I should clarify that I despise newsmedia. The moment it became a ratings-driven enterprise, reporting direct facts went out the window. Now everything seems like there's a spin on it, and that's what I object to about things like this. Yeah, what happened is shitty, lying about it as shitty, but presenting the story with stated lies of omission and slant is still lying from the media and still shitty.
That was the point I was trying to make about the voting and job ability post a couple pages ago. Saying "I don't want someone who would do things like that to be in a position of power" is what I would call a positive, self-affirming statement on the situation.
Saying "He's a liar and that makes him unable to do his job" is different. This is a direct attack on him, which carries very different emotional connotations. It's not an affirmation of what we (the general we) believe, but an aggressive mindset that puts people who speak/feel/read it into attack mode.
As a tie-in with the thought processing video thread from a couple days ago, the negative is always stronger, so the media has a stronger negative bent to make the impression last. If that, coincidentally, means less rational attention paid to the details, it's less fact checking and information they actually have to throw out there.