Acknowledging what the blogosphere has known for weeks, the New York Times finally went on record to admit that just before last Election Day it killed a politically sensitive news story involving corruption allegations that might have made the Obama campaign look bad.
But the admission on Sunday, which came seven months after NYT staff reporter Stephanie Strom's reporting about possibly illegal coordination between the Obama campaign and ACORN last year, took the form of a snarky column from Clark Hoyt, the Old Gray Lady's "public editor." Hoyt used the word "nonsense" to describe the allegations of impropriety leveled against ACORN and the Obama campaign.
Hoyt writes in the Sunday New York Times
On March 17, a Republican lawyer, quoting a confidential source for a Times reporter, testified to Congress that the newspaper killed a story last fall because it would have been "a game-changer" in the presidential election.
The charge, amplified by Bill O'Reilly on Fox News in April and reverberating around the conservative blogosphere, is about the most damning allegation that can be made against a news organization. If true, it would mean that Times editors, whose job is to report the facts without fear or favor, were so lacking in integrity that they withheld an important story in order to influence the election.
I have spent several weeks looking into this issue - interviewing and e-mailing those involved, reading transcripts, looking at campaign finance records and conferring with legal experts. In a nutshell, I think the charge is nonsense.
In his very first sentence Hoyt makes a careless mistake: it was March 19, not March 17 (St. Patrick's Day), that the "Republican lawyer," Heather Heidelbaugh, testified before the House Judiciary Committee.
Then Hoyt gets caught up in minutiae, agonizing about whether the story would have been "a game-changer in the presidential election." He downplays the illegalities, calling them "technical violations of campaign finance law."
Hoyt writes
The story involved allegations that Barack Obama's campaign, in league with Acorn, a left-leaning community activist group, was guilty of technical violations of campaign finance law. Evidence supplied by the source could not be verified. Even if the story had panned out, it is hard to see how any editor could have regarded it as momentous enough to change an election in which the Republicans were saddled with an unpopular war and an economic meltdown.
On the surface if one doesn't think through Hoyt's explanation carefully, it may seem quite reasonable. But spend a few minutes thinking about it and holes begin to appear in the house ombudsman's reasoning.
A quick digression: Of course, we can only wonder what the New York Times would have done if it had gained information that John McCain's campaign had committed technical violations of campaign finance law. The NYT did publish a blog item about the DNC's allegation that McCain's campaign had illegally procured a loan and the paper was only too willing to imply in a Feb. 21, 2008 story that McCain was having a romantic affair with a female lobbyist three decades his junior. The charge, which was based on information provided by anonymous sources supposedly working for McCain, ultimately proved groundless and the newspaper retracted it a year later. The NYT disingenuously claims that it had never intended to suggest that the lobbyist "had engaged in a romantic affair with Senator McCain."
The aborted story that gave rise to the Obama/ACORN controversy centers around information provided by Anita MonCrief, a former ACORN employee whom Hoyt acknowledges "fed information to Stephanie Strom of The Times for several articles on troubles within the group." Apparently the information MonCrief provided was good.
We know this because Strom broke a number of important stories about ACORN and surely much of the information she used came from her trusted source Anita MonCrief. In July she reported that Dale Rathke, brother of ACORN founder Wade Rathke, embezzled nearly $1 million from the group. She also reported that ACORN management covered up the embezzlement for eight years, withholding information even from ACORN's national board.
The next month Strom reported that Tides Foundation founder Drummond Pike, a comrade-in-arms of liberal philanthropist George Soros, had personally covered what remained of Wade Rathke's debt (the embezzler had agreed to a slow-as-molasses repayment plan that would have kept him in debt well into old age).
In September Strom reported on two ACORN national board members' lawsuit aimed at forcing ACORN to provide financial documents regarding the embezzlement.
She followed up the next month with a story on ACORN's efforts to sever its remaining ties with its founder. (Strom reported that Wade Rathke resigned as chief organizer of ACORN. In fact, Rathke was fired, as shown in the ACORN national board's minutes of June 20, 2008, available at page 11 of the linked PDF file.)
The same month Strom wrote about an internal memo written by ACORN's lawyer that alerted the group to potential legal problems related to its organizational structure.
But apparently MonCrief's information was suddenly no good when it might have embarrassed the Obama campaign.
Heidelbaugh testified before a congressional committee in March that the nonprofit group violated a host of tax, campaign finance, and other laws. She said the Obama campaign sent ACORN its "maxed out donor list" and asked two of the avowedly nonpartisan group's employees "to reach out to the maxed out donors and solicit donations from them for Get Out the Vote efforts to be run by ACORN."
Hoyt describes the interactions between ACORN and Democratic campaigns this way:
On Sept. 7, Moncrief wrote to Strom that she had donor lists from the campaigns of Obama and Hillary Clinton and that there had been "constant contact" between the campaigns and Project Vote, an Acorn affiliate whose tax-exempt status forbids it to engage in partisan politics. Moncrief said she had withheld that information earlier but was disclosing it now that the conservative columnist Michelle Malkin was "all over it."
Hoyt writes that Strom received from MonCrief "a spreadsheet purporting to be the Obama donor list, but there was no on-the-record source or other way to verify that the list came from the Obama campaign." MonCrief agreed to go on the record but the NYT suddenly discovered that she had "a credibility problem" because she "had been fired by Acorn for using an official credit card for personal expenses."
To repeat, although the newspaper knew of the supposed credibility problem, it found MonCrief's information highly reliable in previous ACORN articles. All of sudden MonCrief was deemed not credible on a story that might have an adverse impact on Obama's candidacy.
Hoyt wrote that Suzanne Daley, the national editor, "called a halt to Strom's pursuit of the Obama angle."
Hoyt then presents an expert opinion about how, even if true, MonCrief's allegations would not have been a game-changer for the election.
But PowerLine's John Hinderaker skillfully dissects Hoyt's sophistry, writing:
Hoyt also argues that the story about Obama and ACORN would not have been a "game-changer" in that it would not have swung the election to John McCain. I agree. But since when is that the standard? Is Hoyt telling us that the Times' policy is only to print stories that have the potential to change the result of a Presidential election? Of course, if the story did have the potential to change the outcome of the election, that, too, would have been offered as a reason not to print it.
Hinderaker also argues that "the facts as related by Hoyt don't rebut the charge; they support it."
Read Hinderaker's commentary on the case and decide for yourself if the New York Times was right to end its probe.
—Matthew Vadum is Editor of Organization Trends and Foundation Watch at the Capital Research Center.




















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§ SHOCKING!!! Shocking I Say!!!!
May 18, 2009 - 00:49 ET by TheSterDid I say...
SHOCKING!!!
Ster.
Why would the NYT have their
May 18, 2009 - 01:10 ET by d1carterWhy would the NYT have their Ombudsman even address this story? Not even close to being believable. Shameful. With this and Mo Do's little problem, another bad day for the Gray Lady.
another bad day for the
May 18, 2009 - 06:09 ET by motherbeltanother bad day for the Gray Lady.
I had a lot to say about this, but Matthew hit every one of my points, so I'll just say this:
Remember this old Charlton Heston Movie?
They might say "Wow, that sucks!" But at least they'll say "Wow!" -Duff Goldman, the Ace of Cakes
Hey mb...I finally got to
May 18, 2009 - 19:18 ET by bigtimerHey mb...I finally got to the last blog post I hadn't read yet today that I really care about....and I was thinking like you, Matthew did such a good job, what more was there one could add...and I saw your link!
Perfect!
Doubling down on stupid is not a particularly good idea. ~Andrew Breitbart
double post They might
May 18, 2009 - 06:13 ET by motherbeltdouble post
They might say "Wow, that sucks!" But at least they'll say "Wow!" -Duff Goldman, the Ace of Cakes
The explanation tells a tale
May 18, 2009 - 02:28 ET by KC MulvilleI think Matthew has it exactly right. In the act of denying that they acted politically, the explanation was entirely political. First, that Moncrief was used as a reliable source, until the evidence began to look bad for Obama. Second, that they refused to publish something because Obama had (basically) already won.
The theoretical basis for spiking the story is that they (so they claim) didn't have enough corroboration for the story in question. But, that's only a question of balance. How much corroboration were they willing to accept, balanced against the potential damage to the Obama campaign? That means that the damage to Obama was a factor, and that's what makes it political. Journalists do not have the right to spike a story for its political consequences, and yet maintain the fiction that they're non-political, non-partisan, neutral and objective. In individual human beings, we call that cognitive dissonance: the willingness to believe contradictions.
EXCPETIONAL piece of work Matthew
May 18, 2009 - 04:34 ET by DeskpilotObviously your ability to conect the dots to gather the relevant facts in a story are more than the NYT can fathom. This is TRULY a searchlight on the cockroaches.
Maybe, rather than spiking the story, the NYT might put Hoyt on a pike.
If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can read it in English, You're welcome - Deskpilot, AM(H)1 (AW), USN (Ret)
...technical violations of
May 18, 2009 - 05:02 ET by Darasen...technical violations of campaign finance law...
Wasn't Tom DeLay crucified by the media for FAR less than this?
Just read...
May 18, 2009 - 06:49 ET by AJBI just read where they might be out of money to publish this rag by next year. Too bad. It needs to go today...
Just like Bernie Maddoff
May 18, 2009 - 07:00 ET by c5thenwas guilty of technical violations of SEC rules
Hey, I got the wrong "CHANGE"!
www.loyaltoliberty.com
I think this story falls
May 18, 2009 - 08:40 ET by BruzillaI think this story falls into the "Much Ado About Nothing" file. Should the NYT's have filed a story that was unsubstantiated, close to an election? No. Would they have done it if it were about McCain? Yes, but that still doesn't make it right.
Also, I seem to recall hearing stories about ACORN and Obama throughout the election, most of them being about campaign law violations. What makes anyone think one more would have made any difference?
The Newspaper of record.
May 18, 2009 - 13:31 ET by CobraManDoesn't the NYT describe themselves as the Newspaper of Record? Imagine that, the newspaper of record failing to print something just because they claim that the source's statements couldn't be verified! I wonder why they just didn't use their standard "as some conservatives have implied," like they have in the past?
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.
The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus.
The US Supreme Court
Much ado about hypocrisy
May 18, 2009 - 13:46 ET by CobraMan"Should the NYT's have filed a story that was unsubstantiated, close to an election?"
In case you have forgotten, the NYT published unsubstantiated excerpts from the fake Bush TANG memos, back in 2004.
"The memos indicated that Mr. Bush had failed to take a physical against orders and that Colonel Killian was being pressured to "sugarcoat" his performance rating because Mr. Bush, whose father was then a Texas congressman, was "talking to somebody upstairs." NYT Sep 14, 2004
You have to realize that this was printed AFTER the accuracy of the memo's in question was in serious doubt. Why did the NYT bother to print excerpts of memo's they KNEW were not verified and were, in all probability, fraudulent? Why didn't the NYT's redact the contents of memos they KNEW were unsubstantiated? It's simple, they WANTED to raise serious questions about Bush's National Guard service in order to affect the election! Just as they redacted any mention of the ACORN allegations as they were AFRAID it would affect the election! Talk about hypocrisy!
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.
The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus.
The US Supreme Court
I take the NYT's point of view in this matter.
May 18, 2009 - 09:08 ET by needleAn exposé of Acorn’s pervasive criminality and Obama’s connection to it would not have been a "game-changer" in last years election because Democrats, both those who fill the ranks of the Degenerate Media like the NYT and their readership, are not concerned about ethics, morality, or criminality as those matter pertain to Democrat politicians, but only as they pertain Republican politicians. That is why, for example, when politicians are in hot water, the Degenerate Media identifies only Republican with an “R”, but not Democrats with a “D”
Impunitas semper ad deteriora invitat.
Great homework
May 18, 2009 - 09:57 ET by zachlindMatthew, this is one fine piece of work. I’ve been reading newsbusters.org for quite some time and it’s generally my first read of the day. The homework is extensive and impressive. Thanks.
Excellence in journalism
May 18, 2009 - 10:02 ET by JohnMMatthew's piece exemplifies the highest level of quality.
The NYT... well if there's no Charmin...
If the NYT goes away...
May 18, 2009 - 11:25 ET by DragonsbreathWhat will we use to train our new puppies named after Miss America on?
The Constution?
Proof Obama is not Jesus. Jesus could actually build a cabinet
Welcome to the new
May 18, 2009 - 11:32 ET by sudmufWelcome to the new thugocracy of the Barry Regime.
John Edwars redux
May 18, 2009 - 13:23 ET by CobraMan"Evidence supplied by the source could not be verified."
Isn't that similar what they said about the John Edwards affair as exposed by the National Enquirer? We all know how that one turned out, don't we New York Times?
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.
The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus.
The US Supreme Court
→ Got that right
May 18, 2009 - 13:28 ET by Cool ArrowDidn't see them following the story of Obama's alleged homosexual encounter either.
In that story, there was an actual, self professed, participant making the claim.
"I was fighting a war in Iraq!" - Nancy Lugosi
And what about the LA Times?
May 18, 2009 - 16:31 ET by needleSlightly off topic; but this is as good an occasion as any to remind ourselves that the LA Times is still withholding the tape showing the Big Zero pandering to a Palestinian Terrorist and a crowd of his friends.
Impunitas semper ad deteriora invitat.