Midterms Top News Agenda
Christine O'Donnell the Week's Leading Newsmaker
The surprise victory of a Tea Party-backed candidate in Delaware's Republican Senate primary fueled the biggest week yet for coverage of the 2010 midterm elections.
Christine O'Donnell's Sept. 14 upset over nine-term Rep. Mike Castle pushed the midterm elections to the top of the news agenda, where it filled 30% of the newshole during the week of Sept. 13-19, according to the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. The previous high-water mark for midterm elections was 18% the week of May 17-23, when incumbent Sen. Arlen Specter was defeated in the Pennsylvania Democratic primary.
Last week, the midterms were the top story in all five of the media sectors studied by PEJ and completely dominated the ideological radio and cable talk shows, accounting for nearly three-quarters of the airtime examined. O'Donnell herself generated so much attention that she proved to be the week's leading newsmaker, figuring prominently in almost twice as many stories as President Obama.

In the wake of O'Donnell's victory, the media narrative last week focused on several themes -- the strength of the Tea Party movement, the possibility that Democrats might now hold an endangered Delaware Senate seat and growing fault lines between the GOP establishment and Tea Party insurgents.
The U.S. economy (No. 2 story) accounted for 16% of the newshole last week, about half the coverage devoted to the midterms. A subject that has lately been driven by grim indicators of economic health instead focused last week on tax policy, most notably a debate over whether to extend Bush administration tax cuts.
Three other stories rounded out the top five last week, but each received only a fraction of the coverage given to politics. News about the U.S. education system was the No. 3 story of the week. The president's visit to a Philadelphia school, the future prospects for the District of Columbia's controversial schools chancellor and a study comparing higher education achievements by gender added up to 3% of the newshole.

The No. 4 story was a combination of several items related to the war in Afghanistan. The media highlighted parliamentary elections there and profiled the only living serviceman to receive the Medal of Honor since the war in Vietnam. Altogether, the conflict filled 3% of the newshole.
Finally, at 2%, was the safe return of an American hiker who had been captured and held by the Iranian government for more than a year. The coverage focused on Sarah Should's release and the negotiations that led up to it, but also on the implications for diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Iran.
Continue reading the full report at journalism.org.

