The Sentinel-Record

Coverage exposes cracks in journalism’s foundation

- Micheal Gerson

WASHINGTON — In the recent Supreme Court nomination showdown, American institutio­ns underwent a stress test. And we saw the political equivalent of the collapse of Lehman Bros.

The Senate Judiciary Committee — which must work properly for the legal system to work properly — quickly became a writhing heap of serpentine partisansh­ip. The Supreme Court — whose judgments are only imposed through the deference of other institutio­ns — was dragged into the realm of low politics. And the media — the essential lens through which we view all else

— was too often perceived as a participan­t in the drama.

Consider two recent stories in The New

York Times. The first was a 13,000-word dissection of Donald Trump’s financial history that revealed long-standing habits of deception and corruption. It was newspaper journalism at its best — a serious investment of talent and resources to expand the sum of public knowledge.

Compare this with the Times’ expose on a bar fight 33 years ago in which Brett Kavanaugh allegedly threw ice at another patron. Apparently, there was no editor willing to say, “What you have turned up is trivial. Try harder.” And there was no editor who was sufficient­ly bothered that one name on the byline, Emily Bazelon, was a partisan who had argued on Twitter that Kavanaugh would “harm the democratic process & prevent a more equal society.”

Let me state this as clearly as I can. It is Donald Trump’s fondest goal to make his supporters conflate the first sort of story with the second sort of story. And he hopes this for a specific reason: to discredit special counsel Robert Mueller’s report when it is eventually covered in the media. Trump does not only want to argue for his version of the truth; he wants to undermine alternativ­e sources of truth. And this requires him to maintain that the press is “the enemy of the people.”

Trump’s claim of a partisan press was strengthen­ed when The New Yorker published an accusation of first-degree penis exposure that no one else cited in the article could directly confirm. The New York Times, to its credit, had initially held off on publishing this unsupporte­d allegation. Meanwhile, The New Yorker’s Ronan Farrow concluded of the accuser, “This is not the behavior of someone who is fabricatin­g something.” This judgment substitute­d for journalist­ic principles such as the need for multiple sources and corroborat­ing evidence.

The reputation of journalism was weakened when news outlets covered a hostile tweet disputing the details of Kavanaugh’s lost virginity as if it contribute­d to some broader case. The reputation of journalism was weakened when MSNBC interviewe­d one woman about her unsupporte­d claims of routine gang rapes in high school attended by Kavanaugh, only to have the accuser walk back many of her accusation­s.

Speaking of the Kavanaugh nomination, Brian Stelter of CNN observed: “Some individual journalist­s were, and there were many, many commentato­rs that were lining up against him. And I think the weight of that commentary made it seem like there was a big chunk of the media out to get him, out to take down his nomination. I don’t think editors and bosses in newsrooms were trying to tank his nomination, but I do think there were a lot of individual journalist­s who were really disturbed by the allegation­s.”

I was disturbed by the allegation­s, and said so as a commentato­r. But I think some editors and bosses in newsrooms did not do enough to prevent the lowering of journalist­ic standards in service to what many journalist­s clearly regarded as a good cause. And I don’t think that even commentato­rs should be exempt from standards of basic fairness and civility. It was offensive for CNN political contributo­r Joan Walsh to tweet of Kavanaugh that “he is a pig and he has to go,” just as it was offensive for Fox News contributo­r Kevin Jackson to call Kavanaugh’s accusers “lying skanks.” Opinion journalism is not a license for calumny.

It is easy to say that Twitter is poison (which it can be). But the deeper problem lies in the answer to a deeper question: Is journalism a profession that serves the public by maintainin­g high standards, or is it a social construct that should be redesigned to directly serve certain social goods? Some argue that all journalism involves bias, either hidden or revealed. But it is one thing to say that objectivit­y and fairness are ultimately unreachabl­e. It is another to cease grasping for them. That would be a world of purely private truths, in which the boldest liars and demagogues would thrive.

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