Keller Lies?

I don't think the importance of this post from Captain Ed at Captain's Quarters can be should be missed. New York Times editor Bill Keller admits he lied about the timing of the release of the story on the program to monitor some phone calls.

In fact, the Keller/Calame interview seems very strange indeed. Keller refused to answer this question in January, and in fact refused to answer any of Calame's questions regarding the timing of the publication. Calame followed up this week, and despite Keller's insistence that the story was now "old news", agreed to sit down with his public editor — and then confessed he had lied all along.

Left-wing pundits and bloggers have insisted that Keller spiked the story to keep George Bush in office. Keller, however, has a different take on his decision. He insists that the news would have likely helped Bush rather than hurt him, and the public support for this program after its delayed revelation last December supports that analysis. John Kerry and the Democrats had castigated Bush for the lack of visible effort to find and track terrorists, and the program's exposure would have forced Kerry to recant and suddenly argue that Bush had been too enthusiastic about fighting terrorism, a tough pirouette to execute in a grueling presidential campaign.

In the end, the final version of the story got prepared just days before the election, and Keller argues that a release at that point would have been "unfair" to all parties. It took several weeks for all of the political dust to settle once the article did come out. He may have a point, but then two related events took place: he delayed the release for over a year, and then Keller lied about the timing when he published it.

Keller flat out lied. At this point, the NYT isn't a good choice for even lining a bird cage. It's become too toxic for that. I would say it's time for the Times to reconsider staffing levels.

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2 Responses to Keller Lies?

  1. D. B. Light says:

    It’s not just the Times — it’s the entire journalistic community that is in crisis.

    The old Progressive assumption was that a properly-trained and credentialed cadre of journalists could provide the public with objective, accurate, timely, and disinterested information upon which to make their decisions.

    Here we have the most highly credentialed institution in the field of journalism deciding to suppress what they consider to be highly important information for purely partisan purposes.

    This follows upon scandalously inaccurate reportage from Lebanon, Iraq, and New Orleans, and calls into question the entire journalistic — indeed the entire Progressive — enterprise.

  2. Candymarl says:

    Why am I not surprised?