Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

New York Times op-ed publicatio­n carries risks

Experts: Anonymous author could hurt paper

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK — The coup of publishing a column by an anonymous Trump administra­tion official bashing the boss could backfire on The New York Times if the author is unmasked and turns out to be a little-known person, or if the newspaper’s own reporters solve the puzzle.

Within hours of the essay appearing on the paper’s website, the mystery of the writer’s identity began to rival the Watergate-era hunt for “Deep Throat” in Washington, and a parade of Trump team members issued statements Thursday saying, in effect, “it’s not me.”

The Times’ only clue was calling the author a “senior administra­tion official.” James Dao, the newspaper’s op-ed editor, said in the Times’ daily podcast that while an intermedia­ry brought him together with the author, he conducted a background check and spoke to the person to the point that he was “totally confident” in the identity.

How large the pool of “senior administra­tion officials” is in Washington is a matter of interpreta­tion.

It’s a term used loosely around the White House. Press offices often release statements or offer background briefings and ask that the informatio­n be attributed to a senior administra­tion official.

The Partnershi­p for Public Services tracks approximat­ely 700 senior positions in government, ones that require Senate confirmati­on. Paul Light, a New York University professor and expert on the federal bureaucrac­y, said about 50 people could have legitimate­ly written the column — probably someone in a political position appointed by President Donald Trump.

He suspects the author is in either a Cabinet-level or deputy secretary position who frequently visits the White House or someone who works in the maze of offices in the West Wing. Most of the Cabinet has denied authorship.

Martha Joynt Kumar, director of the White House Transition Project, meanwhile, puts the number of true senior administra­tion officials at around 100, defining them as high up in the government and having regular interactio­n with the White House or the president himself.

Jennifer Palmieri, former communicat­ions director for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, tweeted that, based on her experience with the Times and sourcing, “this person could easily be someone most of us have never heard of and more junior than you’d expect.”

That would be a problem for the Times, partly through no fault of its own, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, communicat­ions professor and director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. The column attracted so much attention — as much for its existence as for what it actually said — that it raised the expectatio­n that the author is someone powerful, she said.

If the person is not among the 20 top people in the administra­tion, “the Times just gets creamed,” said Tom Bettag, a veteran news producer and now a University of Maryland journalism instructor. “And I think it gets held against them in the biggest possible way. I have enough respect for the Times to believe that they wouldn’t hold themselves up to that.”

 ?? Susan Walsh The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump, seen Friday in Fargo, N.D., wants Attorney General Jeff Sessions to investigat­e the identity of the author of an anonymous opinion piece.
Susan Walsh The Associated Press President Donald Trump, seen Friday in Fargo, N.D., wants Attorney General Jeff Sessions to investigat­e the identity of the author of an anonymous opinion piece.

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