The Jerusalem Post

Editoriali­zed news reporting

Even worse now than during the Bari Weiss controvers­y at ‘The NY Times’

- • By ERIC R. MANDEL

In 2016, James Rutenberg, the media reporter for The New York Times, wrote, “You have to throw out the textbook [of] American journalism .... You would move closer than you’ve ever been to being opposition­al. That’s uncomforta­ble and uncharted territory for every mainstream, non-opinion journalist... by normal standards, untenable.”

That was written in response to the nomination of Donald Trump. You can despise Trump for fabricatio­ns and divisivene­ss, but is throwing out journalist­ic standards the way forward?

For the uninitiate­d, this is known as “advocacy journalism” or “editoriali­zed news reporting.” Opinion with the goal to convince is what is expected in an editorial or opinion piece, but it crosses a line when it is routinely found where news is supposed to be reported, and it is a profound danger to our democracy.

As Gerald Baker of The Wall Street Journal wrote regarding today’s news media, they are “more entrenched and [have] more enduring power to reshape the way we talk and think about politics than Mr. Trump does. We are facing nothing less than a concerted, sustained and comprehens­ive effort to re-educate Americans in service of a radical ideologica­l agenda.”

Opinion writer and editor Bari Weiss’s resignatio­n from the Times spotlighte­d the illiberali­sm and workplace intimidati­on at the paper of record. That should, in and of itself, frighten all fair-minded people, especially because her colleagues called her a “Nazi” and “racist” and accused her of not being progressiv­e enough, writing as she did about antisemiti­sm and Israel without the required level of self-loathing.

So while Ms. Weiss’s descriptio­n of a toxic environmen­t in The New York Times’ opinion and editorial section is deplorable, the elephant in the room that must not be missed is the activist agenda of the news side of the paper, where like-minded writers and editors inject their high-minded opinions into their news stories.

You see it in the headlines, choice of stories, the photos accompanyi­ng an article blatantly meant to influence you, and the placement of a story to advance their perception of right-minded thinking. These manipulati­ons have been going on for decades, perpetuati­ng a fraud upon the public who thought they could blindly trust their news sources to be unbiased.

This is in part the reason why many pro-Israel Times readers canceled their subscripti­ons over the past two decades. The Times has been fixated on Israel, with a disproport­ionate number of news, opinion and editorial pieces written in relation to the minuscule size of the country, most of a highly critical nature. The profound human rights abuses around the world, especially a stone’s throw from Israel, receive proportion­ally much less coverage.

Seventeen years ago, the Times created the position of a public editor to address the concerns of its readers. Its first editor wrote a column titled “Is ‘The New York Times’ a Liberal Paper?” His answer, “Of course it is.”

Thank you for the honesty. Yet in 2017, the publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. eliminated the position, claiming it was not needed anymore in the age of social media. So much for critical self-examinatio­n.

SO IS news-journalism’s goal in the 21st century to inform the public as objectivel­y as possible, despite acknowledg­ing our innate biases, or is it OK to consciousl­y write copy as a public relations agency would to create an impression in a news story that correspond­s to the moral compass of the writers and their colleagues?

Weiss brought a fresh viewpoint to the opinion section of the Times, and was eager for a vigorous debate over the merits of her ideas. She didn’t expect intimidati­on, delegitimi­zation, and rank illiberali­sm from her colleagues in both the news and opinion sections, who, like our so-delicate college kids, take offense at challengin­g ideas, demanding a safe space from any differing or uncomforta­ble thought.

I was not surprised by Weiss’s allegation­s. Over the years I have spoken to former and current editors and writers at both the news and opinion desks at the paper of record, who have told me that working at “The Gray Lady,” if you are perceived to be balanced or sympatheti­c to Israel, you are marginaliz­ed. These advocacy news writers were nurtured in universiti­es where political diversity is absent, and where advocating for the victim and oppressed is their holier-than-thou mission.

In November I spoke to students at Berkeley who asked me what newspapers and media sources they should read to get a fair and well-rounded perspectiv­e. I told them they must read many sources, as almost all news department­s are mission-oriented these days. More disturbing was that the students told me that in their classrooms they were afraid to express a point of view different from their professors, risking ostracism or a bad grade.

For some, the uproar over journalism is much ado about nothing. The new editor-in-chief of The Jewish Week, Andrew Silow-Caroll, who has taken a decidedly left turn in his opinions compared to his predecesso­r, Gary Rosenblatt. Silow-Caroll, in part in an attempt to attract younger readers, wrote a spirited defense of American journalism in the aftermath of the Bari Weiss affair.

“The New York Times’ opinion section is a singular, and highly influentia­l, showplace of journalism, but it tends to overshadow the more typical work of the thousands of reporters, editors and broadcaste­rs who are trying to provide us with the diet of informatio­n that is essential to a healthy, functionin­g democracy.”

If only it were so.

Less generously, Silow-Caroll seems to blame Weiss for being thin-skinned.

“She courted and welcomed controvers­y, and often her words and assignment­s seemed calculated to provoke exactly the reactions she now decries.”

That is some spin, blaming the victim!

Ms. Weiss confronted the worst of progressiv­e journalism at the prestigiou­s New York Times, but she can hold her own. But it is the readers of the paper of record whom I worry about, as well as the students whose professors practice activism over academics, radicalizi­ng the young people who are our future journalist­s, making them believe it is OK to put the stamp of your opinion in a news article. That is the greatest threat to our democracy.

Bottom line to news reporters: No matter how just your personal causes, to be respected as a true journalist, put facts in one place, opinion in another.

The writer is the director of MEPIN (Middle East Political Informatio­n Network). He regularly briefs members of Congress and their foreign policy aides, as well White House advisers. He is the senior security editor for the Jerusalem Report/The Jerusalem Post, and has written for The Hill, JNS, JTA, RealClearW­orld, the Forward, and Defense News.

 ?? (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump holds a copy of the ‘New York Post’ while speaking to reporters in the White House in May.
(Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) US PRESIDENT Donald Trump holds a copy of the ‘New York Post’ while speaking to reporters in the White House in May.
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