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Debt Stalemate Top Story, But No Surge in Public Interest

Many Say Illegal Tactics by U.K. Media Likely Also Used Here

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With a deadline fast approaching and talk of serious economic consequences without congressional action, the standoff in Washington over raising the debt limit was the top story last week for both the public and the news media.

Yet public interest in the federal budget deficit and national debt is not much higher than it was the previous week, even with the Aug. 2 deadline on a possible default drawing closer.

Currently, 38% say they followed news about the debt limit debate very closely, little different from the 34% that said this one week earlier according to the latest Weekly News Interest Index survey, conducted July 21-24 among 999 adults by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press. The survey was conducted before the prime-time speeches on July 25 by President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner.

About a quarter (27%) cited the deficit and debt talks as their most closely followed story this week, while 20% cited news about the economy and 18% mentioned the intense heat wave sweeping much of the nation. The stalemate over raising the debt ceiling was more dominant in terms of news coverage, accounting for 29% of the newshole, according to a separate analysis by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. The next most heavily covered story, at 17% of all coverage, was the British press scandal, which has attracted little public interest.

Public interest in the debt stalemate has risen over the past month, from 29% during the first week of July to 38% this week. Interest is well below the 47% who tracked the budget showdown in early April, but that survey was conducted over the final weekend before a government shutdown loomed. The week earlier -- roughly comparable in time with this week -- just 30% were following the shutdown debate very closely.

Illegal News Gathering Tactics Also Used in U.S.?

While the media scandal in England involving newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation accounted for 17% of last week's coverage, public interest in the U.S. remained relatively modest: 16% say they very closely followed news about how newspapers owned by Murdoch's corporation may have hacked into people's phones and illegally obtained financial and medical records. Just 3% say this was the news they followed most closely.

About seven-in-ten Americans (72%) say they think it is at least somewhat likely that U.S. news organizations use tactics similar to those used by the British newspapers at the center of the scandal to gather personal information about subjects of their reporting.

About a third (34%) say this is very likely, while 38% say it is somewhat likely. About a quarter say this is not too likely (16%) or not at all likely (8%). Those following news about the scandal very closely are more likely to say they think this is very likely (45% among those following very closely vs. 32% among those following less closely or not at all).

Comparable numbers of partisans say that American news organizations are very likely to use the same tactics: 32% of Republicans and 27% of Democrats say this. Among independents, 39% agree.

When people are asked whether Murdoch's News Corp. owns any major news organizations in the United States, just 35% correctly answer that it does. Another 35% say the company does not and 31% say they do not know.

Partisans are about equally likely to answer this question correctly. Those following news about the scandal very closely, however, are much more likely to know that News Corp. owns media organizations in the U.S. than those following less closely (64% vs. 29%).

Among the companies owned by News Corp. are the Fox Cable News Channel, The Wall Street Journal newspaper, the Dow Jones Newswires and The New York Post newspaper.

About half of those who correctly say that News Corp. does own media organizations in the U.S. (18% of the total) mention the Fox News Channel when asked to name a specific entity owned by Murdoch's company, 7% name The Wall Street Journal and 2% name The New York Post.

Read the full report and see the questionnaire and survey methodology at people-press.org . See also an analysis of which players in the debt limit debate are getting the most coverage and this week's News Coverage Index at journalism.org.