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The MEDIA list! 90% liberal


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Guest GO Mavs

LOL at Democrats who always yell about FOXNEWS... hahahaha

 

 

 

Television:

 

(D) ABC News, Mary Fulginiti, "Primetime" correspondent. Click for details.

 

(D) ABC affiliate in Boston, WCVB, Sangita Chandra, producer. Click for

details.

 

(D) ABC affiliate in Wichita, KAKE, Susan Peters, anchor. Click for details.

 

(D) CBS News, Serena Altschul, correspondent for "CBS Sunday Morning." Click

for details.

 

(D) CBS News, Edward H. Forgotson Jr., producer, "CBS Sunday Morning." Click

for details.

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Boston, WBZ, Liz Walker, newsmagazine host. Click for

details.

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Los Angeles, KCBS, Claudia Bill, news writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Memphis, WREG, Markova Reed, anchors the morning and

noon news. Click for details.

 

(D) CNN, Guy Raz, Jerusalem correspondent, now defense correspondent for

National Public Radio. Click for details.

 

® CW affiliate in Chicago, WGN, Jay Congdon, news producer. Click for

details.

 

® CW affiliate in Los Angeles, KTLA, Diana Chi, news writer. Click for

details.

 

® Fox News Channel, Ann Stewart Banker, producer for Bill O'Reilly's "The

O'Reilly Factor." Click for details.

 

(D) Fox News Channel, Codie Brooks, researcher for Brit Hume's "Special

Report." Click for details.

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Omaha, KPTM, Calvert Collins, reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Minneapolis, KMSP, Alix Kendall, morning anchor. Click

for details.

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Washington, D.C., WTTG, Laura Evans, anchor. Click for

details.

 

® MSNBC, Joe Scarborough, host of "Morning Joe" and "Scarborough Country."

Click for details.

 

(D) MTV News, Gideon Yago, "Choose or Lose" presidential correspondent.

Click for details.

 

(D) NBC News, Victoria Corderi, "Dateline" correspondent. Click for details.

 

® PBS affiliate in New York, Thirteen/WNET, Rafael Roman, host, "New York

Voices." Click for details.

 

(D) Independent station KTVK, Phoenix, Steve Bodinet, reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) MSNBC.com, Rachel Schwanewede, senior editor, TodayShow.com. Click for

details.

 

(D) MSNBC.com, Joel Widzer, travel columnist. Click for details.

 

(D) Salon.com, Gary Kamiya, writer at large and former executive editor.

Click for details.

 

(D) Salon.com, Katharine Mieszkowski, reporter. Click for details.

 

Magazines:

 

(D) The Atlantic Monthly, Martha Spaulding, assistant managing editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) Business Week, Prudence Crowther, chief copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) The Economist, Andreas Kluth, technology correspondent. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Economist, Joanne Ramos, financial writer. Click for details.

 

® Forbes, Jean A. Briggs, assistant managing editor. Click for details.

 

® Forbes, Robert Lenzner, national editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Forbes, Tatiana Serafin, senior reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) Inc., Jane Berentson, editor. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, David Denby, film critic. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Henry Finder, editorial director and books editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Tad Friend, Hollywood reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Ann Goldstein, head of copy department. Click for

details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Hendrik Hertzberg, senior editor. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, John Lahr, theater critic. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Janet Malcolm, writer. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, George Packer, war correspondent. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Mark Singer, profile writer. Click for details.

 

(D) The New Yorker, Judith Thurman, writer. Click for details.

 

(D) Newsweek, Temma Ehrenfeld, associate editor. Click for details.

 

(D & R) Newsweek, Jane Bryant Quinn, personal finance columnist. Click for

details.

 

(D) Newsweek, Anne Underwood, correspondent on health and medical stories.

Click for details.

 

(D) Rolling Stone, Jason Fine, deputy managing editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Rolling Stone, David Swanson, assistant editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Rolling Stone, Jann Wenner, editor and publisher. Click for details.

 

(D) Time, Jim Frederick, senior editor. Click for details.

 

(D) U.S. News & World Report, Michael Freeman, researcher. Click for

details.

 

(D) U.S. News & World Report, Amanda Spake, senior writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) Vanity Fair, Elise O'Shaughnessy, contributing editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Vanity Fair, Michael Shnayerson, contributing editor. Click for details.

 

(D) McClatchy Newspapers, Beryl Adcock, news desk chief, Washington bureau.

Click for details.

 

(D) The Wall Street Journal, Krishnan Amantharaman, managing editor of the

classroom edition. Click for details.

 

(D) The Wall Street Journal, Henny Sender, senior special writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Wall Street Journal, Eben Shapiro, editor of the Weekend Journal

section. Click for details.

 

(D) The New York Times, Randy Cohen, ethics columnist. Click for details.

 

(D) The New York Times, Christine Muhlke, deputy editor, style magazine.

Click for details.

 

(D & R) The New York Times, Nancy Tilghman, freelance writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) Los Angeles Times, Nick Cuccia, design editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Los Angeles Times, Manohla Dargis, film critic, now at The New York

Times. Click for details.

 

(D) Los Angeles Times, Dan Neil, automobile critic. Click for details.

 

® Los Angeles Times, Charles Perry, food writer. Click for details.

 

(D) New York Daily News, Celia McGee, reporter, and freelancer for The New

York Times. Click for details.

 

(D) New York Daily News, Matthew Roberts, photographer. Click for details.

 

® The Washington Post, Stephen Hunter, film critic. Click for details.

 

(D) The Chicago Tribune, Maureen Ryan, entertainment reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Chicago Tribune, John von Rhein, classical music critic. Click for

details.

 

(D) San Francisco Chronicle, William Pates, letters editor for the editorial

page. Click for details.

 

(D) Newsday, Long Island, Rita Hall, section designer/artist/writer. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Boston Globe, Rebecca Ostriker, arts editor/writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Boston Globe, Henry Riemer, sports statistician. Click for details.

 

® The Star-Ledger, Newark, Robin Gaby Fisher, feature writer. Click for

details.

 

(D) Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Barbara Haugen, copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Detroit Free Press, Susan Hall-Balduf, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Detroit Free Press, Joel Thurtell, reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) The Oregonian, Portland, Steve Amick, reporter. Click for details.

 

® The Miami Herald, Harry Broertjes, copy editor/page designer. Click for

details.

 

® The San Diego Union-Tribune, Joe Cline, graphic artist. Click for

details.

 

(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Penni Crabtree, business reporter. Click

for details.

 

(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Bob Elledge, assistant news editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Shaffer Grubb, graphic artist. Click for

details.

 

(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Arline Smith, news production editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Charlie Smith, copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Sun, Baltimore, John Scholz, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) San Jose Mercury News, Rachel Wilner, sports editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Boston Herald, Chris Donnelly, news librarian. Click for details.

 

(D) South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Ethan Skolnick, sports

columnist. Click for details.

 

(D) Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Randy Galloway, sports columnist. Click for

details.

 

(D) Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Vincent Langford, sports copy editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Hartford Courant, Nancy Gallinger, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) The Hartford Courant, Bill Lewis, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Richmond Times-Dispatch, Michael Hardy, state political reporter. Click

for details.

 

(D) Richmond Times-Dispatch, Pam Mastropaolo, copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Contra Costa Times, Calif., Robert Taylor, fine arts reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Press-Enterprise, Riverside, Calif., Mark Benoit, wire editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Palm Beach Post, Fla., George McEvoy, columnist. Click for details.

 

® The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Barbara Bradley, fashion editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Des Moines Register, Stephen P. Dinnen, business reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) The Honolulu Advertiser, Chris Neil, wire editor. Click for details.

 

(D) The Blade, Toledo, James Bradley, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Lexington Herald-Leader, Brian Throckmorton, copy desk chief. Click for

details.

 

® The Morning Call, Allentown, Pa., Beth Hudson, sports reporter. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Daytona Beach, Fla., News-Journal, Marc Davidson, editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Albany, N.Y., Times Union, Greg Montgomery, graphic design editor. Click

for details.

 

® The Washington Times, Gary Arnold, film critic. Click for details.

 

(D) San Gabriel Valley Newspapers, Calif., Eric Terrazas, sports editor.

Click for details.

 

® The New York Sun, Liz Peek, financial columnist. Click for details.

 

(D) The Lincoln, Neb., Journal Star, Paul Fell, editorial cartoonist. Click

for details.

 

(D) The Lincoln, Neb., Journal Star, Sylvia Hermanson, copy editor. Click

for details.

 

® The Macon, Ga., Telegraph, Stephen "Keich" Whicker, local government

reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) New Hampshire Union Leader, David Johnson, sports copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Corpus Christi, Texas, Caller-Times, Elvia Aguilar, business writer.

Click for details.

 

(D) National Catholic Reporter, Margot Patterson, senior writer and

arts/opinion editor. Click for details.

 

(D) York, Pa., Daily Record, Teresa Cook, copy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Muskegon, Mich., Chronicle, Terry Judd, reporter and chief of the Grand

Haven bureau. Click for details.

 

(D) Fort Wayne, Ind., News-Sentinel, Fran Adler, copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Fort Wayne, Ind., News-Sentinel, Faith Van Gilder, copy editor. Click

for details.

 

(D) Martha's Vineyard, Mass., Times, Whit Griswold, copy editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Air America and CBS Radio, Betsy Rosenberg-Zimmerman, environment talk

show host and environment reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) National Public Radio, Corey Flintoff, newscaster. Click for details.

 

(D) National Public Radio, Michelle Trudeau, correspondent. Click for

details.

 

(D) NPR affiliate in Washington, WAMU, Susan Goodman, reporter. Click for

details.

 

(D) WWJ News Radio, Detroit, Vickie B. Thomas, reporter. Click for details.

 

-----

 

Wire services:

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Katherine Burton, reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Dieterich, energy editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Joshua Fellman, reporter in Asia. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Houck, multimedia news editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Milanee Kapadia, reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, James Polson, reporter on energy and utilities. Click

for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Carlos Torres, reporter in Washington. Click for

details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Urban, real estate reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) Bloomberg News, John Wydra, radio newscaster. Click for details.

 

(D) Dow Jones Newswires, Samuel J. Favate Jr., editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Dow Jones Newswires, Billy Mallard, credit markets editor. Click for

details.

 

(D) Reuters, Lisa von Ahn, news desk editor. Click for details.

 

(D) Reuters, Michael Erman, reporter. Click for details.

 

Non-English-language news organizations:

 

(D) La Stampa, newspaper in Turin, Italy, Paolo Mastrolilli, New York

correspondent. Click for details.

 

(D) New Delhi Television, Stephen Marks, reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) The Korea Daily News, Chang W. Kim, journalist. Click for details.

 

(D) Pakistan TV, Jack Khangura, reporter. Click for details.

 

(D) Oriental Daily, Chun Fai Cheng, reporter. Click for details.

 

 

Click for related content

Read the story: Journalists dole out cash to politicians (quietly)

Live Vote: Should journalists give?

Compare the policies of news organizations

Message board: Weigh in on journalists and politics

 

 

 

 

 

Details:

 

Television:

 

(D) ABC News, Mary Fulginiti, "Primetime" correspondent, Hollywood, Calif.,

$500 to Gov. Bill Richardson, Democratic presidential candidate, 2007.

Before she joined ABC in November 2006, lawyer Fulginiti gave $6,000 to

Democratic candidates.

 

ABC forbids political activity by journalists.

 

"A friend asked me to contribute" to Richardson, Fulginiti said. "This is

not a reflection of my political views. Look, I've made a mistake here. I'm

a legal analyst - this is all new to me. I have been politically active in

the past. This is when I was just starting out at ABC. I was still thinking

as a lawyer."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) ABC affiliate in Boston, WCVB, Sangita Chandra, producer, $250 to House

candidate Jamie Wall, Democrat, Wisconsin, in April 2005.

 

Chandra is a producer for the nightly newsmagazine "Chronicle" and news and

feature programs. She said she gave to the candidate in Wisconsin because of

a personal connection. "He's one of my best friends. He's the only candidate

I've donated to."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) ABC affiliate in Wichita, Susan Peters, anchor, $600 to America Coming

Together in two donations in 2004 and 2005. She anchors the news at 5, 6 and

10 p.m. America Coming Together funded get-out-the-vote drives to defeat

President Bush in 2004.

 

Peters didn't return calls.

 

KAKE news director David Grant said, "To be honest, I don't have an answer

for you. Can I get back to you?" He didn't call back.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CBS News, Serena Altschul, contributing correspondent for "CBS Sunday

Morning," $5,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in

October 2004. She was a correspondent for CBS from 2003 to 2006.

 

A CBS spokeswoman said Altschul "did some checking with family members, and

the contribution was in fact made in her name."

 

A year after this donation, CBS tightened its policy to forbid all political

activity.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CBS News, producer, Edward H. Forgotson Jr., "CBS Sunday Morning,"

$1,000 in June 2006 to Patrick J. Kennedy, Democrat, the Rhode Island

congressman and son of Sen. Ted Kennedy. The donation was made two weeks

after Kennedy pleaded guilty to driving under the influence of prescription

drugs in an accident on Capitol Hill.

 

A CBS spokesman said the network's policy was tightened in September 2006 to

forbid contributions to political campaigns. Previously, there was a bit of

wiggle room.

 

"My donation pre-dates the clarification of CBS News policy," Forgotson

said. "I've made no contributions to any candidate or party since."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Boston, WBZ, Liz Walker, newsmagazine host, $1,000 to

Women Senate 2006, which gave to Democratic candidates, in December 2005;

$2,500 to Democratic Sen. Hillary Clinton in January 2005; $250 to

Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow in Michigan in March 2006; and $250 to Sen.

Maria Cantwell, Washington Democrat, in March 2006.

 

Walker did not return a phone call, but WBZ spokeswoman Ro Dooley Webster

said that Walker was not in the news department when she made those

contributions, though she has since returned to a news department role.

Walker had been the station's anchor for 20 years but left in January 2005

to become host of the station's community affairs and opinion show. She made

the contributions in 2005 and 2006, before returning to a news role, doing

pieces for the newscast.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Los Angeles, KCBS, Claudia Bill, news writer, $250 to

Democrat John Edwards in March 2007, and $500 to Democratic candidate Lois

Capps in a House race in October 2003.

 

"I'm a news writer. I write copy for the anchors," Bill said. "What's

written by the news writers is copy edited several times. I haven't covered

any politics at all in this particular race. I made a donation as a private

citizen, not as a member of CBS. If I were, say, Katy Couric, then you may

have a different picture." She said she wasn't aware that CBS policy now

forbids donations.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CBS affiliate in Memphis, WREG, Markova Reed, anchor of morning and noon

news, $250 to Ed Stanton, a Democratic House candidate from Memphis, in

January 2006.

 

Reed did not return calls. WREG's president and general manager, Ronald A.

Walter, said, "Yes, we do restrict employees, journalists particularly, from

engaging in political activity. We don't want people doing that. We feel

that in this particular case it was an innocent mistake on her part, and we

have handled it internally."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) CNN, Guy Raz, Jerusalem correspondent, now with NPR as defense

correspondent, $500 to John Kerry in June 2004.

 

Raz donated to Kerry the same month he was embedded in Iraq with U.S. troops

for CNN. He also covered reaction to Abu Ghraib and President Bush's

policies in the Middle East. In 2006, he returned to NPR, and covers the

Pentagon.

 

"Yes, I made the donation," Raz said in an e-mail. "At the time, I was a

reporter with CNN International based out of London. I covered international

news and European Union stories. I did not cover US news or politics."

 

Both CNN and NPR prohibit political activity by all journalists, no matter

their assignment.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® CW affiliate in Chicago, WGN, Jay Congdon, news producer, $500 to

Republican senatorial candidate Cynthia Thielen of Hawaii in October 2006.

 

Congdon did not return phone calls. The station's management would only

confirm that he is employed.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® CW affiliate in Los Angeles, KTLA, Diana Chi, news writer, 19

contributions totaling $8,025 to the Republican National Committee from 2002

through 2006.

 

Chi did not return phone calls. Nor did the news director, Jeff Wald.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® Fox News Channel, Ann Stewart Banker, producer for Bill O'Reilly's "The

O'Reilly Factor," $5,000 in June 2006 to Volunteer PAC, which gave to

Republican candidates. Her father was once a campaign treasurer for former

Republican Sen. Bill Frist of Tennessee.

 

Banker didn't return calls. A Fox News spokesman said donations are allowed.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fox News Channel, Codie Brooks, researcher for Brit Hume's "Special

Report," $300 to Senate campaign of Harold Ford Jr., Tennessee Democrat, in

March 2006, $200 more in June, and $2,100 more in September.

 

Brooks, who said her family is friendly with Ford's, said she raised much of

the $2,600 from friends - it wasn't her money alone. "A lot of Fox employees

have contributed to Democratic candidates. I know I'm not the only one."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Omaha, KPTM, Calvert Collins, reporter, $500 in October

2006 to Jim Esch, Democratic House candidate from Omaha. Esch lost to the

Republican incumbent in November.

 

Collins says that her father made the campaign contribution. "I had told my

dad that I was friends with this man. He said, 'Would you like me to make a

donation?' I said, 'That's up to you, but don't do it in my name.'" She said

her father also made a $2,000 contribution in her name to Kay Granger,

Republican, Texas, in 2004, when Collins was a student in broadcast

journalism at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

 

Collins also posted a photo of herself with the candidate on her Facebook

page, with the note, "Vote for him Tuesday, Nov. 7!" After the photo was

posted on a blog about Nebraska politics, a public Web site, she posted a

reply:

 

"I would like to take a moment to set the record straight, Jim and I are

friends, and nothing more. It is part of my job to build rapport with

candidates and incumbents during election season. I have many friends in

other campaigns... It is also important to note, I have NEVER covered the

2nd District Congressional Race, and have no plans to do so in the coming

week.

 

"To those of you who have been offended by this incident, I apologize. My

relationships with politicians have not and will not affect my reporting. I

appreciate your understanding."

 

She told MSNBC.com, "I covered more politics than any of our reporters. I

try to establish good relationships with both sides, so they would call our

station. A lot of the political PR people are former reporters, so they have

allegiance to one candidate or another."

 

The photo was taken at a cancer fundraiser, she said. "We have a lot of

mutual friends." She said she posted it on her Facebook page where only her

friends could see it. "I foolishly wrote, in jest, to vote for him, and

forgot completely that that was on there. When my boss heard about it, I

immediately removed it. Press people of opponents called it to attention."

 

"The irony is, if anyone had really done their research, I was a registered

Republican. I have now changed to being an Independent, and I will stay that

way my entire career. I learned a lot from this experience that I will never

repeat. In a way, I'm glad this happened to me at age 23, and not 33, and I

will learn from it."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Minneapolis, KMSP, Alix Kendall, morning anchor, $250

in September 2006 to Midwest Values PAC, which gave to Democratic

candidates.

 

Kendall said she opposes the war and thought that her donation was

anonymous.

 

"I also believe that the station doesn't own my political views and values.

Did I make the contribution? I did. We all have political opinions in this

business. A lot of us want to be politically active. But marching in a war

protest isn't an option, being a recognizable person, so we give with our

checkbook. I don't think that working for a news organization I give up my

rights. I interview plenty of people that I don't agree with, but I also ask

questions to get the other side. I think it's actually an advantage - in a

news organization we have people of many political views. We have healthy

debates. I think it's my civic duty to be involved in what matters to me. I

think it's ridiculous that anyone who's sitting in front of a camera doesn't

have an opinion - come on, we all do. Did I think about that at the time?

No, I didn't. Maybe I should have. But I still feel I have a right to my

civic duties."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fox affiliate in Washington, D.C., WTTG, Laura Evans, anchor, $500 in

August 2006 to John Sarbanes, Democratic House candidate in Maryland. Evans

anchors the 5 p.m. news. She is listed in FEC records by her married name,

Laura Manatos.

 

On her blog on the station's Web site she commented recently on the Iraq

war: " Everyone's trying to save face here ... all the while people are

dying. Didn't voters in November speak loud and clear, saying they're tired

of the fighting and want an end in sight?"

 

When first contacted by MSNBC.com, Evans said her husband, lobbyist Mike

Manatos, "actually made the contribution, and the check was written on our

account."

 

But the records show that her husband had already given the legal limit to

Sarbanes. He couldn't legally contribute more. When asked about those

records, she said, "I hadn't talked to my husband. He reminded me that he

had actually talked to me about this, because he had maxed out, could we

write a check in my name. I said, 'Sure.' Now I remember having this

conversation. It's within Fox policy, it was OK for me to do it."

 

Fox does allow news employees to make political contributions.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® MSNBC, Joe Scarborough, host of the "Morning Joe" talk show and the

evening newscast "Scarborough Country," $4,200 in March 2006 to Derrick

Kitts, Republican candidate for the House from Oregon. Scarborough was a

Republican member of Congress from Florida from 1995 to 2001. He also

provides political commentary for MSNBC, CNBC and NBC's "Today Show."

 

MSNBC policy requires journalists to report any potential conflict of

interest and to seek approval from the president of NBC News before making

any political contribution.

 

A spokesperson for NBC, Jeremy Gaines, replied to questions sent to

Scarborough. "Yes, he did make a donation to Derrick Kitts. Kitts is an old

friend of Joe's. Joe hosts an opinion program and is not a news reporter."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) MTV News, Gideon Yago, "Choose or Lose" presidential correspondent, $200

to Democratic presidential candidate Wesley Clark in January 2004; $500 to

America Coming Together, which campaigned against President Bush, in

September 2004; $250 to the Democratic National Committee in September 2004;

$250 to VoteVets, which is running ads against the president's handling of

the war, in March 2006, and $250 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign

Committee in October 2006. He said he is no longer at MTV News.

 

Gideon Yago, raw:

 

"I don't understand. Things that I do as a private citizen?

 

"We're not a traditional news network in the sense of NBC or Fox or CBS.

 

"We're sensitive about equal time or fairness. We're non-biased.

 

"I mean, what the f---, man?

 

"I came back from doing coverage in Iraq and was very moved by what I saw. I

was never told by my boss or anyone that we couldn't give to a campaign.

 

"I'm not a journalist now. Writing fiction.

 

"I would never qualify what we do as journalism. Ninety percent of what we

did was simple identification, after 9/11: Who is Rumsfeld? Who is Colin

Powell? Who is Al Qaeda?

 

"I try to call it as you see it.

 

"After my second trip to Iraq in 2004, I felt the conventional news media

was not doing a good enough job of conveying the horrors and the failures of

the war in Iraq.

 

"At 18 I was a registered Republican. At 24, I was a registered Democrat.

 

"I tried very hard - our job was not an indoctrination process - I tried to

be as professional as possible whenever possible.

 

"We were a non-traditional news outlet. We were nonpartisan.

 

""OK, I've been rebuked. Thank you for spanking me in public.

 

"Do you hand in all your rights as a public citizen when you do this?

 

"I mean - who's your editor? I'm going to call him right now."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) NBC News, Victoria Corderi, "Dateline" correspondent, $250 in December

2005 to Democrat Josh Rales, who ran for Sen. Paul Sarbanes' open seat in

Maryland. Rales finished a distant third in the primary. Corderi is listed

in the FEC records by her married name, Keane.

 

"In a word, 'Yikes!'" Corderi said in an e-mail. "Josh Rales is a longtime

neighbor and acquaintance. A good friend of mine gave him a cocktail party

last year, a sort of 'meet and greet.' My husband and I went to be nice,

knowing full well Josh was tilting at windmills with his candidacy. Later,

my husband (who is a dyed-in-the-wool Republican, by the way) told me he'd

written a check for a nominal amount so our friend would have something to

show for the night. I'd not even thought to consider that since my name is

on our checks that I would appear in public records as a contributor. I have

a policy of not contributing to campaigns and not showing public support for

candidates. This was a lapse that you brought to my attention."

 

The NBC policy does not outright allow or forbid donations but requires

approval of the president of NBC News.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® PBS affiliate in New York, Thirteen/WNET, Rafael Roman, host of "New

York Voices," $250 to President Bush in July 2004, and $300 to Republican

Sen. John Thune of South Dakota the same month.

 

"I wouldn't do it again, quite frankly," said Roman, a former news anchor

for WNET. "At that time it seemed to me that it wasn't part of a story that

I was covering in the future. I would say, now, no. Even if you're not

covering something, you might at some point. Citizenship is an important

responsibility that's not taken away by the job you do, but I wouldn't do it

again."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Independent station KTVK, Phoenix, Steve Bodinet, reporter, $400 to John

Kerry in May 2004.

 

Bodinet did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

 

Click for related content

Read the story: Journalists dole out cash to politicians (quietly)

Live Vote: Should journalists give?

Compare the policies of news organizations

Message board: Weigh in on journalists and politics

 

 

Online:

 

(D) MSNBC.com, Rachel Schwanewede, senior editor, TodayShow.com, $461.30 to

America Coming Together in October 2004. She was among the more than 20

journalists who bought tickets to the "Vote for Change" series of concerts

to raise money to defeat President Bush in 2004. MSNBC.com is not naming the

others, but in the interest of transparency we are naming our own.

 

Schwanewede said she purchased the tickets for her husband's birthday for a

Springsteen concert.

 

"There's no intention of mine to donate to any political campaign."

 

MSNBC.com policy requires permission of the editor in chief for any

political activity.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) MSNBC.com, Joel Widzer, travel columnist, $2,000 to Democratic

presidential candidate Bill Richardson in February 2007. Widzer actually is

an employee of MSNBC.com partner Tripso.com, though the FEC record lists his

employer as MSNBC.com.

 

Widzer said that he actually gave $1,000. The FEC records show two separate

entries of $1,000 on the same day.

 

"I'm actually a Republican - one of the few Republicans who still support

George Bush and think he's doing OK with the war effort," Widzer said. "One

of my friends works for Bill Richardson and asked me to give to the

campaign. She knew me from MSNBC, so she listed that."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Salon.com, Gary Kamiya, writer at large and former executive editor,

$250 to MoveOn.org, which opposed President Bush, in September 2004.

 

Kamiya, who now writes a column for Salon, was executive editor when he made

the donation. In his column he has urged the impeachment of President Bush,

whom he calls "a historic disaster."

 

Kamiya did not reply to messages. The editor of Salon, Joan Walsh, said he

is traveling.

 

This week, after MSNBC.com called, Salon.com decided to forbid political

donations by all editorial staff.

 

"Salon hasn't had an explicit policy, but the growing importance and

credibility of our political coverage convinced us that we needed one,"

Walsh said in an e-mail. We've told all editorial staff not to donate to

candidates, campaigns, parties or groups that give money to candidates,

campaigns or parties. We're including all edit staffers because we like to

move people around, and come election time, most people contribute to

campaign coverage."

 

The policy went into effect this week, Walsh said, but the editors "have

been talking about it for a while."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Salon.com, Katharine Mieszkowski, reporter, $400 in April 2007 to

EMILY's List, which gives to Democratic candidates who support abortion

rights. Also gave $200 in June 2003 to EMILY's List.

 

Mieszkowski writes mostly about technology, science and the environment. She

has also written on explicitly political topics, including John Kerry, Al

Gore, voting machines, Texas textbooks, President Bush's response to

Hurricane Katrina, school vouchers and peace movements.

 

See the previous entry for Salon's new policy.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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Magazines:

 

(D) The Atlantic Monthly, Martha Spaulding, assistant managing editor, $500

to the Democratic National Committee in May 2004.

 

No longer at The Atlantic, Spaulding said, "It's certainly not the

Atlantic's contribution." She said she was not aware that contributions were

disclosed on the Internet with a donor's occupation and employer. And she

said she didn't understand how any company could forbid political activity

by its employees.

 

The magazine said a tougher policy may be coming.

 

"Historically, we have not had a formal policy," said spokeswoman Amy

Thompson, "and as an institution, The Atlantic is part of 'no party or

clique,' as our founders put it. Even though we have not implemented an

officially codified policy, Atlantic editorial staffers are discouraged from

supporting political campaigns.

 

"We're discussing this issue, and may in fact move toward a formal

prohibition on political donations by editorial staffers. Of course, we have

always policed any conflicts-of-interest on the part of writers and editors

working on political stories."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Business Week, Prudence Crowther, chief copy editor, $200 to John Kerry

in April 2004, and another $200 that July.

 

Crowther said she doesn't think of herself as a newsperson. "I'm not a

journalist, so I can't help you. I did obviously contribute to the Kerry

campaign."

 

Business Week policy allows donations for most staff. "Our Code of

Journalistic Ethics requires journalists to disclose any potential conflicts

of interest and to recuse themselves from stories if a conflict could

occur," said spokeswoman Patti Straus. "As a business publication, we don't

prohibit campaign contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Economist, Andreas Kluth, technology correspondent, $500 to John

Kerry in May 2004. He is based in San Francisco, covering Silicon Valley.

 

"In my case, just to be clear, I told the editors about it, and I don't even

cover politics," Kluth said in an e-mail. "That said, I do think that

journalists can write perfectly fair and balanced pieces as professionals

and simultaneously have private opinions, vote, donate, etc. Conflicts of

interest such as shareholdings (where press coverage could be seen to lead

to personal profit) are delicate, so in all these cases, disclosure seems

appropriate. At The Economist we regularly disclose all investments."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Economist, Joanne Ramos, financial writer, a total of $2,100 in

September and December 2005 to Matt Brown, the former Rhode Island secretary

of state, a Democrat who ran for the Senate before dropping out amid a

fundraising controversy. Ramos has written about banking, corporate pension

reform, auditor concentration, the hedge-fund sector, Iraq's banking system

and international accounting standards.

 

"I'm a finance writer. I don't write about politics," Ramos said. "I'm not

sure what the policy is."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® Forbes, Jean A. Briggs, assistant managing editor, donations to the

Republican National Committee of $250 in March 2007, $250 in December 2005,

$250 in February 2004, $250 in February 2003, $250 in March 2002, $250 in

February 2001 and $250 in August 2000; as well as $250 to Rick Lazio, House

candidate, Republican, in August 2000.

 

"I don't make campaign contributions," Briggs said. "I'm the assistant

managing editor of Forbes magazine. I don't make campaign contributions."

 

When the contributions were described, she said, "You call that a campaign

contribution? It's not putting money into anyone's campaign."

 

(The Republican National Committee put $25 million into the Bush-Cheney

campaign in 2004.)

 

When asked whether she made these contributions, Briggs said, "I don't

believe I have to answer that question. Goodbye. Thank you for your call."

And she hung up the phone.

 

In a follow-up e-mail, Briggs complained that MSNBC.com had not formally

requested an interview before calling to ask questions.

 

Forbes policy allows campaign contributions. Says Monie Begley Feurey,

senior vice president, corporate communications: "Forbes has no policy

regarding employees' personal contributions to political parties or

candidates, but it does encourage any employee to be involved in their

communities in any way they choose."

 

Briggs is also listed as a board member by PERC, the Property and

Environment Research Center, which advocates "market solutions to

environmental problems." PERC has received funding from ExxonMobil and other

oil companies. The organization's Web site says, "She exposes fellow New

York journalists to PERC ideas and also brings a journalistic perspective to

PERC's board. As a board member, she seeks to help spread the word about

PERC's thorough research and fresh ideas."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® Forbes, Robert Lenzner, national editor, $1,500 to Kathleen Troia

McFarland, House candidate, Republican, in November 2005.

 

"As a rule, I don't make any political contributions," Lenzner said. "That

was before the campaign that started. I never made any other contributions.

It was merely a social, personal thing. I do not write about politics. Her

husband is a friend of mine. It was contributed on the spur of the moment. I

did not make it as a member of Forbes magazine. I don't believe it's a

violation of any policy of Forbes magazine."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Forbes, Tatiana Serafin, senior reporter, $202 to John Kerry in April

2004. She covers billionaires, retailing and other topics.

 

"I don't feel comfortable talking about my politics," Serafin said. "I'd

prefer not to answer questions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Inc., Jane Berentson, editor, $1,000 to the Democratic National

Committee in April 2004. Berentson is the senior editor at the magazine.

 

"Inc. has no prohibition against campaign contributions," she said in an

e-mail.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, David Denby, film critic, $1,000 to John Kerry in March

2004, and $250 more in May 2004.

 

He writes reviews and capsule summaries of films, including Al Gore's "An

Inconvenient Truth" (an "epochal documentary"), Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit

9/11" ("slipshod intellectually"), and "An Unreasonable Man," a documentary

on Ralph Nader, whom he apparently hasn't forgiven for getting in the way of

the Gore and Kerry presidencies ("a thoughtless man who believes only in

himself.")

 

Denby did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Henry Finder, editorial director and books editor, $250

to John Kerry in June 2004.

 

New Yorker policy allows donations.

 

"It's an interesting question," Finder said. On the one hand, he said, it's

not convincing to think that by abstaining from making a donation, a

journalist is "preserving some kind of equilibrium in my head where I don't

have opinions. You can't will yourself to be indifferent between chocolate

and vanilla.

 

"If people give, it's in the public realm. How do you justify opacity as

somehow making journalism better, to say, we need to preserve an appearance

of indifference. That's something like misrepresentation, a dubious form of

disguise."

 

Though he said he could see the "prudential argument," that as an editor you

wouldn't want to feed the public perception of bias, he expressed faith in

"ordinary reportorial professionalism, that whoever the reporter, they're

not writing a piece that will make the world better, in their view, but

they're writing the piece that is the piece."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Tad Friend, Hollywood reporter, $500 to John Kerry in

May 2004. Friend is the author of "Lost in Mongolia: Travels in Hollywood

and Other Foreign Lands."

 

Friend did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Ann Goldstein, head of the copy department, $500 to

MoveOn.org in October 2006.

 

"That's just me as a private citizen," Goldstein said. As for what the New

Yorker's policy might be, she said she hadn't considered it. "I've never

thought of myself as working for a news organization."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Hendrik Hertzberg, senior editor, $2,000 to John Kerry

in three payments in 2004. Hertzberg often writes the Comment in the front

of the magazine, and was a speechwriter for Jimmy Carter.

 

Hertzberg, in answer to the question whether he made these donations, sent

this reply: "Damn right."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, John Lahr, theater critic, $200 to the Democratic

Congressional Campaign Committee in June 2006, $250 to the Democratic

National Committee in September 2004, and $500 to John Kerry in March 2004.

 

Sometimes Lahr works an anti-Bush quip into his work. (Such as, to the

president, "thinking is a fuse that has to be blown in order for him to do

what he wants to do.")

 

"The whole point about criticism is to stimulate debate," Lahr said. "My

biases are transparent, because I express them. One of the implications of

your question is that people have no integrity - that people wouldn't be

fair.

 

"What would you have me write? It would be hard to find a sentient person

who could take a strong position for what the Republicans have done in the

past six years. What are you going to do, take a position for their position

on global warming or the war in Iraq? C'mon!

 

"This is a Puritan folderol. If you scratch farther into the people who make

these rules, say at The New York Times, they're all in somebody's pocket."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Janet Malcolm, writer, 17 donations for $6,700 since

2003 to Democratic campaigns and PACs, including EMILY's List and the

Democratic National Committee.

 

Malcolm did not return phone calls.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, George Packer, the prize-winning war correspondent for

the magazine since 2003 and author of the 2005 book "The Assassins' Gate:

America in Iraq," $750 to the Democratic National Committee in August 2004,

and $250 in July 2005 to Iraq War veteran Paul Hackett, a Democrat who

campaigned against the war and for a seat in Congress in Ohio.

 

"Journalists don't give up their rights as citizens. They can and should

vote; they can and should support candidates," Packer said in an e-mail.

 

"My readers know my views on politics and politicians because I make no

secret of them in my comments for The New Yorker and elsewhere. If giving

money to a politician prejudiced my ability to think and write honestly, I

wouldn't do it. Fortunately, it doesn't."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Mark Singer, profile writer, $250 in April 2004 to

Victory Campaign 2004, which supported America Coming Together, which

opposed President Bush. In January 2004, he had written the magazine's

profile of Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean.

 

"I will tell you the truth. I am not a political writer," Singer said. "I

got a call in the summer of 2003 from David Remnick because Nick Lemann was

going to run the journalism school at Columbia, and he needed someone to

cover the Dean campaign. And I tried to avoid doing it, because I don't

believe fundamentally in the process by which we elect presidents -

obviously it's an insane process. And I had a son who was working in the

Dean campaign - he was 17, up in Burlington. It was a conflict of interest.

I disclosed in the piece that my son was working for the campaign."

 

As for the donation, "I knew I was never going to write another political

piece in my life. There was a decent interval, or an indecent interval,

after the article. I must have rationalized that a get-out-the-vote

campaign, there was some distinction - but now that I'm talking to you, I

see that there's not a distinction. Obviously I'm a Democrat. I understand

the nature of the question you're asking - but it's much easier to influence

the outcome of a political election by writing about it than it is by making

a contribution.

 

"I believe very much that writers have to be aware of conflicts of interest

in all sorts of situations. Probably there should be a rule against it. But

there's a rule against murder. If someone had murdered Hitler - a journalist

interviewing him had murdered him - the world would be a better place. I

only feel good, as a citizen, about getting rid of George Bush, who has been

the most destructive president in my lifetime. I certainly don't regret it."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

 

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(D) The New Yorker, Judith Thurman, writer, $1,000 to the Democratic

National Committee in October 2004. Thurman, who normally writes about

books, art and fashion, wrote the magazine's profile of Teresa Heinz Kerry,

published on Sept. 27, 2004. Her donation to the Democratic National

Committee was recorded on Oct. 7.

 

Reached at home, Thurman said, "Let me get back to you." She did not call

back.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Newsweek, Temma Ehrenfeld, associate editor, $1,000 in June 2006 to the

Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. She has been a reporter for

Newsweek columnist Jane Bryant Quinn and does her own reporting on science

and health topics.

 

 

"I don't do political coverage here," Ehrenfeld said. "I report for Jane

Bryant Quinn's finance coverage. We write about topics like health

insurance, so sometimes we write about legislation. I do write some of my

own stories, not political."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D & R) Newsweek, Jane Bryant Quinn, personal finance columnist, $1,000 to

Judy Aydelott, a Democrat who ran for Congress in New York. Previously gave

$2,800 in four donations to a Republican, former Rep. Sue Kelly of New York.

 

"In my case, I gave to dear friends," Quinn said. "They came to me, and I

gave. And I gave to both Republicans and Democrats."

 

A Newsweek spokeswoman described a policy with some room, particularly for

freelancers like Quinn.

 

"We have an expectation that Newsweek journalists will not make any

contributions to political campaigns," said Jan Angilella. "Are there

exceptions to this general expectation? Yes. Depending on the particular

circumstances, including an employee's or freelancer's specific role or

responsibility."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Newsweek, Anne Underwood, correspondent on health and medical stories,

$1,000 to John Kerry in March 2004. The donation is listed under her married

name, Enslow.

 

"I really don't want to participate in this," Underwood said, hanging up the

phone.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Rolling Stone, Jason Fine, deputy managing editor, $280 to the

Democratic National Committee in September 2004.

 

Fine did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Rolling Stone, David Swanson, assistant editor, $202 to John Kerry in

March 2004.

 

Swanson did not reply to messages. He is now at the company's Men's Journal.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Rolling Stone, Jann Wenner, editor and publisher, $25,000 to the

Democratic National Committee in 2006; $20,000 to the Democratic Senatorial

Campaign Committee in 2006; $10,000 to the Democratic National Committee in

2004; $5,000 to committees supporting Bob Casey, a Democrat elected to the

Senate from Pennsylvania in 2006; $1,250 to Democracy for America, Democrat

Howard Dean's PAC, in 2004; $1,008 to America Coming Together, which opposed

President Bush, in 2004; and $500 to Democratic Senate candidate Ned Lamont

in Connecticut in 2006.

 

Although known for music coverage, Rolling Stone covers politics, too. And

editor/publisher Wenner is still very much involved in editing the magazine,

said publicity director Beth Jacobson.

 

"We encourage our editors to be active participants in the democratic

process," Jacobson said. "We don't operate like a newspaper. We're a

magazine with a point of view, and it's clear we have that point of view.

People go to Rolling Stone - they know what they're going to get."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Time, Jim Frederick, senior editor, $500 to the Vermont Democratic Party

in October 2006.

 

"At the time I made that donation, I was Time's Tokyo Bureau Chief. I am

currently a senior editor at Time's European edition, based in London,"

Frederick said in an e-mail.

 

Time's policy says, "Employees are free to engage in personal volunteer

political activity and contribute personal resources to candidates and

parties in any manner consistent with federal, state, and local laws."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) U.S. News & World Report, Michael Freeman, researcher, $250 to Sen.

Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential candidate, in February 2007.

 

"I'm not a journalist. I work in fact-checking," Freeman said, though he is

in the news department. About the policy, he said, "In past years, they've

sent that out, and it seemed like it really wasn't clear whether it applied

to me or not."

 

The magazine's policy says employees could be accused of a conflict of

interest if they donate, while it doesn't explicitly bar such a donation.

 

A spokeswoman for U.S. News said the new editor, Brian Kelly, is reviewing

the policy.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) U.S. News & World Report, Amanda Spake, senior writer, $250 to John

Kerry in August 2004. Spake covered public health issues and policy. Now a

freelance writer, she is on a fellowship from George Soros' The Open Society

Institute to study the health effects of Hurricane Katrina.

 

"I went to a luncheon for Kerry," Spake said. "I had friends who were

organizing that luncheon, and I felt I had to do it."

 

As for any conflict of interest, she said, "I never covered politics. I

covered public health. It did not impact my coverage one bit."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Vanity Fair, Elise O'Shaughnessy, contributing editor, $2,000 to

Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean in January 2004.

 

A spokeswoman for Vanity Fair said that O'Shaughnessy was a contributor to

the magazine when she made this donation. She is a former executive editor

of Vanity Fair. For a time earlier this year she was editor of Tango

magazine for women

 

"While Vanity Fair does not have a policy regarding its contract writers'

making political contributions, we would expect a writer to recuse himself

from any story that presented a conflict of interest or even the appearance

of one," said spokeswoman Beth Kseniak.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Vanity Fair, Michael Shnayerson, contributing editor, $2,000 to John

Kerry in March 2004. The magazine has described Shnayerson as its de facto

environmental editor, because he writes frequently on the topic, but he also

has written about the likelihood of hacking of electronic voting machines,

Halliburton's war-related profits, anti-terrorism data mining, global

warming skeptics and other political topics.

 

"The fact is that there was no ban on political contributions at Conde Nast

publications, at least as best I could determine (nor is there now),"

Shnayerson said in an e-mail.

 

"I did give the matter some thought before I wrote my check, and it seemed

to me that this was at worst a gray area, and at best a fairly clear one in

favor of making the contribution. ... As a contributing editor, I write four

stories a year. One might be about the environment or related to politics;

the others might be about anything from a media subject to a fashion

designer. This is different from a newspaper writer who covers a political

beat, and to me tips the balance in favor of my right, as a citizen, to make

any legal political contribution I choose to make."

 

He added this postscript: "I must say I do wish, in retrospect, that I had

that $2,000 back to make a perhaps wiser contribution this go-round!"

 

Click to return to the list.

 

 

Click for related content

Read the story: Journalists dole out cash to politicians (quietly)

Live Vote: Should journalists give?

Compare the policies of news organizations

Message board: Weigh in on journalists and politics

 

 

Newspapers:

 

(in order by approximate daily circulation)

 

(D) McClatchy Newspapers, Beryl Adcock, news desk chief, Washington bureau,

$1,000 to John Kerry in April 2004. (She also gave a total of $650 to the

Democratic National Committee in 2002 and 2003.) A blogger called these

contributions to the attention of Adcock's bosses, Tony Ridder and Clark

Hoyt. (Hoyt is now the public editor at The New York Times.) The bureau,

then part of Knight Ridder, was known for its reporting that called into

question the rationales for the war in Iraq.

 

"I was extremely upset and shaken that I had misunderstood something so

important, and offered my resignation to Clark so as not to bring any

further embarrassment to the company," Adcock said in an e-mail. "He refused

it. He and Mr. Ridder both expressed regret that I had misunderstood the

policy and had been hurt by it. I had discussed my donations on more than

one occasion with more than one other editor here; I'd never made any secret

of them, not knowing I wasn't supposed to be doing it. After this emerged, I

sure wished that one of those editors had told me - or even told my bosses -

so I could have stopped sooner.

 

"I no longer have a copy of the Knight Ridder ethics policy. Roughly, I

recall it saying that employees are permitted to engage in political

activity but that if there's a question of a conflict of interest they

should discuss it with their supervisors, or something like that. I

copy-edit stories and compile our news budgets and other communications with

our newspapers, and it did not occur to me that my Washington bosses

considered those functions a conflict of interest with making campaign

donations.

 

"I was under the same policy at Knight Ridder's The Charlotte Observer

newspaper in North Carolina, where I'd worked before coming to the

Washington bureau. There I mostly worked in the features section, so I was

confident there was no conflict of interest. I probably should have

rethought that when I came to Washington, but I simply read the ethics

policy, saw it was the same one I was used to, and my husband and I

continued making our occasional donations."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Wall Street Journal, Krishnan Amantharaman, managing editor of the

classroom edition, $500 to Barack Obama in two payments in February and

March of 2007.

 

"I asked for those contributions back," Amantharaman said. "I don't want to

comment on this."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Wall Street Journal, Henny Sender, senior special writer, $300 to

John Kerry in May 2004. Sender covers Asia.

 

"Dow Jones' Code of Conduct does indeed bar news employees from contributing

to partisan political organizations," Sender said in an e-mail. "I had been

in Asia most of my career and this had never been an issue for me. As soon

as I learned of this policy, which was shortly after I made that donation, I

asked for and received a refund of my check back from the Kerry campaign. So

for me, I wrote the check, realized the mistake, got the money back."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Wall Street Journal, Eben Shapiro, editor of the Weekend Journal

section on Fridays, $1,500 to Democratic Victory 2004 in June 2004.

 

"The entry you're asking about reflected a purchase of art I made at a

fundraiser," Shapiro said in an e-mail. "Shortly afterward, I was reminded

of the Dow Jones' Code of Conduct provision barring news employees from

contributing to partisan political activities. At that point, I returned the

art and my money was refunded. So, while my mistake landed me on the list

you're checking, at the end of the day my contribution was erased."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New York Times, Randy Cohen, ethics columnist, $585 in three

donations in August 2004 to MoveOn.org, which conducted get-out-the-vote

drives to defeat President Bush. In addition to the syndicated column "The

Ethicist" for the Times Magazine, Cohen answers ethics questions for

listeners of NPR.

 

Freelancers like Cohen are covered by the Times policy, which says, "Times

readers apply exacting standards to the entire paper. They do not

distinguish between staff-written articles and those written by outsiders.

Thus as far as possible, freelance contributors to The Times, while not its

employees, will be held to the same standards as staff members when they are

on Times assignments, including those for the Times Magazine. If they

violate these guidelines, they will be denied further assignments."

 

Cohen said he thought of MoveOn.org as nonpartisan and thought the donation

would be allowed even under the strict rule at the Times.

 

"We admire those colleagues who participate in their communities - help out

at the local school, work with Little League, donate to charity," Cohen said

in an e-mail. "But no such activity is or can be non-ideological. Few papers

would object to a journalist donating to the Boy Scouts or joining the

Catholic Church. But the former has an official policy of discriminating

against gay children; the latter has views on reproductive rights far more

restrictive than those of most Americans. Should reporters be forbidden to

support those groups? I'd say not. Unless a group's activities impinge on a

reporter's beat, the reporter should be free to donate to a wide range of

nonprofits. Make a journalist's charitable giving transparent, and let the

readers weigh it as they will.

 

"Those who do not cover anything, but write a column of opinion should have

even more latitude. It is such a writer's job to make his views explicit.

Those donations to nonprofits will no doubt reflect the views he or she is

hired to express. In evaluating such civic engagement, it is well to

remember that to have an opinion is not to have a bias. To conceal one's

political opinions is not to be without them."

 

After MSNBC.com checked the names of Times staff and contributors on this

list with a spokesperson for the Times, Cohen sent this addendum:

 

"That said, Times policy does forbid my making such donations, and I will

not do so in the future."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The New York Times, Christine Muhlke, deputy editor, style magazine,

$500 to John Kerry in June 2004, and $1,800 in two donations in 2004 to

Downtown for Democracy, which made independent expenditures to oppose

President Bush.

 

Muhlke referred questions to a Times spokesperson, who said Muhlke joined

the Times staff in April 2005, after the donations. Before then she was a

contributor on contract, writing food articles. The Times policy, which

forbids donations, says that it applies to freelance writers as well as

staffers, while they are on Times assignments.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D & R) The New York Times, Nancy Tilghman, freelance writer, $2,300 to

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in March 2007; $1,000 to

Bill Manger, Democratic candidate for Congress, in August 2004; $1,000 to

President Bush in March 2004; and $2,000 to Wesley Clark, Democratic

presidential candidate, in December 2003. Her most recent Times bylines were

in January 2006 and sporadically from 2001 through 2004. Her 2007 donation

also listed the Times as her employer.

 

Tilghman said she no longer writes for the Times.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Los Angeles Times, Nick Cuccia, design editor, $500 to John Kerry in

March 2004, and $1,500 more in July 2004. Cuccia is a page designer on the

features desk.

 

"I was not responsible for, or involved in, editing or placing national,

political or campaign stories in the paper," Cuccia said in an e-mail.

 

The Times policy in effect at that time applied only to political writers:

"Staff members should not take part in political or governmental activities

they may be called upon to cover, or whose coverage they supervise."

 

In 2006, the Times completely overhauled its ethics policies, including a

ban on political contributions by any editorial staff member.

 

"I am in compliance with that policy," Cuccia said, "and intend to remain

so. Beyond that, I haven't any further comment."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Los Angeles Times, Manohla Dargis, film critic, now at The New York

Times, gave $1,000 to John Kerry in mid-July 2004, when she was still at The

Los Angeles Times, and $1,000 more in late July, after she had been hired by

The New York Times, but before she began the job. Previously, while at the

L.A. Times, she gave $300 to Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader

in September 2000, and $500 to Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean

in December 2003.

 

Dargis has reviewed Michael Moore's "Sicko," among other films with

political themes. She wrote that "Sicko" was "persuasive, insistently

leftist."

 

"I made the Dean, Nader and first Kerry donations when the Los Angeles Times

had no policy/guidelines prohibiting political donations by the likes of

me," Dargis said in an e-mail. "The second Kerry donation was made when I

was a free agent, employed neither by the Los Angeles Times nor by the New

York Times."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Los Angeles Times, Dan Neil, automobile critic, $250 to the Democratic

National Committee in July 2004. Neil received the Pulitzer Prize for

criticism in 2004.

 

"Yup, that's me, all right," Neil said in an e-mail.

 

"Two things: I'm a columnist, not a straight-news guy, and my political

affiliations are not, I don't think, in doubt. Goes to the question of

whether my 'activism' by donation is indicative of some covert (and mythic)

liberal bias in the press.

 

"Two, I believe - I am not certain of this - the paper's policy specifically

bars public political advocacy/activism. In other words, I couldn't go out

and rep the DNC and then pretend to be an impartial commentator, as Paul

Begala has done, or come very close to doing, in any event.

 

"This policy has, at times, worked a hardship on me. I wanted to march with

Latinos in Los Angeles in 2006 - justice for Latino immigrants being a human

rights issue right on my front door in Los Angeles - but I couldn't because

of my understanding of the paper's policy on public advocacy."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® Los Angeles Times, Charles Perry, food writer, $200 to the Republican

National Committee in October 2004.

 

"Yes, that $200 was my donation," Perry said in an e-mail.

 

"The Times ethics policy states as its basic principle that editorial

employees may not use their positions at the paper to promote personal

agendas or causes, nor should they allow their outside activities to

undermine the impartiality of Times coverage, in fact or in appearance. I

wholeheartedly support this policy, without any reservation.

 

"I'm a food and drink writer, not a news reporter. I have always felt there

was no problem with contributing to my party because Food is a non-political

section (could I somehow smear Democrat beers and whitewash Republican

ones?). Therefore I felt my political contributions could scarcely discredit

my writing, or my employer.

 

"The ethics policy says that staff members may not "contribute money to a

partisan campaign or candidate" (though it also says "The Times does not

seek to restrict staff members' participation in civic life"). Since 2004,

just to be on the safe side, I have declined to make any political

contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) New York Daily News, Celia McGee, reporter, $1,000 to New York Sen.

Hillary Clinton in May 2005, when McGee was on staff for The Daily News, and

another $1,000 in March 2007, when she was a freelancer for The New York

Times.

 

The Daily News spokeswoman said McGee left the paper in February 2006. A

Times spokesman said the prohibition applies to freelancers "when they are

on Times assignments."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) New York Daily News, Matthew Roberts, photographer, $404 to John Kerry

in March 2004.

 

Roberts did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Washington Post, Stephen Hunter, film critic, $250 to the National

Republican Congressional Committee in June 2004. Hunter received the

Pulitzer Prize for criticism in 2003. He also is known as a writer of

thriller novels.

 

"That is indeed my donation, probably an unwise idea," Hunter said.

 

"A couple of years afterward, I was called aside by someone in management

and told not to do it again. And being an obedient boy, I didn't do it

again."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Chicago Tribune, Maureen Ryan, entertainment reporter, $1,500 to

John Kerry in three donations in 2004; $1,000 to the Democratic National

Committee in October 2004; and $500 to the Ohio Democratic Party in October

2004.

 

In September 2005, the Tribune's public editor disclosed in his column that

Ryan had given to Kerry, then had written a column unfavorably comparing

President Bush's response to Hurricane Katrina to Oprah Winfrey's response

when she visited New Orleans.

 

In her own column, Ryan apologized to readers : "You should have had that

information up front. I am sorry you did not. Having said that, I can tell

you from the bottom of my heart that if Kerry had been elected, and events

in New Orleans played out exactly the way they did last week, I would have

written the same piece, substituting Kerry's name for Bush. Though I

contributed to a Democratic cause, last week I praised Fox News' coverage of

the post-Katrina disaster. Though I celebrated Oprah Winfrey's actions after

the flood, I have written articles critical of her in the last year. As I

have in the past, I will continue to attempt to be as honest and as fair as

I can be in my television coverage, and I would feel honored if you could

forgive this unintentional oversight and continue to share this space with

me. Because you readers - even those of you who disagree with me - are the

reasons I do what I do."

 

The paper's public editor responded to MSNBC.com's questions sent to Ryan,

saying the rules were tightened in early 2005.

 

"The Tribune ethics policy includes a blanket ban on editorial employees

making any political contributions," wrote public editor Tim McNulty. "Now a

few particulars...

 

"Back in 2004, Ms. Ryan was a writer in the feature section of the

newspaper. She asked both her immediate supervisor and my predecessor as

public editor if it was OK for her to make contributions.

 

"She was told at the time that it was permissible as long as she was not

involved in political coverage. Ms. Ryan did not have any role then in

reporting directly or even indirectly on politics.

 

"Since that time, the company found it impractical to monitor exceptions and

far better, we think, to simply say in the ethics policy that 'no editorial

employee, whether involved in political coverage or not, may donate to or be

affiliated in any way with such groups' (referring to political parties and

causes)."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Chicago Tribune, John von Rhein, classical music critic, $200 to the

Democratic National Committee in October 2004.

 

Update: Von Rhein sent this by e-mail: "I write strictly about classical

music for the Chicago Tribune and was unaware of the paper's policy

regarding political contributions by staff writers, even when acting as

private individuals. I since have been informed of the policy and have told

my editors I will adhere to company guidelines in the future."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) San Francisco Chronicle, William Pates, letters editor for the editorial

page, $600 to John Kerry in three donations in March and April 2004. Pates,

who selected which letters were published, was moved to the sports copy desk

after the staff of a Web site at San Jose State University, Grade the News,

asked about his contributions. The Newspaper Guild contested the transfer

and Pates is now back as the letters editor.

 

Pates did not return a message, but he told The Associated Press that he had

not thought the paper's policy against political activity would apply to

him, because he worked on the opinion pages.

 

The paper's editorial page editor, John Diaz, told MSNBC.com that Pates had

done an honest, professional job in his "gatekeeper role" and just hadn't

thought the issue through.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Newsday, Long Island, Rita Hall, section designer/artist and sometime

writer, $210 to Democratic Sen. Hillary Clinton in March 2006, and ...

 

"Dig deeper," she said. "I gave $2,000 to Kerry." Indeed, she did, in March

2004. "I'm not allowed to do this. I know it's against the rules," she said

of giving to candidates. "I'll probably get fired. They're looking for any

excuse to cut staff here."

 

She also slipped some anti-Bush material into a first-person column she

wrote about her son, who won the Top Chef competition on the Bravo network.

"In passing I mentioned that I was interested in finding people who hated

Bush as much as I did. They took that out.

 

"My view is: You're still going to have an opinion whether you admit to it

or not. If you don't admit to it, you're being dishonest. Let's be

transparent."

 

Newsday's senior editor, John Mancini, who hadn't known of Hall's

contributions, said, "It is against our policy for anyone on the editorial

staff to make political contributions. Anything that would call into

question our objectivity. It stems from the appearance of conflict being a

problem."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Boston Globe, Rebecca Ostriker, arts editor/writer, $2,000 to John

Kerry in June 2004.

 

Ostriker was on vacation and did not reply to messages.

 

Globe editor Martin Baron said Ostriker was a part-time copy editor in the

Living/Arts section in June 2004. Now she is on staff.

 

"Our policy is clear," Baron said in an e-mail. "No political contributions

by anyone in the newsroom. I am not aware of any breaches of the policy in

the last few years."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Boston Globe, Henry Riemer, sports statistician, $1,700 to

Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean in 2003-2004 and $1,000 in

2004 to Democracy for America, which gave to Democrats. Riemer retired in

2004.

 

"We felt the need in 2004 to clarify a seeming ambiguity among some staffers

about whether those who had no involvement in political coverage could make

political contributions," said Globe editor Martin Baron. "The discovery (by

our own reporters) of Henry Riemer's contribution was one reason we issued a

clarifying memo."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Star-Ledger, Newark, Robin Gaby Fisher, feature writer, $200 to

President Bush in March 2004 and $300 to the Republican National Committee

in November 2004.

 

Fisher said she doesn't cover politics and the paper doesn't have a policy

on contributions. She gave in 2004, she said, because of the war. "It

frightened me that it was a bad time to change course, because we were in

the war. After getting your call and reflecting on it, I think it was kind

of a bad idea."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Barbara Haugen, copy editor, $250 to Sen. Amy

Klobucher, a Democrat, in October 2006.

 

Haugen did not return phone calls. The paper's managing editor, Scott

Gillespie, said, "We have a conflict of interest policy. We ask that people

who are involved in political coverage - we dissuade them - we actually

dissuade the entire staff. We haven't banned it outright for the entire

newsroom. Our policy says that people should avoid doing any partisan

politics on their own, avoid any politics. It's especially emphasized for

people who do political coverage."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Detroit Free Press, Susan Hall-Balduf, copy editor, $300 to John Kerry

in July 2004. Now editing news copy, she gave when she was in features.

 

"I was scolded," Hall-Balduf said. "We did a story on how easy it was to

look up these records on the Internet, and they were not happy to find a

couple of our own people on the list. But I made the point that I worked

only in features, and I never edited any stories that have to do the

election. I was told not to do it again. I wouldn't do it again. But at the

time my job was focused on the doings of Britney Spears."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Detroit Free Press, Joel Thurtell, reporter, $500 to the Michigan

Democratic State Central Committee in September 2004.

 

"Whatever the Free Press policy is," Thurtell said, "I actually have my own

policy about that: I'm a citizen of the United States. I have a right to

support whatever candidate I like."

 

Thurtell said his political views don't influence his reporting, as

demonstrated by his role as a reporter on the stories disclosing the ways

that Democratic Rep. John Conyers used his congressional staff to run

personal errands and do campaign business.

 

"I got tons of e-mail from liberal-type people who likened me to Karl Rove.

I have tried to be as honest as I possibly can as a reporter."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Oregonian, Portland, Steve Amick, reporter, $200 in July 2004 to

the Democratic National Committee. Amick is no longer at the paper.

 

"I don't want to be interviewed," Amick said, hanging up the phone.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Miami Herald, Harry Broertjes, copy editor/page designer, $250 to

the Republican National Committee in June 2006, $500 more in August 2006 and

$200 to President Bush in August 2004.

 

Broertjes, on the Broward County staff, did not return telephone messages.

Herald managing editor Dave Wilson said the policy is clear: "Journalists

should not make campaign contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The San Diego Union-Tribune, Joe Cline, graphic artist, $200 to the

Republican National Committee in October 2004, and $400 to President Bush in

November 2004.

 

Cline did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Penni Crabtree, business reporter, $225 in

October 2004 to MoveOn.org, which ran get-out-the-vote efforts to defeat

President Bush.

 

Crabtree did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Bob Elledge, assistant news editor, $250 to

Democratic presidential candidate Wesley Clark in January 2004 and $500 to

John Kerry in July 2004. Also gave $250 to Clark in 2003.

 

Elledge did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Shaffer Grubb, graphic artist, $500 to

MoveOn.org, which opposes President Bush, in 2006; $500 in 2006 to Michael

Arcuri, a Democrat elected to Congress from New York, in 2006, and $500 in

2006 to Christine Jennings, a Democrat who lost a still-contested

congressional race in Florida.

 

Grubb does elegant infographics, including an award-winning graphic on the

toll of U.S. dead in Iraq. He began working at the paper in May 2005 after

graduating from the University of Missouri-Columbia.

 

"I asked my superior before I gave," Grubb said. "It's allowed."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Arline Smith, news production editor, $500

to the Democratic National Committee in October 2004.

 

"Yes, that is my donation," Smith said in an e-mail. "I am the production

editor at the Union-Tribune. This means I coordinate the flow of type and

pages from the Newsroom through Composing to Platemaking. In my job I have

no responsibility for the assigning, reporting or editing of political

stories or for their placement, headlines, etc. There is nothing in our

ethics policy that bars me from making political donations."

 

See below for her husband, Charlie.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The San Diego Union-Tribune, Charlie Smith, copy editor, $500 to the

Democratic National Committee in June 2004.

 

"That's my wife, Arline," Smith said. "She is the one who made the

donations." And his wife agrees. (See Arline Smith, above.)

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Sun, Baltimore, John Scholz, copy editor, $250 to the Democratic

National Committee in March 2004.

 

According to an article in The Sun, Scholz retired in July 2004. He worked

for the business copy desk and did not view the donation as a conflict, the

newspaper said. The Sun at that time had no policy banning donations. Scholz

was due to retire soon after that article was published.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) San Jose Mercury News, Rachel Wilner, sports editor, $250 to John Kerry

in June 2004.

 

Wilner said her understanding was that the paper's policy allows

contributions unless it would present the appearance of a conflict of

interest.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Boston Herald, Chris Donnelly, news librarian, 16 donations in 2003 and

2004: $3,200 to the Democratic National Committee, $2,500 to John Kerry,

$675 to MoveOn.org, which opposes President Bush, and $200 to the Democratic

Congressional Campaign Committee.

 

Donnelly, who now works for a database company, said he thought of himself

as a librarian, not a journalist, although he worked for the news

department. He said he didn't know the paper's policy.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Ethan Skolnick, sports

columnist, $250 to Peter Deutsch, Democratic candidate for Senate, in July

2004; and $250 to Debbie Schultz, Democratic candidate for House, in June

2005.

 

"I no longer can make any more," Skolnick said in an e-mail. "At the time

that I made them - they were both friends of a politically active friend - I

was not aware of the newspaper's policy that restricts us from doing so

(even if we work in sports, as I do).

 

"Anyway, after carefully reading the ethics policy last year, I disclosed

the donations to my editor. When I've been asked for donations since, I have

declined. I also told political organizations to take me off of their call

lists."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Randy Galloway, sports columnist, $750 to the

Democratic National Committee in three payments in 2004 and 2005; and $500

to Democratic Rep. Martin Frost in September 2004. Previously gave $1,000 in

2002 to Senate candidate Ron Kirk, Democrat.

 

"That was my wife, Janeen," Galloway said in an e-mail. "It's a joint

checking account, both names on the checks. She makes her own political

donations."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Vincent Langford, sports copy editor, $500 to

the Democratic National Committee in October 2006.

 

Langford did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Hartford Courant, Nancy Gallinger, copy editor, $250 to John Kerry

in July 2004.

 

"That is my contribution," Gallinger said in an e-mail. "Since that time,

Tribune has adopted a policy against political contributions by

journalists."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Hartford Courant, Bill Lewis, copy editor, $250 to John Kerry in

August 2004. Lewis, who was a copy editor on the A section, or news, is now

in features.

 

Lewis did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Richmond Times-Dispatch, Michael Hardy, state political reporter, $1,000

in February 2006 to Democrat Matt Brown, the former Rhode Island secretary

of state, who ran for the Senate before dropping out amid a fundraising

controversy.

 

As a state capitol political reporter in Virginia, Hardy writes frequently

about Democrats and Republicans.

 

"My contribution in a Rhode Island primary was based on a personal

decision," he said in an e-mail. "As for my assignments, I cover the

governor's office, state appellate courts and the General Assembly. I have

no national responsibilities."

 

The managing editor of the Times-Dispatch, Peggy Bellows, did not reply to

messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Richmond Times-Dispatch, Pam Mastropaolo, copy editor, $1,650 to the

Democratic Party of Virginia in February 2007, and $1,165 in February 2006.

 

Mastropaolo didn't reply to messages. Nor did the managing editor, Peggy

Bellows.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Contra Costa Times, Walnut Creek, Calif., Robert Taylor, fine arts

reporter, $500 to the Democratic National Committee, October 2004.

 

"I write about visual arts for the Times," Taylor said. "I'm a features

writer and reviewer. If I were a political reporter, I might have made a

different decision. If we have a policy on making political donations, I'm

not aware of it."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Press-Enterprise, Riverside, Calif., Mark Benoit, wire editor, $500

in October 2004 to MoveOn.org, which ran get-out-the-vote efforts to defeat

President Bush. As a wire editor, Benoit is a copy editor who selects which

state, national and international stories to publish.

 

"I'd rather not talk about it," Benoit said.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Palm Beach Post, Fla., George McEvoy, columnist, $200 to John Kerry in

May 2004, another $200 in June 2004, and $204 to the Democratic National

Committee in September 2004.

 

McEvoy did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Barbara Bradley, fashion editor, $300 to

the Republican National Committee in November 2004. Previously gave $500 to

President Bush in December 2003.

 

"I am a fashion and features reporter and was ignorant of our newspaper's

policy against donations by reporters," Bradley said in an e-mail. "My

editors informed me, and I made no more contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Des Moines Register, Stephen P. Dinnen, business reporter, $250 to

John Kerry in June 2004. His byline is S.P. Dinnen.

 

Dinnen said he wasn't sure whether he gave to Kerry or not. "It might have

been my wife. She's active in politics." He said he wasn't sure how the

campaign would have gotten his occupation and employer for the records.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Honolulu Advertiser, Chris Neil, wire editor, $500 to John Kerry in

June 2004. A wire editor is typically a copy editor who selects which state,

national and international news to publish.

 

Neil did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Blade, Toledo, James Bradley, copy editor, $250 to John Kerry in

June 2004, and $250 to the Democratic National Committee in September 2004.

 

Bradley, who edits news copy, said he didn't know whether the paper has a

policy on political activity. "It's never come up."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Lexington Herald-Leader, Brian Throckmorton, copy desk chief, $250 to

John Kerry in June 2004. His staff edits local news articles, selects wire

stories and writes headlines.

 

"The thing that we try to avoid is the appearance of partiality,"

Throckmorton said. "And for me that means bumper stickers and yard signs and

things that might lead the public to easily but falsely suspect that there's

a problem with our impartiality. But something as private as a donation

which they might have to work to find out...."

 

Besides, he said, "the fact of a political donation doesn't imply lack of

impartiality or bad news judgment to begin with, and one person making a

donation doesn't imply that there's a bias throughout the newsroom."

 

Then Throckmorton said, "I'm not comfortable being included in the story. Do

not publish my name."

 

The paper's managing editor, Tom Eblen, said in an e-mail, "Herald-Leader

newsroom employees are not allowed to actively or publicly participate in

politics. Our policies strongly discourage, but do not prohibit, this type

of donation."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Morning Call, Allentown, Pa., Beth Hudson, sports reporter, $500 to

the Republican National Committee in October 2004.

 

Hudson did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) The Daytona Beach, Fla., News-Journal, Marc Davidson, editor, $200 to

Sen. Bill Nelson, Florida Democrat, in March 2006, and $250 to Sen. Russell

Feingold, Democrat from Wisconsin, in July 2002.

 

Davidson, the senior editor and a member of the paper's owning family, said

in an e-mail that the paper "has no policy prohibiting contributions by

employees. It does require its editorial employees not to RUN for office,

though. I think my grandfather, who made most of the policies we follow,

thought that preventing donations would rob them of their last right to

political expression - a line he didn't want to cross.

 

"Yes, those are my donations. I've always been an active Democrat, and until

my responsibilities at the N-J became editorially related, I was a figure in

the county Democratic Party.

 

"But I will say that no one is ever in doubt over this newspaper's

politically liberal stance, and it's unlikely that I would send money to a

candidate I was not already committed (in my mind) to support. That support

would be evident in my work, regardless of my contributions.

 

"As a general rule of thumb we try to avoid the appearance of conflict of

interest, so it's unlikely that you'd see too many political contributions

large enough to make those lists coming from any editorial staff. I'm kind

of the exception to that rule because, as I said earlier, no one is in any

doubt about the paper's stances and since my name (rightly or not) is

inextricably linked with the paper, no one is going to construe an

occasional donation by me as being in conflict and everyone is going to

assume I sent a contribution even if I didn't.

 

"I don't often make such contributions, but sometimes, as with the Nelson

one you list, I felt it was vital to support him."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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(D) Albany, N.Y., Times Union, Greg Montgomery, graphic design editor, $500

to the Democratic National Committee in September 2004; $725 to MoveOn.org,

which opposed President Bush, in 2004; $1,600 to John Kerry in 2003-2004;

and $250 to Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., in 2006.

 

Montgomery said he doesn't think of himself as a journalist - he designs

covers for magazines and feature sections and does the occasional news

graphic or map. He said the paper has no written policy on political

activity. When he gave, he said, "I thought that was a particular point in

time when it was time to stand up and be counted." As for any future

donations, he said, "It's a moot point, because I'm out of money."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

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® The Washington Times, film critic Gary Arnold, $1,000 to the Republican

National Committee in four donations in 2004. Also $1,400 total to the RNC

in six donations in 1997-2003. Arnold was the full-time critic for The

Washington Times before becoming a freelancer for the paper at the end of

2005.

 

Arnold said he'd like to see more disclosure of the political views of

journalists. "I'm always reading things from political reporters who pretend

to be impartial, but it's clear what their biases are."

 

He said that political issues are "a non-issue for 90 percent of the movies

I review" but that the minority is getting larger, with much of Hollywood

wearing its opinions on its sleeve.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) San Gabriel Valley Newspapers, Calif., Eric Terrazas, sports editor,

$200 to the Democratic National Committee in October 2004, and $500 more in

May 2006.

 

Update: "Yes, those were my donations to the Democratic National Committee,"

Terrazas said in an e-mail. "I'm a lifelong Democrat and I have donated to

the DNC from time to time for the last several years.

 

"As a journalist, I know that objectivity is essential. But since my

donation was coming from my own pocketbook, I didn't think it would be a big

deal to donate to the DNC. Also, I believe our newsroom doesn't have a

policy against campaign donations."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® The New York Sun, Liz Peek, financial columnist, $2,000 to Elizabeth

Dole, Republican, in March 2007; $2,000 to the Volunteer PAC, which supports

Republicans, in June 2006; $1,000 to Mark Kennedy, Republican, in June 2006;

$500 in June 2006 to Straight Talk America, which supported Republicans;

$15,000 to the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee in April

2006; and $4,200 to Kathleen Troia McFarland, Republican House candidate, in

November 2005. In previous years, she gave $65,000 to the National

Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee.

 

Peek did not return calls. A PR person sent an e-mail asking what the story

was about but then would not answer questions.

 

The managing editor of The Sun, Ira Stoll, said, "We don't have a written

policy on that. I can imagine situations where it might pose a conflict. But

to me the right to contribute to a campaign is a basic free speech right,

and I would want to err on the side of allowing those contributing to the

Sun to exercise those rights, and it has the side benefit of disclosing to

those readers something that might otherwise be hidden from them."

 

But, we asked, were the donations disclosed to the readers in the Sun? "No,

but as you've proven, they are easily found on the Internet."

 

"Our readers are very sophisticated," he said, able to tell the difference

between an editorial endorsing a candidate and a journalist donating to a

candidate.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) The Lincoln, Neb., Journal Star, Paul Fell, editorial cartoonist, $450

in 2006 to Maxine Moul, Democratic candidate for the House.

 

"For your information, I did contribute the amounts listed to the Maxine

Moul for Congress campaign in 2006," Fell said in an e-mail. "I am a

freelance cartoonist, who contracts with the Lincoln Journal Star to draw

three editorial cartoons a week.

 

"They don't pay me enough money to be able to dictate how I conduct myself

in political campaigns. I generally do not donate to political candidates,

but Maxine Moul is a longtime friend and former newspaper publisher where I

got my start as a cartoonist back in 1976.

 

"Frankly, I don't give a rat's ass what the Lincoln Journal Star or their

parent organization, Lee Enterprises, policies are on allowing newsroom

staff to give to candidates and parties. I do not believe they did disclose

my donations. That's their problem, not mine."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) The Lincoln, Neb., Journal Star, Sylvia Hermanson, copy editor, $250 to

the Democratic National Committee in January 2007.

 

Hermanson said this was a joint contribution with her spouse. "So, am I

busted? I'll have to check our policy on newsroom practices."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

® Macon, Ga., Telegraph, Stephen "Keich" Whicker, local government

reporter, $250 to Republican congressional candidate Mac Collins in October

2006.

 

Whicker, who covered a different congressional race for the paper, said he

didn't contribute - it was his father of the same name who paid for a ticket

to a fundraiser where President Bush was speaking. But it was the son, the

reporter, who used the ticket to attend the fundraiser. "Dad's a Republican.

He couldn't go, and basically he gave the ticket to me to go."

 

"Because I cover politics, I'm extremely careful about that sort of thing. I

don't even vote in elections. I didn't pay for it. I went to attend - I'd

never seen the president before."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) New Hampshire Union Leader, David Johnson, sports copy editor, $500 to

James Craig, the state House Democratic leader and candidate for Congress,

in March 2006.

 

"I don't believe they have a policy on that," Johnson said of the Union

Leader, the state's largest newspaper. "I've never heard one way or another.

It doesn't affect anything that I do personally. Not that sports doesn't

have political issues. It does."

 

The paper's managing editor, Edward C. Domaingue II, did not reply to an

e-mail.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Corpus Christi, Texas, Caller-Times, Elvia Aguilar, business writer,

$500 to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in March 2007.

 

She said she accompanied her father and brother to a Clinton fundraiser, but

that it was her father, not she, who made the contribution. "No, my news

organization doesn't allow journalists to make campaign contributions. And I

didn't make a campaign contribution," Aguilar said in an e-mail. "I

accompanied my father and brother to the event, and my father paid for this

with the cashier's checks. I do not know why I showed up as a contributor."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) National Catholic Reporter, Margot Patterson, senior writer and

arts/opinion editor, $2,100 to Claire McCaskill, Senate candidate, Democrat,

in October 2006; a total of $800 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign

Committee in 2004 and 2006; $1,000 to Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver in

2004; and $250 to Howard Dean, Democratic presidential candidate, in

February 2004.

 

Patterson has reported from the Middle East and written extensively about

political topics, including cover articles on the Iraq war, for the

independent national weekly in Kansas City. Both Rep. Cleaver and Sen.

McCaskill oppose the war.

 

The reporter also signed a petition against the war and paid to have it

published as the advertisement "KC Metro Citizens Oppose War On Iraq!"

 

None of this was disclosed to the readers of NCR, which bills itself as "the

independent newsweekly."

 

Patterson said her policy is more honest than the "hypocrisy" of reporters

who hold positions but don't back them up with donations.

 

"Most reporters I know have opinions, regardless of whether in their

capacity as citizens they choose to give to a political candidate," she said

in an e-mail. "I feel my responsibility as a journalist is to be fair to the

people and issues involved and to be as accurate as possible. That

responsibility is incumbent upon me regardless of whether I choose to vote -

or not - or choose to contribute money to a political campaign - or not."

 

"As I see it, I was born a citizen of the U.S. and I will die a citizen of

the U.S. and my responsibilities to my country do not suddenly cease because

I take a particular job. When I see my country embark on a course of action

that I think disastrous to its future and fatal to its citizens, I think it

my duty to do my utmost to stop it. That includes supporting candidates who

will promote a less aggressive foreign policy and who will defend

constitutional government and the rule of law. All of us have multiple roles

and identities in life that we negotiate."

 

About signing the petition against the war, Patterson wrote in the e-mail,

"I'm sure I had long since forgotten about that ad when writing the

articles." In any case, she said, that's not "an ethical problem. For one

thing, I wasn't covering the same people I gave money to when I wrote the

articles. For another, the newspaper I work for has been strongly and

unequivocally opposed to the war from the outset and has made that

abundantly clear in its editorials. NCR has always been anti-war and it is

NCR policy not to accept a dime from the Department of Defense. I do not

think NCR readers can be in any doubt as to where the paper stands when it

comes to war. It's against it. There is no attempt to be neutral or

even-handed about this topic."

 

Her editor, Tom Roberts, said he was "less than a strict constructionist on

the matter of what reporters should be allowed to do in the exercise of

citizenship and conscience." He said that the paper's articles have in fact

been neutral and even-handed, though its editorials have opposed the war. On

campaign contributions, he allowed them unless they would be perceived as a

conflict of interest.

 

"The contribution to the ad, on the other hand, is clearly another matter.

Although the paper, editorially, has consistently and strongly opposed the

war even before it started, a reporter signing a petition crosses the line

to activism and we've spoken about it."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) York, Pa., Daily Record, Teresa Cook, copy editor, $500 to Democratic

House candidate John Sarbanes in Maryland in July 2006.

 

Cook didn't return calls. Her editor, James McClure said, "I'm not going to

comment."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Muskegon, Mich., Chronicle, Terry Judd, reporter and chief of the

newspaper's Grand Haven bureau, $1,900 to the Democratic National Committee

in six contributions from 2004 through 2006; and $2,000 to John Kerry in

March 2004.

 

"You caught me," Judd said. "I guess I was just doing it on the side."

 

The paper's metropolitan editor, John Stephenson, said appearances of a

conflict do matter. "We run letters all the time from people who say we're

right-wing this or left-wing that." He checked with the paper's senior

editor and found that the paper has no written policy on donations, but he

said it will consider one now.

 

"This information makes us want to think further and more deeply about what

we encourage and discourage in reporters," Stephenson said. "We have always

historically said, 'You guys can have any political beliefs you want, just

don't wear your hearts on your sleeve, or your bumper. Truthfully, this sort

of thing may be the new bumper.' Ten years ago, you may have to have waded

through a mountain of paper to find this stuff. We are rethinking. It's OK

to do something if our readers don't know it? Is it all about appearances,

or is there more principle here? It's an interesting question."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fort Wayne, Ind., News-Sentinel, Fran Adler, copy editor, $250 in August

2006 to Dr. Tom Hayhurst, Fort Wayne city councilman and Democrat who lost

the congressional race in 2006 for the 3rd Congressional District.

 

Adler said, "Well, you know, it was from my husband and me. I'm surprised

that my name is on it. That's neither here nor there. That's just how you

found me. We are people and citizens, and we have the right to support

candidates in our own ways.

 

"I was asked to distribute flyers at a 4-H fair, but my editors thought

something that visible was inappropriate. But I was allowed to make a

contribution. I'm a citizen, and I'm going to have my opinions regardless. I

think I can be absolutely objective about him and his opponents and

anything. I'm in the distinct minority in this newspaper in my political

leanings - I don't think it's an issue."

 

The paper's editor, Kerry Hubartt, said he hadn't thought of campaign

contributions as public. "We don't mind contributions as such, but we have

to tell our staff they can't openly participate in a campaign, handing out

flyers.

 

"There are probably things we may not know about in terms of participation,"

Hubartt said, "that might make us nervous if we did know about them."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Fort Wayne, Ind., News-Sentinel, Faith Van Gilder, copy editor, $500 in

October 2006 to Dr. Tom Hayhurst, Fort Wayne city councilman and Democrat

who lost the congressional race in 2006 for the 3rd Congressional District.

 

"Actually, my husband and I gave," Van Gilder said. "I don't remember why.

 

"We just rewrote our ethics policy for the newsroom about two years ago. I

looked at it, and it said you can't run for political office. It doesn't

mention donations or wearing a political button or putting a political

bumper sticker on your car. We have a pretty small newsroom, 30-35 people,

and we, for the most part, we all know each other's political stripes.

 

"I'm sure one of our main objectives is to be very neutral when we're

writing a headline, when we're editing copy. We would never put our personal

opinions in a cutline. When you're a professional journalist, you separate

what you believe from your job. I've been in the business for 25 years.

Maybe someone who is younger has struggled more with that. I'm able to keep

the two separate."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Martha's Vineyard, Mass., Times, Whit Griswold, copy editor, $650 to

MoveOn.org, which got out the vote against President Bush, in September

2004, $1,500 more in October 2004, $500 in September 2006, and $1,000 in

November 2006; and $500 to Joseph Courtney, Democratic House candidate in

Connecticut, in September 2006.

 

Griswold said he now believes that he shouldn't donate to candidates.

 

"Your question's a good one. I never even thought of it. I'm not a reporter.

I don't think of myself as setting policy - I don't. But I have a little

influence as a copy editor. I can see, if the world was perfect, I shouldn't

do it. My boss doesn't want us to run for office. Coincidentally, he's a

conservative Republican and did endorse Bush twice. I'm way over on the

other side."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

Click for related content

Read the story: Journalists dole out cash to politicians

(quietly)

Live Vote: Should journalists give?

Compare the policies of news organizations

Message board: Weigh in on journalists and politics

 

 

 

Radio:

 

(D) Air America and CBS, Betsy Rosenberg-Zimmerman, environment talk show

host and environment reporter, $500 in June 2005 to Joe Nathan, Democrat;

1,000 in October 2004 to Environment2004 PAC, which made independent

expenditures opposing President Bush; $1,000 in June 2002 to Colorado Senate

candidate Thomas Strickland, Democrat; $250 to John Kerry in March 2002; and

$1,000 in September 1998 to EMILY's List.

 

Rosenberg-Zimmerman contributed while she was reporting on the environment

for CBS Radio and KCBS in California, and then when she moved to Air America

to host a talk show. Her program on April 17 was devoted to Democratic Sen.

Barbara Boxer, to whom she contributed by giving $1,000 in February 2004 to

the California Victory '04 PAC. "Congratulations for all your bold

leadership," she told Boxer. She didn't disclose to her listeners that she

was a Boxer donor.

 

She said she is not a journalist now, although her program's Web site calls

her one. Now she's a "radio activist."

 

"For a while I was calling myself an environmental reporter, because it was

kind of newsy thing. That bio may just be an old bio."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) National Public Radio, Corey Flintoff, newscaster, $538 to Democratic

presidential candidate Howard Dean in December 2003. He is well known from

"All Things Considered."

 

"That contribution was actually made by my wife, but it was on a joint

account, so my name showed up on it," Flintoff said. "Since then, NPR has

instituted a strict policy against campaign donations or political activity

of any kind. I agree with the policy and follow it scrupulously. My wife

still makes contributions."

 

Flintoff said a blogger called the contribution to NPR's attention, helping

to lead NPR to tighten its policy.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

----

 

(D) National Public Radio, Michelle Trudeau, correspondent, $500 to

Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean in two contributions in

September 2003, and $500 more to Dean in May 2004. Trudeau covers science

topics for "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered."

 

Trudeau did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) National Public Radio affiliate in Washington, WAMU, Susan Goodman,

reporter, $450 to Judy Feder, Democrat, in a congressional campaign in 2006;

and $1,000 to the Ben Cardin for Senate campaign, Democrat, in 2005.

Goodman, no longer at the station, reported on politics and public affairs.

She also contributed feature stories to NPR's "Morning Edition" and "All

Things Considered."

 

"Yes, I made those contributions and I voted for those people," Goodman

said. "I did not cover those campaigns. I wouldn't cover anyone I was

actively supporting."

 

If donations were not allowed, "I wouldn't work at a place like that. I

don't think you should give up your rights as a citizen if you work as a

journalist. I guess there are a few issues that I have no opinion on, but

there are very few issues that I have no opinion on. There's an attempt to

be balanced and fair. I feel as a citizen and a voter, I am responsible to

myself, and to know about issues and take a stand. As for being a

journalist, hey, you try to present your story in a way that opens the issue

for people to ask questions, not to sell somebody on something."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) WWJ News Radio, Detroit, Vickie B. Thomas, reporter, gave a total of

$1,000 to Senate candidate Kweisi Mfume in the Maryland race for a Senate

seat in June and December 2005.

 

Thomas did not return telephone calls.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

Wire services:

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Katherine Burton, reporter, $250 to John Kerry in March

2004, and $500 in June 2004 to Downtown for Democracy, which opposed

President Bush. Burton covers investment management, including hedge funds.

 

Burton did not reply to messages.

 

The editor in chief of Bloomberg, Matthew Winkler, said that political

donations are generally allowed at Bloomberg, but not if they might present

a conflict, such as for political reporters. It's up to employees to police

themselves. Someone at his level, he said, can't make any contributions.

 

Winkler himself gave $750 to the 2000 Gore campaign and the Democratic

National Committee in 1998-1999 and gave to Democrats in earlier years. As

reported by Washington City Paper in 2002, Winkler said these donations were

made by his wife from a joint account and that he and his wife were one

"economic entity." He said he and his wife would make no more donations. But

in 2004, the records show, his wife gave $1,600 to Al Gore and the

Democratic National Committee.

 

"I can't control everything my wife does," he told MSNBC.com. "I try. I try.

I try."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Dieterich, energy editor, $250 in June 2004 to

America Coming Together, which opposed President Bush.

 

"I'm not going to comment on this," Dieterich said. "I'm not going to have a

conversation about this. I'm not going to give you a read one way or

another." And he hung up the phone.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Joshua Fellman, reporter in Asia, $500 to Democratic

presidential candidate Howard Dean in December 2003, and after Dean dropped

out, $500 to John Kerry in March 2004. Fellman has written about the Bush

administration policies on the Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

 

Fellman did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Houck, multimedia news editor, $250 to Democratic

presidential candidate Howard Dean in January 2004. He also gave $710 to

Dean in 2003.

 

Houck did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Milanee Kapadia, reporter, $1,000 to John Kerry in May

2004. She is now a reporter for NY1, a cable news channel in New York City.

 

Kapadia did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, James Polson, reporter on energy and utilities, $250 to

Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri in October 2006.

 

"The reason I made the donation is, I'm also the managing partner of a

family farm in Missouri," Polson said. "My cousin who works the farm was a

big McCaskill supporter. I cover electric companies in 50 states. I actually

had not consulted the ethics policy."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Carlos Torres, reporter in Washington, $250 to John

Kerry in July 2004. He also gave $250 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign

Committee in September 2003. Torres covers U.S. economic news.

 

"I have nothing to say about that," Torres said.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, Robert Urban, real estate reporter, $225 in August 2004

to MoveOn.org, which opposed President Bush. Also gave $250 to Democratic

presidential candidate Howard Dean in November 2003.

 

"I have no comment," Urban said.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Bloomberg News, John Wydra, radio newscaster, $200 in October 2004 to

the Democratic National Committee and $400 in 2003 to the same. No longer at

Bloomberg, Wydra is starting a Web site, WydeWorld, promising "incisive

commentary." "In 1986," the site says, "John took a one-year leave of

absence from CBS in order to run for public office as a candidate for

Congress in the 13th U.S. Congressional District in New Jersey, where he won

the Democratic primary, but lost to the incumbent in the general election.

That experience was the foundation for his intensified interest in public

affairs."

 

Wydra did not reply to messages.

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Dow Jones Newswires, Samuel J. Favate Jr., editor, $1,036 total in

August and October 2004 to America Coming Together, which ran

get-out-the-vote efforts to defeat President Bush.

 

Favate didn't reply to messages. These donations may have been ticket

purchases to the "Vote for Change" concerts.

 

On his personal blog, Favate rails against the Iraq war, for gun control,

for a tax audit of Christian psychologist James Dobson, etc.

 

An older blog, still online until recently, lists Favate's "people I don't

like": George Bush, Pat Robertson and the Christian Coalition, Donald

Rumsfeld, the Republican Party, John Ashcroft, Bill Frist, Dennis Hastert,

Tom DeLay, Ann Coulter, the f---ing NRA, corporate America ("these are the

people who are really in charge"), Clear Channel, Halliburton, Cablevision,

and Wal-Mart. "You can be sure that I will be adding to this list from time

to time, so try not to piss me off."

 

After MSNBC.com left a message asking about the blogs, his name disappeared

from the current blog and the older one went dark, though you can see a

copy.

 

Dow Jones spokesman Howard Hoffman said, "No, we don't have a blog policy,

and we're not overly concerned about what Sam did or didn't do on his blog

exercising his free speech rights."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Dow Jones Newswires, Billy Mallard, credit markets editor, $200 to

MoveOn.org in October 2006.

 

"I actually was aware of the restriction on partisan political contributions

in the Dow Jones Code of Conduct before I made the contribution but thought

MoveOn.org was OK because it wasn't the Republican Party or Democratic

Party," Mallard said. "Once this surfaced last week, I spoke with my editors

and agreed that this is a partisan group. Therefore I should not have sent a

contribution and have asked for my contribution to be returned."

 

Dow Jones spokesman Howard Hoffman said, "We take our independence and our

integrity seriously, and our Code of Conduct requires all news employees and

executives to refrain from partisan political activity. We do understand

that people sometimes make mistakes and they have an opportunity to make

amends."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Reuters, Lisa von Ahn, news desk editor, $200 to the Democratic National

Committee in September 2004.

 

Von Ahn, who is listed as a desk editor, referred questions to the public

relations person for Reuters, who said the company allows journalists to

make "personal contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

(D) Reuters, Michael Erman, reporter, $250 to the Democratic National

Committee in March 2004.

 

Erman covers oil and energy companies and issues. He wrote recently about

corporate funding of skeptics of global warming. He declined to answer

questions, referring the call to the public relations person, who said

Reuters allows journalists to make "personal contributions."

 

Click to return to the list.

 

-----

 

Non-English-language news organizations:

 

(MSNBC.com was not able to reach any of these.)

 

(D) La Stampa, newspaper in Turin, Italy, Paolo Mastrolilli, New York

correspondent, $250 to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in

February 2007.

 

(D) New Delhi Television, Stephen Marks, reporter, Bethesda, Md., $2,300 to

Hillary Clinton in March 2007.

 

(D) The Korea Daily News, Chang W. Kim, journalist, Kew Gardens, N.Y.,

$1,000 to Hillary Clinton in February 2006.

 

(D) Pakistan TV, Jack Khangura, reporter, Valencia, Calif., $4,000 to

Hillary Clinton in December 2005.

 

(D) Oriental Daily, Chun Fai Cheng, reporter, Las Cruces, N.M., $250 to the

Democratic National Committee in December 2005.

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Guest Contra-Shill #312

GO Mavs wrote:

> LOL at Democrats who always yell about FOXNEWS... hahahaha

 

<snip the crap>

 

Fox News is an oxymoron, much like Military Intelligence

 

--

Contra-Shill #312

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

We the Sheeple - http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/sunshine.jpg

 

The Energy Non-Crisis

PART 1:

PART 2:

PART 3:

PART 4:

PART 5:

PART 6:

PART 7:

PART 8:

 

John Perkins - Confessions of an Economic Hit Man at

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WjPoeQRewiE

 

Lies. It's All Lies -

 

We Know. We Know - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJpCezIsMpk

-----------------------------------------------------------------

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Guest GO Mavs

"Contra-Shill #312" <contra.shill@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:f5ekpl$ig4$1@news.datemas.de...

> GO Mavs wrote:

>> LOL at Democrats who always yell about FOXNEWS... hahahaha

>

> <snip the crap>

 

Ahh, you didnt want to see the list of how the media votes? Yet want to only

attack Fox news? HAHA.. That proves my point. Keep your blinders on kid.

>

> Fox News is an oxymoron, much like Military Intelligence

>

> --

> Contra-Shill #312

>

> -----------------------------------------------------------------

> We the Sheeple - http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/sunshine.jpg

>

> The Energy Non-Crisis

> PART 1:

> PART 2:

> PART 3:

> PART 4:

> PART 5:

> PART 6:

> PART 7:

> PART 8:

>

> John Perkins - Confessions of an Economic Hit Man at

> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WjPoeQRewiE

>

> Lies. It's All Lies -

>

> We Know. We Know - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJpCezIsMpk

> -----------------------------------------------------------------

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Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

agenda?

 

OC

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Guest Christopher Helms

On Jun 21, 5:47 pm, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

> Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

> media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

> agenda?

>

> OC

 

Exactly. We're not in Iraq because of Dan Rathers personal politics.

We're there because the "liberal" media sat there with its collective

thumb up its ass while the fringe wacko right whipped America into an

almost completely unchallenged War Frenzy. "Sat there with its thumb

up it ass?" Who the fuck am I kidding? The "liberal" media aided and

abetted at every opportunity. There is No. Liberal. Media. If there

was, at least half the Bush administration would probably be in prison

by now. But the "liberal" media simply will not touch any story that

might harm them.

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Guest Roger

You must think Dr. Koop, who was against abortion personally, used his

goverment position to support those views.

 

You must think that Republics who claim to want small government decrease

the size of government.

 

You must think that conservatives who want to liberate the people of Iraq

haven't killed over 600,000 of them instead.

 

 

"GO Mavs" <GoMavs@MavZ.com> wrote in message

news:vtAei.3674$Zh6.1138@trnddc04...

> LOL at Democrats who always yell about FOXNEWS... hahahaha

>

>

>

> Television:

>

> (D) ABC News, Mary Fulginiti, "Primetime" correspondent. Click for

> details.

 

<snip>

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Guest Roger

"OC" <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message

news:1182466074.807296.183870@j4g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

> Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

> media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

> agenda?

 

And he didn't mention that reporters are trained to keep out their personal

views.

 

This is why he didn't address what they report, only who they are.

 

>

> OC

>

>

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Guest Phlip

> You must think Dr. Koop, who was against abortion personally, used his

> goverment position to support those views.

>

> You must think that Republics who claim to want small government decrease

> the size of government.

>

> You must think that conservatives who want to liberate the people of Iraq

> haven't killed over 600,000 of them instead.

 

How _dare_ that liberal-controlled media tell us the truth about those

situations!

 

--

Phlip

http://flea.sourceforge.net/PiglegToo_1.html

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Guest Bugman

"Roger" <rogerfx@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:467bb86b$0$12249$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

> "OC" <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message

> news:1182466074.807296.183870@j4g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>> Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>> media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>> agenda?

>

> And he didn't mention that reporters are trained to keep out their

> personal views.

 

Faux News does a great job.

>

> This is why he didn't address what they report, only who they are.

>

>

>>

>> OC

>>

>>

>

>

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Guest Roger

"Bugman" <jmposing@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:vbKdnbsr5uHmXubbnZ2dnUVZ_ternZ2d@giganews.com...

>

> "Roger" <rogerfx@hotmail.com> wrote in message

> news:467bb86b$0$12249$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

>> "OC" <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message

>> news:1182466074.807296.183870@j4g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>>> Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>>> media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>>> agenda?

>>

>> And he didn't mention that reporters are trained to keep out their

>> personal views.

>

> Faux News does a great job.

 

Of hiring partisans in reporter's clothing.

 

>

>>

>> This is why he didn't address what they report, only who they are.

>>

>>

>>>

>>> OC

>>>

>>>

>>

>>

>

>

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Guest Lockheed Martin

On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net>

wrote:

>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>agenda?

 

If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

Iraq?

 

BTW some of WAR MONGERS who insisted on invading and occupying Iraq

were Jewish no coincidence i.e.

 

Richard Pearle Jewish

Paul Wolfowitz Jewish

Ruport Murdoch (owner of Fox News and mounthpiece of Bush) jewish

and so many more

>

>OC

>

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Guest Ramon F Herrera

We mustn't forget that by and large, intelligent people tend to be

liberal.

 

Was that what Churchill meant? As we age, our intellectual faculties

diminish (that's a proven medical fact) and we become more

conservative (per the great Winston).

 

Oh, crap!! No wonder I feel dumber and more conservative every year!!

Arrgggg!!!

 

-Ramon

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Guest Patriot Games

"Lockheed Martin" <warprofits@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

> On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net>

> wrote:

>>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>>agenda?

> If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

> didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

> Iraq?

 

Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on WMD.

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On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

wrote:

> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

>

> news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>

> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

> > wrote:

> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

> >>agenda?

> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

> > Iraq?

>

> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on WMD.

 

That's the problem. Most of the real intel suggested there were no

WMD and the weapons inpsectors were finding nothing. All they had to

do was go to the CIA and ask almost anyone on the case if there were

concerns of WMD in Iraq. People like Scott Ritter and Joe Wilson were

slimed by the Busheviks and someone like Greg Thielmann got very

little attention from the media.

 

The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

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Guest Baldin Lee Pramer

On Jun 21, 1:39 pm, "GO Mavs" <GoM...@MavZ.com> wrote:

> LOL at Democrats who always yell about FOXNEWS... hahahaha

>

 

What's your point?

 

Blinky

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Guest udarrell

Patriot Games wrote:

> "Lockheed Martin" <warprofits@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

> news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>

>> On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrums77@sbcglobal.net>

>> wrote:

>>

>>> Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>>> media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>>> agenda?

>>

>> If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

>> didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

>> Iraq?

>

> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on WMD.

 

They are NOT liberal, you don't know what a liberal journalists' is. -

udarrell

 

--

WISDOM PRINCIPLE DIRECTED EMPOWERMENT COMMUNICATIONS -

THE REAL POLITICAL ISSUES and WISDOM BASED PEOPLE EMPOWERMENT

 

http://www.udarrell.com/

 

http://www.udarrell.com/my_pages2.htm

 

http://www.udarrell.com/principled_adjudication_disputes_administration_justice.html

(Needs Editing ASAP)

 

http://www.udarrell.com/recognizing_real_enemies.html

 

http://jesuschristsavior.net/Beatitudes.html

 

http://www.antiwar.com/

 

Reality Is Not An Easy Thing To Be Confronted With, or to Accept!

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Guest Patriot Games

"Slo" <Slosteve@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

> On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> wrote:

>> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

>> news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

>> > wrote:

>> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>> >>agenda?

>> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

>> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

>> > Iraq?

>> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on WMD.

> The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

> Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

 

No, its a proven fact.

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On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

wrote:

> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>

> news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>

> > On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> > wrote:

> >> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

> >>news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

> >> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

> >> > wrote:

> >> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

> >> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

> >> >>agenda?

> >> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

> >> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war in

> >> > Iraq?

> >> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on WMD.

> > The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

> > Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>

> No, its a proven fact.

 

Then show some proof.

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Guest udarrell

Patriot Games wrote:

> "Slo" <Slosteve@gmail.com> wrote in message

> news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>

>> On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>> wrote:

>>

>>> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

>>> news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>>> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

>>> > wrote:

>>> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>>> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>>> >>agenda?

>>> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

>>> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the

>>> war in

>>> > Iraq?

>>> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on

>>> WMD.

>>

>> The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

>> Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>

> No, its a proven fact.

 

The media's sole calling & job is to communicate in the public interest,

NOT in the interest of any political philosophy!

Whether their communication falls on one side or the side of another

political philosophy is irrelevant!

There are far more political philosophies than just liberal or

conservative & those also vary widely depending on the specific issue at

hand!

- udarrell

 

--

WISDOM PRINCIPLE DIRECTED EMPOWERMENT COMMUNICATIONS -

THE REAL POLITICAL ISSUES and WISDOM BASED PEOPLE EMPOWERMENT

 

http://www.udarrell.com/

 

http://www.udarrell.com/my_pages2.htm

 

http://www.udarrell.com/principled_adjudication_disputes_administration_justice.html

(Needs Editing ASAP)

 

http://www.udarrell.com/recognizing_real_enemies.html

 

http://jesuschristsavior.net/Beatitudes.html

 

http://www.antiwar.com/

 

Reality Is Not An Easy Thing To Be Confronted With, or to Accept!

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Guest Patriot Games

"Slo" <Slosteve@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:1182879481.357668.76800@i13g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

> On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> wrote:

>> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>> news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>> > On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>> > wrote:

>> >> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

>> >>news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>> >> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

>> >> > wrote:

>> >> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of the

>> >> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>> >> >>agenda?

>> >> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of it

>> >> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the war

>> >> > in

>> >> > Iraq?

>> >> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel on

>> >> WMD.

>> > The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

>> > Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>> No, its a proven fact.

> Then show some proof.

 

I'm sure you can do your own homework.

 

After all, you have almost two months before you have to report to the 10th

grade...

 

Take your time.

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On Jun 26, 12:38 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

wrote:

> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>

> news:1182879481.357668.76800@i13g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>

> > On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> > wrote:

> >> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

> >>news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

> >> > The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

> >> > Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

> >> No, its a proven fact.

> > Then show some proof.

>

> I'm sure you can do your own homework.

 

You're the one making the assertion. Righties are always stating that

there's a "liberal media bias" but they offer no proof. They offer no

proof 'cause it just ain't true. During the 2000 campaign there were

more negative news stories about Gore than Bush and the media aided

the Bushies in hyping the war. The media clearly tilt to the right.

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Guest udarrell

Slo wrote:

>On Jun 26, 12:38 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>wrote:

>

>

>>"Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>>

>>news:1182879481.357668.76800@i13g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>>

>>

>>

>>>On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>>>wrote:

>>>

>>>

>>>>"Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>>>>news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>>>>

>>>>

>>>>>The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy on

>>>>>Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>>>>>

>>>>>

>>>>No, its a proven fact.

>>>>

>>>>

>>>Then show some proof.

>>>

>>>

>>I'm sure you can do your own homework.

>>

>>

>

>You're the one making the assertion. Righties are always stating that

>there's a "liberal media bias" but they offer no proof. They offer no

>proof 'cause it just ain't true. During the 2000 campaign there were

>more negative news stories about Gore than Bush and the media aided

>the Bushies in hyping the war. The media clearly tilt to the right.

>

>

A Men! - udarrell

 

--

WISDOM PRINCIPLE DIRECTED EMPOWERMENT COMMUNICATIONS -

THE REAL POLITICAL ISSUES and WISDOM BASED PEOPLE EMPOWERMENT

 

http://www.udarrell.com/

 

http://www.udarrell.com/my_pages2.htm

 

http://www.udarrell.com/principled_adjudication_disputes_administration_justice.html

(Needs Editing ASAP)

 

http://www.udarrell.com/recognizing_real_enemies.html

 

http://jesuschristsavior.net/Beatitudes.html

 

http://www.antiwar.com/

 

Reality Is Not An Easy Thing To Be Confronted With, or to Accept!

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Guest SlackJaw

Slo wrote:

> On Jun 26, 12:38 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> wrote:

> > "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

> >

> > news:1182879481.357668.76800@i13g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

> >

> > > On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> > > wrote:

> > >> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

> > > > news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

> > >> > The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too

> > easy on >> > Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just

> > that, a myth. >> No, its a proven fact.

> > > Then show some proof.

> >

> > I'm sure you can do your own homework.

>

> You're the one making the assertion. Righties are always stating that

> there's a "liberal media bias" but they offer no proof.

 

We don't offer proof that water is wet, because it's obvious.

> They offer no

> proof 'cause it just ain't true. During the 2000 campaign there were

> more negative news stories about Gore than Bush and the media aided

> the Bushies in hyping the war. The media clearly tilt to the right.

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Guest Lamont Cranston

"Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com> wrote in message

news:468149e8$0$3127$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

> "Slo" <Slosteve@gmail.com> wrote in message

> news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>> On Jun 25, 12:52 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>> wrote:

>>> "Lockheed Martin" <warprof...@whitehouse.gov> wrote in message

>>> news:2j0s731l8lkqc8soatmk852nut9j6bcu2b@4ax.com...

>>> > On Thu, 21 Jun 2007 15:47:54 -0700, OC <ocdrum...@sbcglobal.net>

>>> > wrote:

>>> >>Your headline is wrong. The reporters are liberal, the owners of

>>> >>the

>>> >>media are conservative. Guess who has the most power to set the

>>> >>agenda?

>>> > If the media is so liberal like you claim then how come 90% of

>>> > it

>>> > didn't dare contradict the brainwashing for the build-up to the

>>> > war in

>>> > Iraq?

>>> Because they, like Congress who voted for it, believed the intel

>>> on WMD.

>> The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy

>> on

>> Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>

> No, its a proven fact.

>

 

It's about as proven as the fact that Saddam had WMD.

 

http://www.commondreams.org/views/061900-101.htm

 

The Swarm Of The Right:

Myth Of The Liberal Media

by Michael Dolny

Echoing a common conservative claim, CBS correspondent Bernard

Goldberg wrote a 1996 Wall Street Journal column arguing that

mainstream news media are biased against right-wing sources. His

evidence of a liberal bias: Network colleague Eric Engberg once

labeled the Heritage Foundation as "conservative" but failed to

identify another Washington-based think tank, the Brookings

Institution, as "liberal."

Goldberg's allegation inspired a series of studies about how the media

use think tanks. Since 1996, I have conducted four surveys of think

tanks for the Institute for Public Accuracy (IPA) and Fairness and

Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR), the national media-watch group. Our

findings have consistently refuted conventional wisdom, showing that

major media are much more likely to turn to conservative than to

progressive sources.

 

First, let's dispense with Goldberg's example. Engberg accurately

described the Heritage Foundation as conservative, a label the

organization proudly acknowledges. Engberg was also accurate in not

applying a liberal label to Brookings, an institution that has long

had a center-right orientation. "Centrist" was the descriptive label

used by Bruce MacLaury, the former Nixon administration official who

was Brookings' president from 1977 to 1995; the current president,

Michael Armacost, served in the Reagan and Bush administrations.

Brookings' most prominent analysts, Stephen Hess and Richard Haass,

are also Republicans. In our very narrow political discourse,

unfortunately, Brookings is often the only group that presents

alternatives to conservative viewpoints.

 

But the more important question is how conservative, centrist and

progressive think tanks are treated over all. If the "liberal media"

hypothesis is true, one would expect progressive think tanks would be

most often cited. That, however, was the exact opposite of what we

found.

 

In 1999, according to a search of the Nexis database of major

newspapers and radio and television transcripts, the 25 most cited

think tanks were used more than 17,000 times. Fifty-one percent of

those citations went to conservative or right-leaning think tanks,

such as the Cato Institute, Heritage Foundation and the American

Enterprise Institute (AEI). Thirty-five percent of the references were

to centrist think tanks, led by the Brookings Institution, which has

almost twice as many citations as any other think tank in the study.

Progressive or left-leaning think tanks, such as the Economic Policy

Institute (EPI), constituted only 13 percent of all media citations.

 

This imbalance in distribution has been consistent since we first

looked at think-tank citations in 1996. As media ownership becomes

even more concentrated into fewer and fewer large conglomerates, it's

not surprising that voices consistent with a pro-corporate agenda -

such as privatizing Social Security, privatizing prisons, pushing

forward the global economy, maintaining a large military budget and

opposing universal health care - maintain a stranglehold on the

mainstream political debate.

 

Even when progressives are allowed into mainstream discussions, they

are not given a level playing field. A study we did in 1998 found that

the Brookings Institution was cited without any ideological

identification in 78 percent of the cases. The Heritage Foundation

went without a label 68 percent of the time; other conservative think

tanks were treated similarly. Yet EPI went unlabeled only 52 percent

of the time, and over half of the labels attached to EPI referred to

it as either being tied to or receiving funds from labor unions. None

of the top four think tanks - Brookings, Cato, Heritage and AEI, all

conservative or centrist - were referred to as "corporate-backed" or

given any similar label.

 

Think tanks - especially right and center - are largely

corporate-funded, and generally companies give to institutions they

think will promote policy positions that will benefit them. While

corporate spokesmen may be seen as self-interested, think-tank

representatives may be more likely to come across as dispassionate

experts - especially if the public is not told where their money comes

from.

 

When think-tank representatives are used as experts on a topic, often

their media-framed credibility may be measured by the ideological

label attached to them. When media cite think-tank representatives as

experts without identifying their financial and political backing,

audiences are deprived of an important context for evaluating the

opinions offered.

 

This also helps to conceal the fact that media rely so heavily on the

right and center for their experts - and contributes to the myth of

the liberal media.

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Guest Patriot Games

"Slo" <Slosteve@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:1182888438.540499.314700@j4g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

> On Jun 26, 12:38 pm, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

> wrote:

>> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>> news:1182879481.357668.76800@i13g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

>> > On Jun 26, 10:16 am, "Patriot Games" <Crazy_Bastard@The_Beach.com>

>> > wrote:

>> >> "Slo" <Slost...@gmail.com> wrote in message

>> >>news:1182801745.723368.53020@o11g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

>> >> > The mainstream media dropped the ball and they've been way too easy

>> >> > on

>> >> > Bush et al. The myth of "liberal media bias" is just that, a myth.

>> >> No, its a proven fact.

>> > Then show some proof.

>> I'm sure you can do your own homework.

> The media clearly tilt to the right.

 

Which explains why they give more money to the Left...

 

HAHAHAHAHAHAHHA!!!

 

Fool.

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