I get why Washington journalists respond to criticism in partisan fashion. When readers complained last week about a botched AP report, they were mostly supporters of Hillary Clinton. Naturally youâre upset, the reporter thinks. You donât like news that reflects poorly on your preferred candidate.
By now, we know that report was wrong.
It claimed that half of private individuals who met with Hillary Clinton while she was secretary of state were also donors to the Clinton Foundation. But Clinton met with hundreds of people, public and private. Worse, the AP reporters used as their villain in a story of corruption a Nobel Prize-winning economist whoâd known Clinton for more than 30 years.
This is old news, but the Washington media continues to disappoint. On NPR this morning, âMorning Editionâ host Steve Inskeep asked Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake if he shares Clintonâs view on immigration. According to Trump, Inskeep said, his opponent favors âopen bordersâ and âamnesty.â
This is an example of a statement thatâs technically accurate, but entirely misleading. And dangerous. Yes, Trump has said, time and again, that Clinton wants âopen bordersâ and âamnesty.â Itâs also true that this claim exists only the realm of fantasy. Indeed, in an interview â just yesterday â NPRâs Mara Liasson told Inskeep those claims were false.
Journalists, I believe, are beholden to the truth. If they are unwilling to pay deference to the authority of the truth, even when that deference conflicts with the professionâs other guiding principles, there isnât much point in being a journalist.
Again, I understand why reporters respond to criticisms in partisan fashion. Itâs natural. Indeed, I was sympathetic to Business Insiderâs Josh Barro when he quipped on Twitter that Clinton supporters are among the whiniest supporters.
But in this case, vocal complaints by Clinton supporters are not empty. They are based on something. They are based on demonstrable instances of journalistic malfeasance.
Journalists of Steve Inskeepâs high caliber say they privilege getting the facts right, as they should. But holding them accountable to those standards can be nearly impossible.
I got in touch with Inskeep on Twitter this morning to make him aware of his mistake. (I do not subscribe to the childish claim, as Glenn Greenwald does, that the American media is in the tank for one or the other candidate). It was an honest mistake. So I asked: Will you be offering a clarification?
I didnât expect Inskeep to reply. When he did, it was not a good faith exchange between journalists about the concrete facts of the matter. He offered instead a series of bewildering deflections, obfuscations, and, to be frank, playing dumb.
Here is some what he said:
âThe recording shows me noting that Trump claims his âopponentsâ favor âopen borders.â I then ask Flake, a reformer, if he does.â
(Yes, we know this.)
âNowhere was a false charge simply repeated unchecked.â
(Actually, thatâs precisely what you did. You said as much.)
âDoesnât asking a question allow someone to state their true position? Should we never ask?â
(Flakeâs position is beside the point. The question was based on an NPR-reported falsehood. How about a clarification?)
This is Hannityâs technique interviewing Trump, whom he backs. But as a journalist I prefer to let Flake give evidence.
(I didnât know what to say. The presumption here would seem to be that a politician is responsible for the truth.)
I know how it feels. I hate â just purely blindly hate â being called out for a mistake. Mistakes chip away at a journalistâs credibility. Credibility is a journalistâs lifeblood. Ideally, it would be better for the journalist never to be aware of it.
But thatâs not the world we live in. Indeed, we live in a world in which a candidate for the presidency of the United States can give a policy speech on immigration based on the fever dreams of nativist-white nationalists, and the entire media apparatus does not report that it is unadulterated racism.
We need a better media.
Weâll see if that begins with a minor clarification.