Is Fox News shifting to the Left?
Conservatives are grumbling that Fox isn't speaking their language anymore. Did Fox chief Roger Ailes take his "course correction" too far?
Some prominent conservatives are spurning Fox, saying last year's shift toward the center, spearheaded by CEO Roger Ailes, is more like a shift to the left. Photo: Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images SEE ALL 32 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: Wash. Monthly, Amer. Prospect, PoliticOlogy
Fox News chief Roger Ailes ordered a "course correction" at the network last year, parting ways with Glenn Beck and telling the rest of Fox's conservative talent to tamp down the rhetorical heat and extol the Tea Party movement less avidly. Conservatives aren't loving the change, says Keach Hagey in Politico, and some are tuning out. Fox's apparent shift toward the center was widely discussed and lamented at last weekend's Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). "I've gone from all Fox to no Fox, and replaced it with CNN, which I think right now is giving me a much fairer analysis of what's going on," right-wing Virginia talk radio gabber John Fredericks tells Politico. Is Fox News really veering leftward?
I guess "shift to the Left" is relative: What proof did Fredericks offer of this leftward lurch, asks Ed Kilgore in Washington Monthly. He's apparently upset — "seriously" — that Karl Rove (despite his supporting Romney) and Sean Hannity (allied to the Republican establishment) seem to be getting extra airtime. Other right-wing critics are griping over Beck's ouster. In other words, "any 'shift to the left' makes sense only as a relative term for any fixed object that is part of a Republican Party apparatus moving rapidly to the right."
"Fox's 'Shift to the Left'"
The shift is real, and politically savvy: The disgruntled conservatives are right about Fox's "subtle but real" move toward the center, says Paul Waldman in The American Prospect. But the "fevered conspiracy theories" they're employing to explain the shift are amusingly off base. Fox isn't caving to George Soros or going soft; it's moving "in the direction that Roger Ailes believes is the most advantageous for the GOP." In 2010, that was fueling the Tea Party. But to win a presidential race, you aim for the middle.
"Fox News, now part of the liberal media"
This is about business, and Fox isn't alone: Fox is, above all else, a very successful business, and good businesses adapt, says Evan McMurry in PoliticOlogy. Fox and its liberal counterpart, MSNBC, have both tapped "their respective extremes for all they're worth," and both are moving toward the center in an effort to grow their stagnating audience numbers. So Fox ditches Beck, and MSNBC loses Keith Olbermann, and "the effect overall can't help but be good" for each side — if, that is, the polarized audiences they helped create go along.
"Fox News changes anger Tea Party audience"
Fox News' Tina Fey-Sarah Palin mixup
The cable news network that employs the former Alaska governor accidentally subs in a photo of the comedienne imitating Palin

The video: Sarah Palin may work for Fox News as an on-air consultant, but that doesn't mean the studio staff knows what she looks like. On Sunday, Fox plugged a report that Palin was "50-50" on entering the race for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination with... More
Who should succeed Glenn Beck?
Some commentators say Megyn Kelly is the best bet to replace the mercurial Fox News host. But Kelly's is hardly the only name being bandied about

There are many questions about Glenn Beck's upcoming departure from Fox News' 5 p.m. timeslot, not the least of which is, Who will replace him? Never one to shy away from offering an opinion, Beck, appearing on Andrew Napolitano's Fox Business Network program,... More
Why is Democrat Evan Bayh joining Fox News?
The moderate former Democratic senator will provide political commentary for Fox. Is Bayh betraying Democrats, or just making a smart business decision?

When Indiana Democrat Evan Bayh announced he was giving up his Senate seat last year, he said he could "best contribute to society in another way," perhaps leading a charitable endeavor, or guiding a university. Instead, he's signed on to provide political commentary... More
Why didn't Fox suspend Palin and Huckabee too?
Fox News benches Newt Gingrich until he decides if he's running for president or not. Does this mean that his fellow Fox contributors Sarah Palin and Mike Huckabee aren't running?

Fox News suspended the contracts of probable 2012 GOP presidential candidates Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum on Wednesday, giving them until May 1 to either decline to run or forfeit their Fox paychecks. Critics have long argued that presidential aspirants unfairly... More
Did Fox News mislead viewers on Wisconsin?
On Bill O'Reilly's show, a discussion of violence at the Madison protests is accompanied by video shot in California

During a segment about the Wisconsin protests this week, Fox News host Bill O'Reilly spoke to correspondent Mike Tobin about possible intimidation tactics employed by pro-union forces. Fox simultaneously ran footage labelled "union protests" of an angry confrontation... More


































Follow Us: