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Formation | 2020 |
---|---|
Type | 501(c)4 social welfare organization |
Location | |
Area served | United States |
Method | Advocacy |
Website | https://www.mediaanddemocracyproject.org/ |
The Media and Democracy Project (MAD), a media-focused public interest group, advocates for news reporting that supports democracy. MAD believes that the media obscures important political issues through practices such as sanewashing and horse race journalism, and that the media downplays threats to democracy in the US.[1]
MAD, a 501(c)(4) organization based in New York City, was founded in 2020. MAD describes itself as nonpartisan. The Capital Research Center describes MAD as left-of-center.[2]
In July, 2023, MAD petitioned the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to deny the broadcast license renewal application of FOX affiliate WTXF-TV in Philadelphia. The petition argued that the owners of WTXF failed to meet the minimum standards of character and the obligation to operate in the public interest required by the Communications Act of 1934, to an extent "so egregious as to shock the conscience." The petition cited as evidence the judicial record of the Dominion Voting Systems defamation lawsuit against Fox News, which found that WTXF knowingly and repeatedly aired false narratives about the 2020 presidential election.[3][4] Comments supporting the petition were filed by founding president of Fox Broadcasting Jamie Kellner;[5] former Fox commentator Bill Kristol; former FCC chair Alfred Sikes, a Republican; and former FCC commissioner Ervin Duggan, a Democrat.[6][7] Fox characterized the petition as a frivolous assault on its First Amendment rights.[8] The FCC denied the petition in January, 2025.[9][10] MAD has appealed the denial.[11]
During both the 2022[12] and 2024[1] U.S. election campaigns, MAD issued guidelines for pro-democracy reporting practices, including:
MAD performed a study of five Sunday morning news shows: “This Week” on ABC, “Face the Nation” on CBS, “Meet the Press” on NBC, “State of the Union” on CNN, and “Fox News Sunday” on Fox. They collected information on every guest who appeared on these shows in 2021.[13] They found:
MAD accuses the Trump administration of undermining freedom of the press, citing Donald Trump’s $20 billion lawsuit against CBS and President Trump’s refusal to allow the Associated Press to attend press briefings because the AP declined to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. [15][16]
MAD advocates for the PRESS Act, proposed federal legislation with bipartisan support that would make it illegal for the government to force journalists to disclose their sources or to seize journalists' materials that identify their sources. Currently, journalists are occasionally fined or jailed for refusing to disclose their sources, and their records are occasionally seized by law enforcement.[17][18][19]
MAD makes available to the public a list of over 2,000 community-focused news outlets across the U.S.[20][21] MAD is a member of the Rebuild Local News coalition[22] and is a founding member of the Prison Journalism Project.[23]