The Times gets used, anonymously

A few years ago The New York Times issued some basic rules governing its use of off-the-record comments. Here is a summary taken from a Public Editor column published in 2009. The policy, he wrote, “says anonymous sources should be used only as ‘a last resort when the story is of compelling public interest and the information is not available any other way’ and that anonymous sources should not be allowed to issue “personal or partisan attacks from behind a mask of anonymity.” The policy also “says rote references to sources who ‘insisted on anonymity’ or ‘demanded anonymity’ should be avoided because they ‘offer the reader no help and make our decisions appear automatic.'”

So what to make of today’s story about Democratic criticism of the administration’s handling of the Bowe Bergdahl case? The story includes a quotation from an unnamed Democratic Senator who, the Times says, “asked not to be named in talking candidly about internal party views of the White House” and implies that there are a number of others who have the same critiques. The quotation itself — “We have to quit putting out fires” — is pretty benign, but the larger story leaves the impression that there is a full-on Democratic revolt underway. This is despite the story offering little evidence that there is widespread dissatisfaction.

I don’t write this to defend the president — if he has lost Senate Democrats that is his own fault. I write this to point out that the Times’ story doesn’t actually demonstrate what it purports to demonstrate, that the Bergdahl case has “renewed frustration among congressional Democrats about the administration’s relations with its allies on Capitol Hill, and prompted criticism that the White House failed to prepare the lawmakers for the politically explosive case.”

The problem is the sourcing. It hangs the story on three things: a quotation from a single unnamed source, a vague reference to others, and the assumption that the Times’ cozy relationship with lawmakers means it has information that we have to take on the Times’ word. The Times, after all, is the big kid on the block and knows everyone, so when Times reporters say there is “renewed frustration” it must be true.

The problem is that readers need more — and our elected officials should be held to higher standards. There are 100 Senators — 53 of them Democrats — who were elected to do the public’s business. If they have a problem with the president or party leadership, we expect them to speak up and to do so on the record — unless there is a very compelling reason not to do so.

This brings me back to the Times’ rules on unnamed sources — which are pretty solid, in my book. The Times, as I said before, requires that the unnamed source be used as “a last resort when the story is of compelling public interest and the information is not available any other way” and that they not be allowed to make personal or partisan attacks. It also requires that a full accounting be provided of why the source is allowed to speak anonymously. In this case, the unnamed Democrat says he needs anonymity to speak candidly. Really? Remember, there are 53 Democrats in the U.S. Senate who are perfectly willing to speak publicly against Democratic leadership and the White House when it suits them politically. The only difference here is the lack of obvious political benefit. Hiding behind the “mask of anonymity” allows the senator to show that Senate Democrats are distancing themselves from the president without having to actually do so publicly. It is both cowardly and manipulative on the part of the senator. As for the Times, it allowed itself to be used as a pawn in Washington’s political chess game.

I’ll end this with a comment from the columnist Daniel Froomkin, who put it bluntly on his Facebook page earlier today:

Send me an e-mail.

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Author: hankkalet

Hank Kalet is a poet and freelance journalist. He is the economic needs reporter for NJ Spotlight, teaches journalism at Rutgers University and writing at Middlesex County College and Brookdale Community College. He writes a semi-monthly column for the Progressive Populist. He is a lifelong fan of the New York Mets and New York Knicks, drinks too much coffee and attends as many Bruce Springsteen concerts as his meager finances will allow. He lives in South Brunswick with his wife Annie.

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