If you thought FOX News chairman Roger Ailes's job was to run a news channel, well,
somebody forgot to tell Roger Ailes as a new biography by Gabriel Sherman tells all:
Roger Ailes was so eager to influence national politics that in the run-up to the 2012 presidential election, he told fellow Fox News executives point-blank: “I want to elect the next president.”
Imagine the endless winger uproar, multiple GOP House hearings, and constant screaming about "biased liberal media" if anyone at MSNBC, CNN, or the other three news networks said the same. FOX News is the propaganda arm of the GOP. Period.
The book describes in detail Mr. Ailes’s professional ambition, his desire to influence American politics through a conservative prism, and his status as a visionary who possessed an intuitive understanding of the power of television to shape public opinion. Before entering the corporate world, Mr. Ailes was a political consultant, and Mr. Sherman’s book credits him with being a pioneer in using television during election campaigns.
Again, FOX News is not a news agency. It is a propaganda mill for the Republican Party, and that is Ailes's stated goal, to use the network to promote Republicans and trash Democrats.
So why is it treated as a serious news outlet and not a political entity?
Despite being unsatisfied with many of the Republican candidates for president in 2012, Mr. Ailes endeavored to promote Mitt Romney on Fox News programs, the book says. Before the Wisconsin congressman Paul D. Ryan was chosen as Mr. Romney’s running mate, Mr. Ailes advised Mr. Ryan that his television skills needed work and recommended a speech coach.
You can thank Roger Ailes for Mitt Romney. Ailes thought his network could make him your President and tried to do so. Nobody should be surprised by this, but now that the biggest non-secret in political journalism has been broken wide open, what now?
Maybe somebody in Congress should be asking Roger Ailes why he's working for the GOP, yes?