Economy, Debate Drive News Narrative


From the halls of the Capitol to the campus of Ole Miss, it was a week of high drama in the campaign. For the second week in a row, what has been called the gravest economic crisis since the Depression generated more coverage than the election. It filled 40% of the time studied on television and radio and space in print and online for Sept. 22-28, according to the News Coverage Index from the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. And it further raised the possibility that the economy may frame the coming days of the election narrative. The campaign was the No. 2 story of the week, filling 33% of the newshole. Within the campaign coverage itself, or PEJ's Campaign Coverage Index, the No. 1 storyline last week, at 24%, was the candidates' response to the situation. Right behind it, at 23% of the campaign newshole, was the narrative that stemmed from John McCain's decision to suspend campaigning. The third-biggest storyline, at 7%, concerned the debate itself and the media post-mortems.

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