By Deborah Howell
The Washington Post
Published: 11/12/2006
Excerpt:
Reader R.K. "Dick" Fazzone of Potomac taunted me recently: "Deborah,
every day, The Post continues to practice news journalism with a
liberal political bias without comment from you, The Post's ombudsman."
Okay, Dick, here I go into the lion's den.
During my first six
months here, I heard more from liberal Democrats who complained that
The Post was going easy on the Bush administration. In the past six
months, it has shifted to Republicans claiming bias. Several readers
also have mentioned remarks by former Post political reporter Tom Edsall, who in September said on
a conservative talk show that most journalists he knew were liberal. ...
... Tom Rosenstiel, a former reporter who directs the Project for Excellence in Journalism, said, "I think there is a lot of liberal bias, and it's a serious
problem -- much more than journalists realize. But the suspicion of
many conservatives that journalists are consciously trying to help
liberals or push a liberal agenda is manifestly not true. Most
journalists want to be independent and have an ingrained
professionalism. Journalists tend to think the liberal issue is phony,
because they're trying to be fair. But unfairness exists, and too often
it may not be perceived or detected." ...
...
Bob Steele, a journalism ethics scholar at The Poynter Institute, thinks he's meeting more journalists with conservative views than in
the past. He thinks it's "a red herring" to define any journalist in
stark political terms and said "the best of newspapers have a
check-and-balance system that minimizes the influence of personal
belief."
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