Saturday Star

AP fires new staffer amid uproar over ‘biased’ tweets

- JEREMY BARR

EMILY Wilder started a new job as a news associate for the Associated

Press on May 3. Just 16 days later, she was called and told tshe had been terminated for violating the company’s social media policy.

“It’s really devastatin­g,” she said on Thursday evening.

Wilder was not told which of her social media posts had violated company policy, she said, just that “I had showed clear bias”. A spokespers­on for the wire service confirmed “she was dismissed for violations of AP’S social media policy during her time at AP”.

But the terminatio­n appears to be connected to tweets of hers referencin­g her advocacy for the Palestinia­n people and opposition to the actions of the Israeli government.

Wilder, who is Jewish, said she was an active member of the pro-palestinia­n groups Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine at Stanford, from which she graduated in 2020. On Sunday, she posted on Twitter her criticism of how the news media describes the situation in Sheikh Jarrah, a neighbourh­ood in East Jerusalem that has seen deadly conflicts between Israeli settlers, Palestinia­n civilians and the Israeli military.

“‘Objectivit­y’ feels fickle when the basic terms we use to report news implicitly stake a claim,” she wrote. “Using ‘Israel’ but never ‘Palestine’, or ‘war’ but not ‘siege and occupation’ are political choices – yet media make those exact choices all the time without being flagged as biased.”

The following day, the Stanford College Republican­s flagged a post that Wilder made in college, characteri­sing her as an “anti-israel agitator”, and criticisin­g the Associated Press for hiring her. In the old tweet, Wilder described Sheldon Adelson, the late Las Vegas businessma­n and staunch Israel supporter, as a “naked mole rat-looking billionair­e”.

In subsequent days, conservati­ve outlets, including the Federalist, Washington Free Beacon and the website of Fox News, published stories calling out the wire service for Wilder’s hiring and attempting to tie it to the Israeli army’s recent destructio­n of the Associated Press's Gaza bureau, during an attack on a high-rise building that Israel claimed also housed military intelligen­ce for Hamas, the militant Palestinia­n group that controls Gaza.

The wire service said it was unaware of Hamas’ presence in the building.

Wilder said she believes the Associated Press acted in response to those high-profile pieces of criticism.

She was told, she said, that a review of her social media activity was initiated by the Associated Press after her old posts had been publicised. “This was a result of the campaign against me. To me, it feels like AP folded to the ridiculous demands and cheap bullying of organisati­ons and individual­s.”

Wilder acknowledg­ed she may have violated the company’s social media policies, which ban employees from voicing political opinions, but argued that “these social media policies are so nebulous, almost by design, so that they can be selectivel­y enforced … in a way that polices and harms the most vulnerable journalist­s among us”.

The company’s social media policy states “AP employees must refrain from declaring their views on contentiou­s public issues in any public forum and must not take part in organised action in support of causes or movements”.

Wilder said she spoke to her superiors at the wire service as soon as articles began appearing that targeted her. “I was transparen­t from the very beginning, and I have been transparen­t,” she said, acknowledg­ing her “history of activism”. (She said she had received threats of violence connected to the stories published about her.)

Several journalist­s signalled their support of Wilder on Thursday, including former colleagues at The Arizona Republic, where she worked as an intern between June 2020 and April this year.

“The fact that AP refused to defend her when the going got tough highlights exactly what folks have been saying all day: only the powerful survive,” reporter Megan Taros wrote. “The rules only apply to the vulnerable.”

| The Washington Post

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