One of the rarest commodities in the establishment media is someone who was a vehement critic of George Bush and who now, applying their principles consistently, has become a regular critic of Barack Obama — i.e., someone who criticizes Obama from what is perceived as “the Left” rather than for being a Terrorist-Loving Socialist Muslim. It just got a lot rarer, as The Washington Post — at least according to Politico’s Patrick Gavin — just fired WashingtonPost.com columnist, long-time Bush critic and Obama watchdog (i.e., a real journalist) Dan Froomkin.
What makes this firing so bizarre and worthy of inquiry is that, as Gavin notes, Froomkin was easily one of the most linked-to and cited Post columnists. At a time when newspapers are relying more and more on online traffic, the Post just fired the person who, in 2007, wrote 3 out of the top 10 most-trafficked columns. In publishing that data, Media Bistro used this headline: “The Post’s Most Popular Opinions (Read: Froomkin).” Isn’t that an odd person to choose to get rid of?…
The Post’s inability to articulate a coherent, credible explanation for what it did speaks volumes.
TPMCafe’s truthseeker77: “I am not visiting their website until Froomkin is re-hired.”
And, finally, here’s Froomkin himself:
I’m terribly disappointed. I was told that it had been determined that my White House Watch blog wasn’t “working” anymore. But from what I could tell, it was still working very well. I also thought White House Watch was a great fit with The Washington Post brand, and what its readers reasonably expect from the Post online.
As I’ve written elsewhere, I think that the future success of our business depends on journalists enthusiastically pursuing accountability and calling it like they see it. That’s what I tried to do every day. Now I guess I’ll have to try to do it someplace else.
Update:: WaPo editorial page editor Fred Hiatt pushes back against the it-was-political reading of Froomkin’s ouster: “With the end of the Bush administration,” Hiatt told the paper’s ombud, Andy Alexander, “interest in the blog also diminished. His political orientation was not a factor in our decision.”
Update 2:: Here’s The Atlantic’s James Fallows reacting to the Froomkin news:
Negative journalistic development of the week: the Washington Post’s insane decision to fire its media-political blogger Dan Froomkin. (I know Froomkin only through his work, not personally.) We all have heard the reasons that the press is under pressure by forces not of its making. This is an example of a self-inflicted wound. Are papers like the Post under suspicion for being too insidery and old-media-y? How does it make sense get rid of an independent minded, new media, presumably not-that-expensive, non-Washington-cliquey voice on politics and the media and leave… well, the full opinion and media lineup the Post is sticking with? Some people tell me that it’s a mistake to say that the Post’s editorial page (and the weight of its op-ed lineup) has “become” neo-con and establishment-minded under its current editor, Fred Hiatt; the argument is that this is the Post’s long tradition, which its anti-Nixon crusade concealed. I don’t know. But I would have liked to have heard the argument about why Froomkin was the necessary next person to cut. More later.
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THE TRUTH
To the crying towel crew --
Ratings. Why Air America failed. Ever heard of them?
He had low ratings. If he had high ratings, he'd be rich. Get over it.
Posted by Karl on Sat 20 Jun 2009 at 02:04 PM
Oh please, Froomkin is a damn hack when it comes to this administration. He even admitted it a few months ago when he said that there was a need to cove Obama differently.
In fact, right before being shit canned last week he said that the reason American’s were becoming apprehensive with the administrations drunken sailor approach to fiscal discipline was because the press was not doing its job to cover the universal accepted goodness of multi trillion dollar yearly defects.
I guess his wasn’t one of the millions of jobs his hero Obama was supposed to save.
Posted by mike H on Mon 22 Jun 2009 at 01:07 AM