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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
24.02.2008
Dan Rather's Lessons for the New York Times

Coming on the heels of New York Times public editor Clark Hoyt's column criticizing the paper's McCain investigation, the Sunday political round tables chewed over the McCain-NYT flap. The Times has yet to follow its investigation with additional proof that McCain and Iseman were romantically involved. Dan Rather, no stranger to a controversial investigation of a Republican presidential nominee, weighed in on the Times piece. "These aren't ordinary reporters, these are outstanding journalists," Rather told Chris Matthews, but added: "If they can't back it up they're in a heap of trouble."

Rather found himself in a heap of trouble over a story he couldn't back up. What's interesting about Rather's take is that he seems to recognize that the flaws in his 60 Minutes segment about President Bush's national guard service were his reliance on documents to support a thesis that many said was true based on firm, on-the-record sources. The Times piece suggests that McCain and Iseman carried on a romantic relationship, but never proves it with evidence beyond anonymously quoted concerns voiced by former McCain staffers. As a reader, you get the sense that the Times reporters know more than is stated in print. That might give the reporters confidence in going with their anecdotal evidence. But will that be enough to counter the conservative backlash against the piece? The irony here is that many people never questioned the fundamental truth of Rather's 60 Minutes piece, focusing instead on the potentially fraudulent documents. By leading with the sexual allegations, the Times has opened itself to similar charges on a story that has substance. Indeed, McCain's ties to lobbyists are complex and worthy lines of reporting to explore, given that he's staked his political identity on serving as the scourge of special interests. The Washington Post followed the Times with questions of McCain's connection to lobbyists and hasn't been dragged into the media vortex. In keeping clear of insinuations of sexual impropriety, the Post's pieces have kept the debate trained on McCain--where it should be. 

 

--Gabe Sherman 

Posted: Sunday, February 24, 2008 10:51 AM with 8 comment(s)

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bsdespain said:

The piece seemed pretty thin to me and fairly conflicted about it's angle. The real story was about the influence that a lobbyist could have the Senator. Too bad that got lost in sexual innuendo.

February 24, 2008 1:19 PM

jm_rice said:

Let's see, McCain has been in Congress for 24 years, and the media wants to make an issue out of lobbyist influence.  Please, name me a legislator, federal or state or local, who has not been influenced by a lobbyist.

Quid pro quo?  Graft?  John S. McCain III?  He's a Republican, isn't that enough fodder?  That's right, issues don't sell.  Well, assholes, go for it if, it gets you off.

February 24, 2008 2:19 PM

CharlesFosterKane said:

But doesn't it feel like another shoe is going to drop sooner or later? What happens if a full-blown scandal emerges and McCain is forced out? Huckabee? Return of Romney? Well, it will be a hell of a convention, great political theater, but I don't think it's good for America or, for that matter, Obama to coast to victory in the fall. There are so many important issues at stake and I want him to earn the presidency, not get it through default. Of course, it's doubtful this would happen, but I can't expect the NYT story to end here especially now that they've been attacked so harshly.

February 24, 2008 2:51 PM

titanio said:

1. The Times  piece did not allege there was an affair -- it alleged that McCain staffers believed there was one. You might need a stained blue dress to support the former, but not the latter.

2. The public has no legitimate interest in whom McCain sleeps with. It is of public interest that he granted special access to one particular lobbyist and did extraordinary favors for her clients. The circumstances of his behavior could not be adequately reported if the press were constrained from examining plausible motivations for it. There are only two reasons people do dishonorable things: money and sex. If it had been money this time I would have expected to read about it in the Times. When it is the other, I expect the same. It is dismaying to see so-called serious commentators (such as Doris Kearns Goodwin on Sunday's Meet the Press) react as if the Times had been aiming to titillate rather than inform. How juvenile.

3. McCain's lawyer Benett has tried out the line that since McCain didn't urge the FCC to rule in favor of Iseman's client it wasn't really a favor. That is a fallacious argument on its face. Had the FCC done nothing, monetary loss for the client was certain. As long as the probability of a favorable decision was nonzero, there  was positive expected value attached to the decision.

February 24, 2008 3:14 PM

cpousnret said:

love dan,got a raw deal.

February 24, 2008 4:24 PM

jm_rice said:

"love dan, got a raw deal."

lol...vintage Rather!

February 24, 2008 8:11 PM

purcellneil said:

If McCain's closest advisors thought he was sleeping with an influential lobbyist, he must have given them some cause to think so. I'm not interested in his marital fidelity - if his campaign staff thought he was screwing a stripper, who cares?  But a lobbyist with business before his committee?  That's a serious charge.  

Neil

February 25, 2008 8:03 AM

teplukhin2you said:

Maybe Gabe Sherman or someon else can comment on something I find extremely weird: the Times' failure to produce anything at all like a smoking gun in terms of legislation affecting Iseman's **media company** clients. I mean, of all the industries to investigate for influence-peddling, surely this is the one that Times Co and its employees understands best, by a mile... and the legislation in question was on an issue that directly and powerfully affects the Times' P&L and balance sheet: media ownership regulations!

If the Tiems can't show evidence of corruption here, on their own turf which they know better than anyone, then surely there's nothing to these insinuations.

February 25, 2008 12:51 PM