Abstract
The US presidential elections of 1948 and 2016 produced surprise outcomes when the predicted winners ended up losing the election. Using image repair theory, this article explains the strategies the media used to repair their image in light of predicting the wrong winner. Using a qualitative analysis of news coverage that immediately followed the 1948 and 2016 presidential elections, this study finds that the media utilized similar image repair strategies of offering explanations for poor information, highlighting the media’s good reporting, diminishing the harm caused by the inaccurate predictions, and justifying the inaccurate predictions of both elections. However, the media responses in 1948 and 2016 differed greatly in tone and in the utilization of a new attack strategy to deflect criticism of the media itself. These strategies suggest that media use of image restoration is limited because of the unique societal expectations placed on the press, and that the media’s inaccurate 2016 predictions and subsequent attack strategies may have been contributed to the heightened criticism of mainstream news.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Cayce Myers
Cayce Myers, PhD, LLM., JD, APR is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at Virginia Tech, 181 Turner Street NW, 115 Shanks Hall (Mail Code 0311), Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA.
Karen Russell
Karen Russell is the Jim Kennedy New Media Professor and an Associate Professor in the Department of Advertising and Public Relations at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Georgia, 120 Hooper Street, Athens, GA 30602, USA.