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News Reporting is Perceived as Biased, though Less Agreement on Whether it is Liberal or Conservative Bias

   CNN and FOX News are channels most often turned to for political news

    ROCHESTER, N.Y., June 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Over six in 10 U.S. adults
agree that there is bias in the reporting of news, though there is less
agreement as to whether there is a liberal or conservative bias.
Furthermore, viewers of talk shows say that the hosts of these shows are
equally critical of Republicans and Democrats. Greater numbers of adults
say they turn to CNN and FOX News most often when seeking news or
information about public affairs or politics.
    These are the results of a nationwide Harris Poll of 1,179 U.S. adults
surveyed online by Harris Interactive(R) between June 7 and 13, 2006.
   Specific results from this poll include:

    * Almost four in 10 U.S. adults (37%) listen to talk shows on the radio at
      least once a week and about three in 10 (29%) watch political or public
      affairs TV shows at least once a week.

    * CNN (20%) and FOX News (18%) are the television channels adults most
      often turn to when they want news or information related to politics or
      public affairs. These are followed by the networks, including ABC (9%),
      NBC (8%) and CBS (7%). Other channels include MSNBC (5%), C-SPAN (3%),
      PBS (3%) and CNBC (1%).

    * When comparing those who are "heavy" users of the media (including talk
      radio and television) to "light" users, a slightly different profile
      emerges. Among "heavy" media users, FOX News is the leading channel at
      39 percent, followed by CNN at 22 percent. Among "light" media users,
      CNN is at the top (21%) followed by ABC (13%), NBC (11%), CBS (9%) and
      FOX News (8%).

    * When looking at the profile of viewers of TV channels that are watched
      most often for news about politics or public affairs, preferences emerge
      based on political affiliation and political philosophy. CNN's viewers
      are more likely to be Democrats (42%) or Independents (29%) than
      Republicans (19%), whereas FOX News viewers are more likely to be
      Republicans (63%) as compared to Democrats (12%) or Independents (20%).
      Similarly, FOX News viewers are more likely to say they are Conservative
      (61%) than Moderate (35%) or Liberal (4%). CNN viewers are more likely
      to say they are Moderate (61%) than Liberal (27%) or Conservative (12%).
    The potential biases associated with the media's reporting have been
discussed a great deal. This Harris Poll explores whether the public thinks
that talk show hosts are more critical of Democrats or Republicans. Among
those who watch talk shows at least once a month, 22 percent think that
talk show hosts are more critical of Democrats and 25 percent say that
hosts are more critical of Republicans. The remaining 52 percent say that
the hosts are equally critical of both parties.
    However, over six in 10 (63%) of Republicans agree that there is bias
in the news reporting, with the remaining 36 percent saying they are not
sure (31%) or think there is no bias (5%). Interestingly, the adult public
overall thinks that there is more of a liberal bias (38%) than a
conservative bias (25%). While this may not be altogether surprising, the
fact that the findings don't show an even greater liberal bias is
noteworthy.
    * Furthermore, among those who are "heavy" users of the media, a majority
      (54%) say that there is a liberal bias in news reporting, compared to 24
      percent who say there is a conservative bias. Among "light" media users
      there is less of a difference, with similar numbers saying that there is
      a liberal bias (31%) or conservative bias (25%).

    * CNN viewers are split on this issue, with a third (33%) saying that
      there is a liberal bias and another third (32%) saying there is a
      conservative bias.

    * FOX News viewers, however, strongly feel that there is a liberal bias
      (69%) as compared to 12 percent who say there is a conservative bias.
    Among adults who say that there is bias in the media, television is
perceived as having the "greatest bias in the reporting of news" (41%).
Seventeen percent say that print media and seven percent say that radio is
biased in their reporting. Three in 10 (31%) say that the media overall are
equally biased.
                                   TABLE 1
               WATCH OR LISTEN TO TALK SHOWS OR PUBLIC AFFAIRS
             "How often do you listen to talk shows on the radio?
   How often do you watch political or public affairs shows on television?"
    Base: All adults

                                                          Political or
                                    Talk Shows                Public
                                      on the                 Affairs
                                      Radio                  Shows on
                                                            Television
                                        %                       %
    Less than
     once a month                      54                      50
    Less than
     once a week
     but more than
     once a month                       9                      21
    Once or twice
     a week                            13                      16
    Three times a
    week or more                       25                      13

    Note: Percentages may not add up exactly to 100 percent due to rounding.


                                   TABLE 2
          TELEVISION CHANNEL TURN TO MOST OFTEN FOR NEWS RELATED TO
                          POLITICS OR PUBLIC AFFAIRS
  "When you want news or information related to politics or public affairs,
             which television channel do you turn to most often?"
   Base: All adults

                                                   Total        Media Usage
                                                              Heavy      Light
                                                     %          %          %
    CNN                                             20         22         21
    FOX News                                        18         39          8
    ABC                                              9          3         13
    NBC                                              8          4         11
    CBS                                              7          2          9
    MSNBC                                            5          7          4
    C-SPAN                                           3          4          2
    PBS                                              3          3          2
    CNBC                                             1          1          2
    Local cable news channel                         4          6          5
    Local broadcast news channel                     8          3         10
    Sunday morning shows (various
     broadcasts)                                     2          4          1
    Something else                                   4          3          4
    Don't watch news                                 7          -         10

    Note: Media usage defined:

    Heavy: Listen to talk radio and watch political/public affairs at least
            once a week
    Light: Listen to talk radio and watch political/public affairs at most 2-3
            times a month


                                   TABLE 3
        PROFILE OF VIEWERS OF TV CHANNELS WATCHED MOST OFTEN FOR NEWS
                       ABOUT POLITICS OR PUBLIC AFFAIRS
  "When you want news or information related to politics or public affairs,
             which television channel do you turn to most often?"
    Base: All adults


                                   Total    CNN     FOX    ABC     NBC    CBS
                                     %       %       %      %       %      %
    Political Party Affiliation
       Republicans                  29      19      63     21      27     27
       Democrats                    33      42      12     39      59     45
       Independents                 28      29      20     31      12     23
    Political Philosophy
       Conservative                 29      12      61     22      28     23
       Moderate                     50      61      35     63      46     63
       Liberal                      20      27       4     14      26     14


                                   TABLE 4
     WHICH TALK SHOWS HOSTS ARE MORE CRITICAL OF DEMOCRATS OR REPUBLICANS
    "Thinking of the shows you listen to or watch the most, would you
describe their host or hosts as more critical of the Democrats or more
critical of the
                                Republicans?"

    Base: Adults who listen to or watch talk shows at least once a month


                                                               TV Channel Turn
                                                                to Most Often
                             Political Party Affiliation         for Politics
                                                                  and Public
                                                                    Affairs
                    Total   Republicans  Democrats  Independents  CNN     FOX
                      %           %          %          %         %       %
    More critical
     of Democrats     22          27         24         18        19      28
    Equally critical
     of both          52          42         52         58        54      47
    More critical
     of Republicans   25          30         24         24        27      25

    Note: Percentages may not add up exactly to 100 percent due to rounding.


                                   TABLE 5
                    IS THERE A BIAS IN REPORTING OF NEWS?
    "Some have said there is a bias in the reporting of news in television,
radio
  or print (newspapers and magazines).Which comes closest to your opinion?"

    Base: All adults

                               Political Party Affiliation
                      Total   Republican    Democrat     Independent
                        %         %            %              %
    There is a
     liberal
     bias in the
     media             38        66           18             36
    There is no
     bias in the
     media              5         1            8              7
    There is a
     conservative bias
     in the media      25        13           37             26
    Not at all sure    31        20           36             31

                                    Political Philosophy
                           Conservative    Moderate       Liberal
                                %             %              %
    There is a
     liberal
     bias in the
     media                     62            35             10
    There is no
     bias in
     the media                  3             5              9
    There is a
     conservative bias
     in the media              13            24             47
    Not at all sure            22            36             34

    Note: Percentages add up to more than 100 percent due to multiple
responses accepted.

    Base: All adults

                                                                   TV Channel
                                                                  turn to Most
                                            Total   Media Usage    Often for
                                                                 Politics and
                                                                Public Affairs
                                                  Heavy  Light    CNN    FOX
                                              %       %      %      %      %
    There is a liberal bias in the media     38      54     31     33     69
    There is no bias in the media             5       7      4      9      1
    There is a conservative bias in the
     media                                   25      24     25     32     12
    Not at all sure                          31      15     41     26     19
    Note: Percentages add up to more than 100 percent due to multiple
responses accepted.
    Note: Media Usage defined:
     Heavy: Listen to talk radio and watch political/public affairs at least
             once a week
     Light: Listen to talk radio and watch political/public affairs at most 2-
             3 times a month


                                   TABLE 6
             WHICH MEDIA HAS GREATEST BIAS IN REPORTING OF NEWS?
    "Of the three primary media - television, radio, and print (newspapers
and
    magazines) - which one do you feel has the greatest bias in the
reporting of
                                    news?"

     Base: Adults who say there is bias in the media

                                         Political Party Affiliation
                                 Total   Republican    Democrat  Independent
                                   %         %            %          %
    Television                    41        44           35         44
    Print                         17        27           10         12
    Radio                          7         2           11          9
    All are equally biased        31        25           35         31
    None is more biased
     than another                  4         2            7          3
    Not sure                       1         -            3          1

                                        Political Philosophy
                           Conservative     Moderate       Liberal
                                %              %              %

    Television                 37             47             31
    Print                      22             15             10
    Radio                       2              7             16
    All are equally biased     35             27             33
    None is more biased
     than another               3              3              8
    Not sure                    -              2              3

    Note: Multiple response question.

    Methodology
    This Harris Poll was conducted online within the United States between
June 7 and 13, 2006 among 1,179 adults (aged 18 and over). Figures for age,
sex, race/ethnicity, education, region and household income were weighted
where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in
the population. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for
respondents' propensity to be online.
    All surveys are subject to several sources of error. These include:
sampling error (because only a sample of a population is interviewed);
measurement error due to question wording and/or question order,
deliberately or unintentionally inaccurate responses, nonresponse
(including refusals), interviewer effects (when live interviewers are used)
and weighting.
    With one exception (sampling error) the magnitude of the errors that
result cannot be estimated. There is, therefore, no way to calculate a
finite "margin of error" for any survey and the use of these words should
be avoided.
    With pure probability samples, with 100 percent response rates, it is
possible to calculate the probability that the sampling error (but not
other sources of error) is not greater than some number. With a pure
probability sample of 1,179 adults one could say with a 95 percent
probability that the overall results have a sampling error of +/- 3
percentage points. However that does not take other sources of error into
account. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and
therefore no theoretical sampling error can be calculated.
    These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the
National Council on Public Polls.
    J28028
    Q800-Q825

    About Harris Interactive
    Harris Interactive is the 13th largest and fastest-growing market
research firm in the world. The company provides research-driven insights
and strategic advice to help its clients make more confident decisions
which lead to measurable and enduring improvements in performance. Harris
Interactive is widely known for The Harris Poll, one of the longest
running, independent opinion polls and for pioneering online market
research methods. The company has built what could conceivably be the
world's largest panel of survey respondents, the Harris Poll Online. Harris
Interactive serves clients worldwide through its United States, Europe and
Asia offices, its wholly-owned subsidiary Novatris in France and through a
global network of independent market research firms. The service bureau,
HISB, provides its market research industry clients with mixed-mode data
collection, panel development services as well as syndicated and tracking
research consultation. More information about Harris Interactive may be
obtained at http://www.harrisinteractive.com. To become a member of the Harris
Poll Online, visit http://www.harrispollonline.com.
    The Harris Poll(R) #52, June 30, 2006
    By David Krane, Vice President, Public Affairs and Policy Research, Harris
Interactive(R)

    Press Contact:

    Jennifer Cummings
    Harris Interactive
    585-214-7720


SOURCE Harris Interactive




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    CONTACT:
    Jennifer Cummings of Harris Interactive,
    +1-585-214-7720