On September 20, The Washington Examiner, one of DC’s conservative newspapers, published “The Obama You Don’t Know,” a 10-part “Special Report” drawn from a four-month investigation of President Obama’s pre-presidential narrative.
The Examiner report, which fits neatly into the GOP-friendly meme that mainstream journalists failed to “vet” Obama in 2008, got the expected pickup in conservative media circles: an advance preview on Fox News’s Special Report with Bret Baier, discussion on Michael Savage’s widely-subscribed conservative radio show, commentary on assorted right-wing blogs. Outside the conservative bubble, though, it landed with a thud. Other than a post by The Atlantic Wire’s Elspeth Reeve, who called it “an interesting look” while also gently mocking the sleepiness of some of its revelations—Time once called Obama a “rock-star professor,” but in reality his ratings among students declined over time and he didn’t hang out with law school colleagues!—it was mostly ignored.
We might have ignored it too—but, last Sunday, it ran as a 12-page supplement in The Oklahoman, the Oklahoma City daily that is also considered the paper of record in the state. (An Oklahoman reader tipped CJR off to the supplement.)
In some ways, it’s not all that shocking that the paper distributed to its readers what amounts to a partisan hit piece on Obama (more on the report’s shortcomings in a moment). The Oklahoman, which recently won three First Amendment Awards from the Society of Professional Journalists, isn’t the same paper it was in 1999, when CJR declared it “The Worst Newspaper in America,” bringing charges of racism, sexism, homophobia, stinginess, and shameless partisanship. (That article isn’t available online, but here’s a taste: “The Daily Oklahoman has become a newspaper in reverse, sucking intelligence from its readers.”) But it’s still a staunchly—and unsurprisingly, considering the community it serves—conservative paper, with an editorial page that regularly rails against the Obama administration and echoes conservative talking points.
More importantly, the paper now shares the same owner—Colorado billionaire and conservative political activist Phillip Anschutz—as The Examiner. Content sharing among Anschutz’s media properties is not uncommon: the Anschutz-owned magazine The Weekly Standard also carried the Examiner report, and The Oklahoman’s politics page regularly links to Examiner items that have no home-state connection. As CJR’s Ryan Chittum wrote last year, in the course of faulting The Oklahoman for its puff-piece coverage of its new owner, “Let’s face it: Anschutz is probably not buying a newspaper in 2011 to make money.” The expansion of Anschutz’s media portfolio, though, does make it easier to promote and share material across his properties.
For all that, it is disappointing—and a little surprising—that the report was distributed by The Oklahoman. Some of the early sections may indeed offer interesting glimpses at the difference between Obama’s upbringing and early career and the versions of those stories he, and much of the media, have told. But The Examiner’s sudden sympathy for Chicago’s lefty activists and black nationalists, several of whom are given ample space to find fault with the president, arouses suspicions that it was happy to give a megaphone to any critic it could find.
The report’s closing sections, meanwhile, offer plenty of reason not to trust what came before. In a bit of fear-mongering that feels transported in from October 2001, Obama’s oft-reported association with Chicago businessman and convicted felon Tony Rezko becomes a key bit of evidence to reveal “The Arab-American Network Behind Obama.” (Rezko emigrated in the 1970s from Syria, which is, as The Examiner helpfully tells readers, “home of strongman Bashar al-Assad.”)
And in a case of journalistic malpractice, the final chapter takes a fairly banal comment about how electoral politics works—Obama, speaking to Univision before the 2010 midterms, said this:
If Latinos sit out the election instead of saying, ‘We’re going to punish our enemies and we’re gonna reward our friends who stand with us on issues that are important to us,’ if they don’t see that kind of upsurge in voting in this election, then I think it’s going to be harder and that’s why I think it’s so important that people focus on voting on November 2.
—then snips out all the context and threads the “punish reward” bit into a narrative about Obama’s “gangster government.”
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I have watch supposed RW Journalism morph into what I call the RWZone. Sad to say facts have no place in their style any more.
#1 Posted by Ray, CJR on Fri 28 Sep 2012 at 05:33 PM
You're upset that a newspaper is reporting inconvenient facts about an authoritarian-egalitarian politician? Shocking! And how convenient, that you were blessed with "[a]nother individual at The Oklahoman, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter," and who just so happened to think exactly the way you do! Gee, did that person approach you or did you find the person in your smart phone's contacts list? Either way, you seem ironically "happy to give a megaphone to any critic [you] could find." Here's an idea: stop pretending that ANY presidential candidate who makes it past his party's nomination is beyond reproach. Chances are, those allegedly vetted candidates are paid-for liars and weather vanes who deserve hard, inconvenient interrogation and, at times, contempt. Non-stop. Anything less than constant skepticism falls on the fawning/fake-objectivity side of the fence. That also means you need to stop basing your activism on the superficial and practically phony Dem/Rep divide. Crooks and liars, all around.
#2 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Fri 28 Sep 2012 at 10:53 PM
"...an authoritarian-egalitarian politician..." That term is new to me. Please explain.
#3 Posted by Sue H, CJR on Sat 29 Sep 2012 at 07:36 PM
"'...an authoritarian-egalitarian politician...' That term is new to me. Please explain."
An authoritarian-egalitarian is willing to use authoritarian means to achieve egalitarian ends. (The word politician in this case is a redundancy, as the authoritarian-egalitarian label fits almost every politician.) Example of federal-govt authoritarian-egalitarianism: the "war on [certain] drugs."
#4 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Sat 29 Sep 2012 at 09:43 PM
Amazing I read the defense of a conservative newspaper article by reader Ray)..And after venting his wrath upon you ,in the end he carefully calls all Republican and Democrat politicians.. Theives and liars .I now believe a subtle but growing plan of reverse phsycology on the conservative right is being put in play. Ray says they are all bad but read between the lines and it is basically saying Romney is not as bad as Obama.IE he is the best choice for Pres.In an email and a conversation with two golfing buddys who are as conservative republican as you can get,instead of the usual OBAMA BASHING I have listened to since the day he was elected up to and including the birth certificate issue (( which I thought was put to bed but they insist it is a fake),the one friend says he is not that happy with Romney and the other who has e-mailed me every peice of" Obama is Satan ", trash news for four years sends me an email of Romney's speech gaffs. Both incedents left me somewhat mystified as I would have taken a bet from anyone but them for any amount that no way one let alone both of them would even think anything bad let alone intone a Republican candidate was less than the perfect choice.for any political position let alone president I thought this over and the one phrase that came to mind is "A Leopard can never change it's spots". Sure enough in a later e-mail he sends the Glen Beck show where he basically appologizes to Romney for his speech gaffs and proceeeds to tell the story of his anonomuse gift of milk to the VA spanning years, and Glen"s henchmen manage to toss in Obama's callousness in not taking care of two poor relatives. So Romney gives to the masses and Obama is a family hater so how can he care for you? Both bad but one worse than the other so vote Romney. Have to admit what a ploy. I am not saying Obama has done a great job but who could have done any better. Economys don't. turn around without help.Where would Clinton have been without the computer revolution. Well there is no new super tech to bail the country out at this moment but I have seen signs that things are changing. Friends that were out of work are back at it again making decent money. Yes friends! But mostly blue collar
It is a very small sample but it is in my world. Who gets the credit? With thirty days to go before election i believe this carrot before stick ploy is going to get very large..Romney's not great but much better than Obama. Might be good enough to swing the poor and hopeless vote who just don't feel they can wait any longer for things to turn around. I don't think they understand that under Romney their needs will will never be addressed. Not that anyone cares
james
#5 Posted by james deal, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 11:25 AM
Appologies to Ray; bad eyes ,meant to address Dan's comment' And don't get miffed at me Danit is just political differences, My conservative friends are MY FRIENDS. I have done for them as they have done for me.Politics are a sore subject between us but rarely take up more than five min in the five hours I usually spend with them at the golf course, (.PUBLIC GOLF COURSE), not private
james
#6 Posted by james deal, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 11:36 AM
Why did CJR take down the 1999 take down of the Daily Oklahoman? It was available at http://backissues.cjrarchives.org/year/99/1/worst.asp until fairly recently.
#7 Posted by Brian Dell, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 01:58 PM
The thing you have to understand is that America has one and a half conservative parties. These are the folks who bring home the campaign contribution bacon. Liberals may make up half the nation, but they only have-at best- a third of the political representation. A vote for the Democratic Party is not a vote for liberalism, it's a vote for something else - a third way.
So what you need to do in this case is vote for the lesser evil in the short term and
Vote for the candidates, not for the party. You have to get involved in the primary process and the local political process so that less people like Ben Nelson and Evan Bayh and more people like Elizabeth Warren and Russ Feingold get to campaign. Come election time, it's too late to change the choice between the neo-liberal and the neo-conservative - 'neo-populist' just ain't on the ballot.
Unfortunately, the political process does not often reward the altruistic and the ideal. Money and patronage makes the compromised candidates' campaigns easy, they're bought and easily assembled by professionals. If you want to be represented by someone who represents you, you will have to work for it. You will have to build it. The conservatives knew this and put their churches to work in building the social conservative Republican Party. If you want an alternative to Ayn Rand for Jesus conservatives and corporate centrist "we're a little better than they are" neo-liberals, you're going to have to build that Democratic Party. And it won't be easy, some people hate the new deal liberalism of the 30's claiming it's outdated and big and unwieldy and offensive to all their donors.
As Roosevelt put it, welcome their hatred. You can either fight for a better America or wave it farewell, but you can't mourn its taking if you don't bother to fight for it. Democracy requires an active citizendry. It is your duty to fix the broken nation. Shirk that duty and you'll get the country you deserve.
Fight! Because really, don't you deserve better?
#8 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 02:52 PM
From both parties, you certainly deserve better than this.
#9 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 02:58 PM
James,
Any fact-based story that casts doubt on the efficacy of govt policy, or questions the honesty or motives of a powerful politician, is well-founded journalism in my book. In other words, a free and independent press should always treat powerful govt officials as if they're out to get you; then go from there. Always assume a politician is lying or trying to defraud you, and that his plan is a boondoggle or scam; then go from there. "Innocent until proven guilty" is for private individuals, not governments and political cabals. Govt action is, always and everywhere, coercive. Coercive regimes require lies and aggression to perpetuate and grow. Innocent individuals, and individuals w/o untoward intentions, do not make it to the top of said regimes. News media must keep said individuals, their cabals, and their plans under fire of a sun-pierced magnifying glass. Always. Now, notice I didn't use the terms Democrat, Republican, liberal, or conservative. That's because it's not left versus right; it's the State versus you.
Thimbles,
Delusional "far-right conservatives" would argue the same thing you have, only from their ideological perspective. (Most of today's conservatives are more liberal than Jimmy Carter, and so on.) Keep believing that some superficial political agenda will cure root-level, philosophical maladies. Keep rallying for more of the same thing that brought us where we are today. "Democracy" etc.
#10 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 08:03 PM
Okay, me and Dan are going to have a pow wow.
"In other words, a free and independent press should always treat powerful govt officials as if they're out to get you; then go from there."
Yes, the press should always be skeptical of the powerful, always be skeptical of everything really. We are not just trying to tell a story, we're trying to tell history. It's not an easy job.
""Innocent until proven guilty" is for private individuals"
Bullshit. 'Innocent until proven guilty' is the attitude one takes towards state mandated punishment. You don't use the powers of the state unless the state can prove its merit beyond reasonable doubt. You don't use that for your reporting, during the process of discovery. Your statement against the representatives of government - against the agents of an elected democracy - "Always assume a politician is lying or trying to defraud you, and that his plan is a boondoggle or scam; then go from there." is true. But that statement applies to every situation, every institution which gives one entity power over another. Power corrupts and one must be skeptical of every instrument of power. Libertarians fail because libertarians have a romantic view of individuals - it's not the individual who's corruptible, it's the collective they say. It absolves private power of wrongdoing and responsibility. The public must be distrusted but the private must be held innocent and truthful unless by chance they are proved guilty.
Distrust all power. Verify all words before claiming them to be knowledge. Everyone lies, everyone errs. Treat every account as suspect since they have all emerged from the fallible work that human. There is no special category for government human nor private 'job creator' human.
"Coercive regimes require lies and aggression to perpetuate and grow. Innocent individuals, and individuals w/o untoward intentions, do not make it to the top of said regimes."
Exactly.
No institution, not government, not corporate, not even journalistic is pure. We manage fault through transparency and vigilance, we cannot eliminate it. Government is a clumsy, flawed instrument, but within a democracy it is the only real instrument of power which the public can use. Like the old NRA argument goes, it is the individuals who operate government who kill people, not the government itself. If you can justify the existence of a gun as an instrument for the greater good, than government too can be used for good or ill.
And, unfortunately, conservatives prefer to use it for ill (or to serve the good of the saintly innocent private 'job creator', praised be he). That's because they live in a fundamentally different universe than that which we call 'real'.
"(Most of today's conservatives are more liberal than Jimmy Carter, and so on.)"
What does that mean? Jimmy Carter was the first of the new democrats. He was the one who began financial deregulation. He brought in the first Fed head who ignored his 'full employment' mandate and strangled the labor market until inflation cracked. He walked around with his religion on his sleeve and a largely non-interventionist foreign policy which "lost" Iran, Nicaragua, and nearly the Panama Canal.
Those are what Reagan conservatives ran against. Carter was conservative, which was why Ted Kennedy primaried him.
Reagan today would be standing behind Dick Lugar wondering where his party went. You guys can't accept that you won, because you don't see utopia when you look out the window. That's not because of a flawed implementation of a perfect system. It's because you have a flawed system.
#11 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Mon 1 Oct 2012 at 03:50 PM
"Journalism from a conservative point of view"?!? Shame! There is no such thing! There is only ONE point of view for a real journalist: find and report on the evidence. That's it. End of list. You, like so many, have bought the extremist claptrap that reporters must be crusaders. NO! Reporters must be fact finders. You don't go to the doctor just to walk in and have that person diagnose you with their pet disease with out even looking at you. You go to get an ACCURATE diagnosis.
More sadly, you've bought the conservative lie that since none of us can be inately 100% unbiased, there should be "journalists" that are 100% biased to insure equality of reporting. That's lunacy!
#12 Posted by mediaman13, CJR on Sun 7 Oct 2012 at 12:35 PM