Research/Study
STUDY: How DeSantis, Ramaswamy, and Haley failed to puncture Trump's dominance in right-wing cable attention
From June-October, Trump live events and interviews got more than twice as much right-wing cable airtime as those of DeSantis, Ramaswamy, and Haley combined
Published
This is the second in a series of data-focused articles on how former President Donald Trump has maintained a massive lead in the Republican presidential primary with the unwavering backing of the right-wing media machine. Read the first article here.
The ebb and flow of the Republican presidential primary so far this year has played out similarly to each candidate’s coverage from conservative propaganda outlets. Various alternatives to former President Donald Trump have briefly emerged from the pack — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley — only to inevitably lose momentum. And at all times, none of them have been even close to capturing the amount of right-wing cable news attention that Trump consistently enjoys.
According to Media Matters’ internal databases, Ramaswamy actually led DeSantis and Haley in candidate airtime — a figure representing all of a candidate’s combined interviews, live campaign event coverage, and paid programming — across Fox News, Newsmax, and One America News Network for most of the summer and early fall, a potential indictment of how badly the DeSantis campaign managed to miss its high expectations.
Haley, meanwhile, has had a relatively consistent share of airtime -- though it's been slowly declining over the course of the year. Nonetheless, she has emerged as a competitor to DeSantis, who is still widely seen as the No. 2 contender in the GOP contest after Ramaswamy stumbled out of the summer.