Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Times sticks to story

- JAY AMBROSE Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service.

The New York Times recently did a piece on a conservati­ve activist spreading snippets of false news boosting President Donald Trump. Some got picked up by Internet sites and even by Fox News and radio host Rush Limbaugh. Here’s the question. When is the Times going to worry about its own incessant liberal bias and a major story of its making that was “almost entirely wrong?”

The quoted phrase comes from testimony by former FBI Director James Comey before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. He was testifying under oath about a Times article based on four anonymous sources crucifying Trump’s campaign team on a cross of what now seem to have been errors.

The Times said intercepte­d phone calls showed “Trump associates had repeated contacts with Russian intelligen­ce officials” in 2015. Relying on sources who are or had been government officials and still could be guilty of felonies for leaking classified informatio­n, the story played a fundamenta­lly important role in giving credence to the idea that the Trump campaign worked secretly with Russians in in the hacking of Hillary Clinton campaign computers with the intent of throwing the election to Trump.

The story did get one thing right. It said no evidence of conspiracy had been found. Among the many things it got wrong was repeating the phony tale that Trump once said he hoped the Russians had stolen Clinton’s emails.

He did say that if they had them, they should share them. But he did this in the context of the hacking only transpirin­g because President Barack Obama was a weak leader. He was not talking about campaign emails, but emails on a personal server when Clinton was secretary of state. They could have shown Clinton guilty of obstructio­n of justice even though she said they were just about such things as yoga and grandkids — no big deal.

The Times is sticking by its story as well as with its overreachi­ng enthusiasm for anonymous sources and printing classified informatio­n. It’s hard to imagine Comey lying under oath or being wrong in basic understand­ings. Anonymous sources, while sometimes necessary, cost news outlets credibilit­y because their reliabilit­y is less sure than when going on the record. Printing classified informatio­n abets crime and can put individual­s and the public good at risk, but the Times frequently puts its own judgment ahead of officials more in the know, sometimes maybe being right. And sometimes not.

The Russian meddling is hardly welcome but likely made next to no difference in the election outcome, while today’s exaggerate­d, Trump-directed fury about Russia has more to do with wanting to get rid of him no matter what than wanting to preserve democratic norms.

The Times’ own culpabilit­y, which includes writing straight news stories as if they were editorials, was made evident on its front page the day after Comey’s testimony. The paper then treated something perfectly legal as surely the end of Trump’s world. Comey testified that Trump said he hoped the FBI would quit investigat­ing his national security adviser, viewing his request as improper. But presidents have the authority to begin and end investigat­ions and have done so repeatedly, sometimes using their authority in various ways to the advantage of friends.

The Times actually went so far in a front-page story as to ponder the possibilit­y of a criminal prosecutio­n against Trump, such being the lopsidedne­ss of the times.

A Times public editor recently made so bold as to wonder about some reportoria­l political excesses in emails and other matters, and now she has been fired with no replacemen­ts scheduled. The unchalleng­eable Times remains a good newspaper in some respects but it has abandoned the greatness of its past.

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