As the country's most significant, influential conservative media operation, Fox News commands legions of dedicated and predominantly Republican viewers. Recently, however, GOP candidates in the upcoming presidential election have begun criticizing the network. While former President Donald Trump has long felt comfortable taking a swing at Fox, he has been joined over the past few weeks by rival Nikki Haley and, before he abandoned his campaign, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
'Really bad TV' Trump, Haley and DeSantis have been "united in a curious way" by their willingness to attack the "right-wing media megaphone," Media Matters for America's Matt Gertz reported. Haley pushed back on network host Brian Kilmeade's insinuations last week that she should drop out, telling him she doesn't "care how much you all want to coronate Donald Trump" at her expense. And before ending his campaign, DeSantis blamed "Fox News people," calling them the GOP front-runner's "praetorian guard" as his staff labeled the outlet the "opposing campaign," "full-blown Trump TV" and the "Fox News PAC."
Despite Fox's Trump bias, the network is in a "difficult position" given Trump's "willingness and ability to get Fox viewers to switch to its competitors," concluded Gertz. And Trump has recently accused Fox of "pushing for a Haley GOP nomination," according to Forbes. On his Truth Social platform, Trump blasted Fox as "one-sided" against him, which is why the "Republican base no longer cares about [the network]." He similarly attacked Fox for interviewing New Hampshire's Republican Gov. Chris Sununu, a Haley supporter, claiming that having "this loser on so much is really bad TV."
'Trying to win back Trump voters'Â Fox has made a deliberate effort to head off a repeat of the 2020 election coverage that prompted MAGA viewers to flee "in droves, heading to Newsmax & other conservative-leaning networks," former Fox anchor and onetime Trump administration official Heather Nauert claimed on X. In particular, by "already calling the night for DJT" so early in the New Hampshire primaries, the network was "trying to win back Trump voters w/ glowing, over the top coverage."
One former Republican presidential nominee thinks the problem at Fox is "more deeply rooted" in the "institution" itself — one responsible for some of the "ugly rhetoric injected into the public discourse," according to CNN's Oliver Darcy, reviewing McKay Coppins' biography of Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah). In it, Romney is described as calling Fox a "serious problem" and an "enabler" for former host Lou Dobbs' anti-immigrant screeds. |