically demonstrated and humorously derided, it's no big leap to interpret the mainstream media's deceptive reporting as a deliberate and concerted effort to marginalize an increasingly popular political figure who misses no opportunity to slaughter the sacred cows of traditional party dogmas and conventional media narratives. Paul's supporters can only hope that Jon Stewart has taken notice and has something to say about it once again this time.

Latest articles

White House
No Labels' Failed Presidential Math and Why It Should Focus Its Efforts on Reforming the System Instead
Earlier this month, No Labels officially ended its plans to field a bipartisan “Unity Ticket” in the 2024 presidential election. While most campaigns end due to a lack of voter support or funding, No Labels’s campaign suffered the unique problem of lacking a candidate....
26 April, 2024
-
6 min read
2024 ballot
Pew: Half of US Voters Would Replace Trump AND Biden on the Ballot If Given Chance
US voters are largely unhappy with the options the two major parties have given them in the 2024 presidential election. While Hillary Clinton says these voters need to get over themselves, Pew Research has found that she is talking to most of the country....
25 April, 2024
-
2 min read
voting
Breaking Down the Numbers: Independent Voter Suppression in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania held its primary elections Tuesday, which effectively acted as the general election in most cases. However, statewide, over a million voters had to sit on the sidelines because of the state's closed primary rules....
24 April, 2024
-
3 min read