It has been a pattern since President Trump was inaugurated well over a year ago. Coverage of the White House on the “Big Three” broadcast networks — ABC, CBS and NBC — remains 91 percent negative, according to a new study by the Media Research Center, which has been tracking the phenomenon since Mr. Trump hit the campaign trail in 2016.
It was over 90 percent hostile then — and remains so now. The trend is unprecedented, according to the analysis.
The conservative press watchdog monitored nightly evening networks newscasts throughout January and February to find that anchors and correspondents uttered 10 times more negative comments about the president than positive statements. Analysts examined over 500 stories.
Out of a total of 712 evaluative comments made on the air, only 65 were positive, or 9 percent. The rest — 647 comments — were negative, amounting to 91 percent. The ongoing Russia collusion investigation was the leading topic of choice, followed by immigration issues, the recent government shutdown, and the White House response to the Parkland student shooting.
Throughout January and February, the analysts found that 63 percent of news coverage was devoted to scandals — and just 37 percent to real policy issues. “The results are essentially unchanged from the 90 percent negative coverage we documented for all of 2017, and matches the 91 percent negative coverage we tallied during the 2016 general election campaign,” said Rich Noyes, senior editor for Newsbusters.org, the analytical arm of the Media Research Center.
It's been another year since that article as well, and chances are the liberal media Trump derangement hasn't diminished a bit.
As in the recent example of Brett Baier and Sheppard Smith both trying to get "Judge Jeanine" Pirro fired, Wallace may be part of a group at Fox trying to get respect from their peers by appearing more moderate (i.e., softpedaling on liberals) under the illusion it will make them more respected in the eyes of their foaming-at-the-mouth ultra-Left liberal colleages. It will not.
Any more than moderates like McCain (2008) or Romney (2012) gained better treatment from the liberal media. These were the most centrist and across-the-aisle guys the GOP could possibly offer, and they were still treated by the media like the second coming of Hitler.