[EL] NY Times Editorials on Election Law

Pildes, Rick pildesr at exchange.law.nyu.edu
Fri Feb 14 09:02:27 PST 2014


A bit earlier, I posted on the blog an excerpt from a long story<http://observer.com/2014/02/the-tyranny-and-lethargy-of-the-times-editorial-page/> the New York Observer published a week or so ago, which reported that NY Times staffers were deeply frustrated with the Board's editorials.  One staffer was quoted saying of the editorials:  "They're completely reflexively liberal, utterly predictable, usually poorly written and totally ineffectual."  Having just run across the story, I wanted to generate a discussion on the list serv about this subject when it comes to the NY Times editorials on election law.  I realized it would be better to keep that discussion internal to the listserv, so I am sending this to the listserv rather than on the blog itself.

A critique of the Observer story from the Washington Post can be found here. <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2014/02/05/17-problems-with-the-new-york-observers-hit-piece-on-the-new-york-times/>  Here's an excerpt from the Observer story:


IT'S WELL KNOWN AMONG THE SMALL WORLD of people who pay attention to such things that the liberal-leaning reporters at The Wall Street Journal resent the conservative-leaning editorial page of The Wall Street Journal. What's less well known-and about to break into the open, threatening the very fabric of the institution-is how deeply the liberal-leaning reporters at The New York Times resent the liberal-leaning editorial page of The New York Times.

The New York Observer has learned over the course of interviews with more than two-dozen current and former Times staffers that the situation has "reached the boiling point" in the words of one current Times reporter. Only two people interviewed for this story agreed to be identified, given the fears of retaliation by someone they criticize as petty and vindictive.

The blame here, in the eyes of most Times reporters to whom The Observer spoke, belongs to Andrew Rosenthal, who as editorial page editor leads both the paper's opinion pages and opinion postings online, as well as overseeing the editorial board and the letters, columnists and op-ed departments. Mr. Rosenthal is accused of both tyranny and pettiness, by the majority of the Times staffers interviewed for this story. And the growing dissatisfaction with Mr. Rosenthal stems from a commitment to excellence that has lifted the rest of the Times, which is viewed by every staffer The Observer spoke to as rapidly and dramatically improving.

"He runs the show and is lazy as all get-out," says a current Times writer, and one can almost hear the Times-ness in his controlled anger (who but a Timesman uses the phrase "as all get-out" these days?). Laziness and bossiness are unattractive qualities in any superior, but they seem particularly galling at a time when the Times continues to pare valued staffers via unending buyouts<http://observer.com/2013/01/after-the-deadline-at-the-new-york-times-the-economics-of-buyouts/>.

The Times declined to provide exact staffing<http://observer.com/2014/02/the-tyranny-and-lethargy-of-the-times-editorial-page/> numbers, but that too is a source of resentment. Said one staffer, "Andy's got 14 or 15 people plus a whole bevy of assistants working on these three unsigned editorials every day. They're completely reflexively liberal, utterly predictable, usually poorly written and totally ineffectual. I mean, just try and remember the last time that anybody was talking about one of those editorials. You know, I can think of one time recently, which is with the [Edward] Snowden stuff, but mostly nobody pays attention, and millions of dollars is being spent on that stuff."

Asked by The Observer for hard evidence supporting a loss of influence of the vaunted editorial page, the same Times staffer fired back, "You know, the editorials are never on the most emailed list; they're never on the most read list. People just are not paying attention, and they don't care. It's a waste of money."


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