
Government is not a campaign. It is not a debate stage. It is not a scoreboard. But a significant share of public affairs coverage still treats governance as though the main question is who is up, who is down, who landed a hit, and who won the week.
That approach is easy to package. It is also a distortion of how public life actually works.
When coverage adopts a horse-race frame, performance gets measured by attention rather than by administration. The incentive is to track momentum, conflict, and optics. What gets pushed aside is implementation — staffing decisions, regulatory follow-through, procurement timelines, maintenance of core systems, the slow unglamorous work that determines what people actually experience from their government.
A politician can appear strong in the news cycle while the institution beneath them is functioning poorly. A local government can look boring while actually operating with unusual competence. A policy can be debated for months as a political battlefield and then covered only briefly as a governing challenge once implementation begins.
The public ends up with a vivid sense of conflict and a weak sense of consequence.
Why This Framing Survives
Because it is fast and legible. It creates winners and losers. It makes politics feel like something you can follow. And it allows coverage to move around visible personalities rather than invisible systems.
But systems are where governance becomes real. The permit office. The inspector general. The benefits division. The rulemaking process. The maintenance backlog no one photographed. None of that fits neatly into a “who’s winning?” frame — yet those are often the places where the public most directly feels what government is or is not doing.
| Worth noting: Despite years of industry criticism, horse-race coverage of elections has grown more common over time, not less — driven largely by the rise in public opinion polling that gives journalists a constant stream of quantifiable “who’s winning” data. A separate 2025 University of Kansas study found that outlets that received engagement journalism training reduced horse-race framing from 27% of stories to 13% — suggesting the pattern is a choice, not an inevitability. Journalists’ Resource, 2023 |
A More Useful Set of Questions
Instead of asking who controlled the message this week, ask what is being built, funded, delayed, or quietly weakened. Ask who is responsible for implementation once the press conference ends. Ask whether the institution can actually carry out what was promised, and what the public will be experiencing six months from now.
That is slower coverage. It requires more source development, more patience, and more tolerance for stories without obvious antagonists. It is also considerably more useful.
One test worth applying: if a story can be rewritten with the names removed and still remain important, it is probably about governance. If it collapses the moment the personalities disappear, it was mostly theater.
The horse-race model is well-suited to campaigns. For public administration it is a poor fit. When coverage mistakes movement for performance, the public gets a distorted picture of what power is actually doing. The deeper cost is not just misinformation — it is a public that has been trained to evaluate governance by the wrong criteria, and institutions that have learned to perform accordingly.
Sources: Journalists’s Resource: Horse Race Reporting Research Roundup | University of Kansas: Engagement Journalism Study, 2025 | Reuters Institute Digital News Report



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