Las Vegas Review-Journal

Government paying for news

Taxpayer grants are a disturbing trend

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Imagine if President Donald Trump signed a bill providing millions of dollars to fund news organizati­ons that competed with CNN or The New York Times. There’d be widespread outrage, along with cries of “fake news.” Government-funded propaganda is something done in Russia or North Korea, not the United States. That reaction would be completely justified. Reporting the news is vital to our democratic republic, but just as important is that the government keep its hands out of newsrooms.

Recent developmen­ts in New Jersey deserve the same response. Earlier this month, Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill creating the Civic Informatio­n Consortium and giving it $5 million. Government appointees will run the nonprofit in conjunctio­n with five universiti­es, and it will give grants to groups that produce local news.

It should have been named the Pravda Informatio­n Consortium.

The path to political manipulati­on is obvious. The law allows members of one political party to have a majority on the organizati­on’s board, which will allow it to determine who gets the grants. Requiring that the grantees work with member universiti­es will also skew the applicant pool leftward. The legislatio­n even recognizes this inherent conflict and says “the grantee shall be independen­t from the influence of the state, a member university and any other grantor or contributo­r of funds or outside source.”

That sounds nice, but good luck getting another grant if you publish an exposé on a politicall­y powerful figure in New Jersey. Independen­ce from the government is critical for the integrity and credibilit­y of news organizati­ons. But when you apply for a grant from the state, you’ve already given it influence over your organizati­on. There’s a good reason why newspapers keep a wall between the news and advertisin­g department­s.

There’s a more pragmatic concern. If local newspapers are struggling, the worst thing the government can do is send in a state-subsidized competitor. News outlets have it hard enough without having to send cash to their competitio­n.

The news business is a challengin­g one. Consumer habits are changing rapidly, and many news companies are still searching for a sustainabl­e business model. The federal government’s imposition of a tariff on newsprint has been painful, especially for smaller papers. If you’re looking for a way to help newspapers, urge federal lawmakers to repeal the tariff.

But the government’s job isn’t to solve everyone’s problems. It’s to secure freedom and provide basic services. When the government starts funding the news, it makes it harder for private news companies to compete and sets a dangerous precedent.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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