Have the 839 GOP debate questions reflected the ‘citizens agenda’?

Jay Rosen:

By studying the 20 Republican presidential debates of this election season, we can better see if the questions being asked correspond with the issues voters actually care about

Wait! Before you answer, you may want to know what the journalists who have moderated these debates have chosen to ask about so far. We can tell you because we, NYU’s Studio 20, have studied it. There have been 20 debates among the Republican candidates since the first one last May. Some 839 unique questions have been put to the men (and one woman) who would be president. Here’s how they broke down.

So this is what the press thought the candidates should be talking about as they competed for votes in the early stages of the 2012 election: two questions were about climate change. Two were asked about Occupy Wall Street. Four made any reference to the Arab spring. Twelve were about education. If you wanted to know about abortion and gay rights, the candidates were asked about those things 46 times, or 5% of the total. Interested in campaign strategy and the way the candidates responded to each other’s negative ads? That was asked about 113 times (13% of the total).

But a whole lot more was almost never asked about. Small business got one question. Women’s rights (beyond the abortion battle) got one question. How to prevent another crash like the one in 2008: one question. Super Pacs, a huge factor in the 2012 campaign, were asked about twice.