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TNR: "The Long Bombshell"

21 Feb 2008 03:25 pm

Here's the New Republic's behind-the-scenes dig at the New York Times.

The key paragraphs:

The publication of the article capped three months of intense internal deliberations at the Times over whether to publish the negative piece and its most explosive charge about the affair. It pitted the reporters investigating the story, who believed they had nailed it, against executive editor Bill Keller, who believed they hadn't. It likely cost the paper one investigative reporter, who decided to leave in frustration. And the Times ended up publishing a piece in which the institutional tensions about just what the story should be are palpable.
In late December, according to Times sources, Keller told the reporters and the story's editor, Rebecca Corbett, that he was holding the piece in part because they could not secure documentary proof of the alleged affair beyond anecdotal evidence. Keller felt that given the on-the-record-denials by McCain and Iseman, the reporters needed more than the circumstantial evidence they had assembled to prove the case. The reporters felt they had the goods.
The Drudge item didn't derail the investigation, however. By late December, the reporters had submitted several pages of written questions to Bennett for comment, and completed a draft of the piece before the New Year. But to their growing frustration, Keller ordered rounds of changes and additional reporting. According to Times sources, Baquet remained an advocate for his reporters and pushed the piece to be published, but sources say Keller wanted a more nuanced story looking less at personal matters and more at questions of Iseman's lobbying and McCain's legislative record. (The Washington-New York divide is an eternal rift at the Paper of Record: Baquet had successfully brought stability and investigative acumen to the Washington bureau; with the McCain piece, he was being sucked into his first major struggle with New York.)
It was at about that time, amidst flurries of rumors swirling about the looming Times investigation, that the Times' McCain beat reporter, Marc Santora, abruptly left the campaign trail after covering the senator for four and a half months, frustrated by the McCain rumors. A rising star at the paper, Santora had been working grueling hours, joining the 2008 election coverage straight from a reporting assignment in Baghdad. As the campaign headed to South Carolina, the site of McCain's defeat in 2000, Santora emailed the Times deputy Washington editor, Richard Stevenson, to vent about how the rumors were dogging him on the campaign trail, and left the McCain beat on January 10. "The last thing I wanted was to be a pawn in this thing," Santora told me. "I was exhausted, there were a lot of rumors flying around. I thought the best thing for me to do was take a break."
Of course, each of these sources had reason to keep the story from breaking. But what actually pushed it into publication? The reporters working on the investigation declined to comment. In an email to me on February 19, Keller wrote: "This sounds like a pointless exercise to me--speculating about reporting that may or may not result in an article. But if that's what Special Correspondents of The New Republic do, speculate away. When we have something to say, we'll say it in the paper."

Comments (9)

I think the NYT's has more than they are saying.. McCain should defend himself but he has to be careful.. His vowing to beat the NYT's is asking for trouble.. He should deny it and move on.. Fyi I am a Obama supporter.

Whoa, I'm no copyright lawyer, but I'd say this tiptoes right up to the very edge of fair use, and most likely exceeds it. Now, of course, if you were providing commentary (ha, fat chance) on each paragraph individually, that would increase the likelihood that you were quoting in accordance with fair use, but I don't think copyright law would look kindly on you quoting a full quarter of the article without additional justification.

I am not a lawyer; more importantly, I am not your lawyer; this does not constitute legal advice; for legal advice, consult a qualified professional in your jurisdiction, etc.

One more nail in that RAG's coffin.

Being consumed by anger and envy has done the Times in. Sad. What has become of the NYT is a loss for all of us.

This article does not accuse McCain of anything! It does nto say he had an affair. It does not say he did anything unethical. The NYT chose to exclude evidence that blew wide holes in their story (such as all the times McCain voted against the lobbyist's desired outcome) - which in and of itself is disgusting.

I don't like McCain nor the 2 Dem candidates. I think any of them will make a lousy President.

However, this is another sad day for journalism.

Not only did they exclude when McCain voting agisnt them, they also was given copies of the letters McCain wrote to the FCC which he states he not trying to pressure them which way to vote but was asking what the hold up was since the it took 800 Days plus for them to act.

Also left out was other Congressmen were doing the same thing.

Jeff makes a good point. I know nothing about law or care to, nor do I care if you reprinted the entire article

but... zero commentary? This passes as a blog entry?

Just noticed the ironic subtitle of Marc's site "a reported blog on politics" reported, indeed.

To add some actual commentary to this blog, McCain should definitely be wary of what he says about this article. It reads like they removed hard evidence and are itching for McCain or Radio Loudmouths to "force their hand" into giving specifics.

Unless we learn more about this in the next few days, NYT takes a big hit for all this.

Why the presumption the NYT must have "more evidence"? The "public scandal" of the story is the eight-year old story of McCain's intervention before the FCC. If there was really something more in this realm, it would have been run.

The allegations that McCain staffers were worried about an affair provides evidence of motive not known before. But, frankly, this reads like an anecdote in somebody's "Inside Story: Campaign 2000", rather than anything newsworthy. The NYT knows it. If they had something more, they would have strengthened the story.

NYT may not have anything more. If it doesn't -it's pretty bad journalism. But they may have wanted McCain to go on record as denying it and then hope that someone will be willing to publicly set the record straight. Still that's pretty risky, high stakes journalism.