Research/Study
STUDY: Trump dominates right-wing media primary on his way to likely GOP nomination
Trump received nearly 69 hours of candidate airtime from Fox News, Newsmax, and OAN, compared to a combined 52 hours for seven of his competitors
Published
This is the third 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 and second articles here.
According to polling data, the 2024 Republican primary has not been much of an actual competition: Though the first votes are still months away, former President Donald Trump has held a dominant lead the entire time. Part of the reason is that right-wing media simply cannot quit Trump, showering him with hours upon hours of TV time, far more than any other major competitor.
According to Media Matters databases, continuing a trend from the summer, Trump has thoroughly dominated the race for candidate airtime (a figure encapsulating interviews, live campaign event coverage, and paid programming) on the three right-wing cable news networks: Fox News, Newsmax, and One America News. We examined candidates who had at least 6 hours of airtime total and got at least 5% support in at least one national poll.
Across these three networks, well over half of total candidate airtime from June through October went to Trump, who had 68 hours and 50 minutes. The next closest candidate, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, had approximately one-seventh the amount of airtime, 10 hours and 8 minutes, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis not far behind, at 9 hours and 56 minutes.
Edging out Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) by a single minute, Trump came in third on candidate airtime from Fox News -- 5 hours and 8 minutes compared to Ramaswamy’s 8 hours and 36 minutes and DeSantis’ 6 hours and 28 minutes-- the Trumpy Newsmax and OAN made up for it, granting Trump 21 hours and 59 minutes and 41 hours and 44 minutes, respectively. And even on Fox, Trump-related coverage (or lack thereof) is still resolutely defensive, undermining efforts to promote other candidates with airtime.
Trump cruised to the 2016 Republican nomination on the back of a right-wing media apparatus that was almost entirely on his side, and the data shows that, for the 2024 primary, right-wing cable news remains in Trump’s corner.