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Full Disclosure for Journalists

Will Collier, remarking on Mickey Kaus’ admission that he donated $300 to the Kerry campaign, wonders why such disclosures aren’t standard practice.

It’s a hard-and-fast ethical standard among financial reporters and columnists that they disclose any personal stake they have in companies, funds, or people that they’re covering. Why should news writers be any different? Would the republic collapse if Peter Jennings announced that he wouldn’t vote for George W. Bush even if he were offered a lifetime supply of aged Coulommiers brie? Would Jennings’ viewers really be so mis-served to know in straightforward terms where he’s coming from?

If James Glassman is expected to reveal in every column which companies he’s invested in, why shouldn’t Dana Milbank and Adam Nagourney have full-disclosure blurbs about how they voted in the last couple of elections, to say nothing about how they plan to vote this year? Is there any good reason why not?

To save space, we could limit it to those who voted Republican.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

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Comments
 

Could Jennings even contribute legally? Isn't he still a Canadian citizen?

Not that it matters much to Will's central point, but the question came to mind.

Posted by Boyd | July 19, 2004 | 12:34 pm | Permalink
 

Yes, there is a good reason why not. It's called the "secret ballot", a cornerstone to fair and free elections.

Beyond that, however, the fatuous right-wing notion that reporters or correspondents should somehow have no political opinions of their own (or at least no opinions that the right-wing would disagree with) is just another of the ridiculous fantasies that emerge from that quarter. People are not robots. They have the opinions they have and there's an end on it.

The most anyone can ask is that reporters and correspondents not make a nuisance of themselves with their political opinions, when they claim to be providing straight information.

Tresspasses in this direction are, of course, unavoidable occasionally, and harder to avoid in an electoral atmosphere as poisoned as our own. But in such an atmosphere they are also self-correcting and Peter Jennings has been given plenty of hell for his lapses.

Posted by Joseph Marshall | July 19, 2004 | 01:14 pm | Permalink
 

For the record, this member of the right-wing doesn't expect that reporters be devoid of opinions on the subjects they cover. All I ask is that they wear those opinions on their sleeves. Let the the people decide if a reporter's story is objective or not given that reporter's opinions.

That's one of the greatest things about the blogoshpere. When you go to a blog its usually readily evident what the political leanings of the author are.

Posted by Rob | July 19, 2004 | 01:47 pm | Permalink
 

Beyond that, however, the fatuous right-wing notion that reporters or correspondents should somehow have no political opinions of their own

Sorry, Joseph, but what's fatuous is the idea that's what right-wingers believe. Like Rob, I for one would simply prefer that they not try to pretend they don't have opinions if they do.

The idea that reporters can pretend not to have opinions when they obviously do, is what's corroding the credibility of Big Media.

Posted by McGehee | July 19, 2004 | 05:11 pm | Permalink
 

Here Joseph, I'll make you feel better. I have feelings... I fell you are an idiot.

Nobody said they can't have an ideology. They should NOT, however, let it sway their coverage.

I don't expect you to be able to understand the difference.

Posted by Paul | July 19, 2004 | 06:56 pm | Permalink
 

Well, Paul, sometimes I feel that way about myself, too, particularly when my fingers don't put down on the keyboard quite what my mind intended. Which occurs often enough on blogs like these.

One of the secrets of life, I find, is to try hard not to be a fool. No matter how foolish you are (and I am massively foolish) there is always hope for improvement.

Posted by Joseph Marshall | July 20, 2004 | 07:49 am | Permalink
 

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