Despite the evocativeness of the Benghazi claims, it was the IRS analogy that was more common. Fifteen times, guests or the host of the four major political talk shows brought up the IRS' targeting of Tea Party groups as an analogy to the Fort Lee traffic problems, compared to seven mentions of Benghazi (more than half on Fox) and 10 mentions of "Fort Lee" itself.



Transcripts: Fox News, NBC News, ABC News, CBS News.

It wasn't only the talk shows that linked the incidents in Fort Lee to the IRS. In the New York Post, John Podhoretz suggested that the IRS scandal was ignored by the media while Christie's problems were embraced because the media is Democratic. (This argument was also made by no less esteemed a personality than Rush Limbaugh.)

Christie belongs to one political party. Obama belongs to the other. You know which ones they belong to. And you know which ones the people at the three networks belong to, too: In surveys going back decades, anywhere from 80% to 90% of Washington’s journalists say they vote Democratic.

He goes on from there: the media is friends with Obama, they're married to "Obamans," they're willing to ignore "tush-covering cover-up." (Imagine typing that!) All this anger dangling from the rhetorical thread that there's less coverage of the IRS than Christie.

About that! Podhoretz relied on "research" from the conservative Media Research ("Research") Center showing that two days of TV coverage last week offered 44-times as much coverage as the last six months of the IRS scandal. ("Scandal.") It's a nifty bit of computation, complete with a giant graph, showing those 88 mentions of Christie and only two discussions of the IRS targeting. Rove made this point, too: "[T]he amount of attention paid to Chris Christie makes the coverage of Benghazi, at the same time, the coverage of the IRS, pale in significance."

Of course, the Media Research Center only went back six months. Had it gone back eight months — to the actual revelation of the IRS' targeting — the figures would be very different. In May and June of 2013, the IRS situation was mentioned online about 135,000 times. About 1,000 of those hits were from FoxNews.com.

As for Podhoretz's argument that the media is biased for Democrats, the line-up of Sunday talk show participants offers a contrasting picture. In 2013, 10 of the 13 guests with more than 10 appearances were Republican.

This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire.