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WashPost Ombudsman Upholds Romney Hair 'Scoop' As Paper Shamelessly Admits Pro-Obama Story Timing

Tim Graham's picture

Washington Post ombudsman Patrick Pexton touted the Post’s Romney-haircut “scoop” as a “deeply reported story” that “holds up to scrutiny.” But the family of the haircut victims told ABC it was “factually inaccurate” and it shouldn’t be used as a political football. Pexton said nonsense: the Post has received “no specific complaint of inaccuracy.”

Perhaps more shocking is that the Post shamelessly admits they timed this story precisely to echo on the day after President Obama’s big pro-gay announcement. They actually waited a day longer than planned to let Obama have the front page to himself when he was being “historic.” Pexton’s only nod to the right: he panned the sneaky update that’s still not a “correction”:

Stu White was portrayed in the original story as being “disturbed” by the alleged haircut incident for decades, and then it was amended to a couple of weeks. That’s embarrassing, but not to the shameless Post:

Kevin Merida, national editor of The Post, said on Friday that “We should have updated it with a note.” I agree with Merida. I would have used strike-through text online to make it clear to readers that that part of the online story was changed. I think that’s just the better part of candor. There is now an editor’s note at the very bottom of the story. The Post is not calling it a correction. I think it is a correction, but not germane to the central theme of the story.

Here’s how Pexton dismissed the family’s complaint:

“Mr. Lauber’s family said in a statement that they were ‘aggrieved that John would be used to further a political agenda,’ Parker wrote in her story. In a tweet she also wrote that the family said “ ‘The portrayal of John is factually incorrect,’ but they would not elaborate on how it was inaccurate.”

Jason Horowitz talked to all three of John Lauber’s sisters for the story and carefully explained to them what the story was about, Merida said.

The Post has received no specific complaint of inaccuracy from the Lauber family, Merida said. “We stand by the story. It’s a full portrait. It’s the story of Mitt Romney’s years at Cranbrook.”

This is certainly not a “full portrait.” It’s a hit piece that’s helped liberal journalists, talkers, and bloggers to assault Romney as someone who “tortured gay kids” for fun. If in 2004, the Post had done a long story on how John Kerry didn’t deserve his medals, they wouldn’t be able to tell liberals with a straight face that it was a “full portrait.”

Finally, there’s the issue of timing.

Pexton said he, too, would have timed this story like the Post to build on Obama’s “historic” interview.

The other criticisms are that this story was published knowing that President Obama was going to announce his shift in favor of gay marriage. The allegation is that somehow The Post is working with the White House to time the story.

Do I think The Post took advantage of the timing? Yes. Vice President Biden had telegraphed the president’s position on gay marriage just days earlier. This story on Romney was in preparation for three weeks. It is part of a series of biographical stories on Romney being written by Horowitz and others and edited by The Post’s Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and associate editor, David Maraniss, who is known for his best- selling biographies of major U.S. political figures.

 If I were an editor I might have sped it up a little, too, to take advantage of the national discussion on gay marriage. Does that mean Post editors are timing stories with the White House? I hope not, and I doubt that is the case.

Merida said they held the printed version for a day because they didn’t want it clashing with the Thursday front page coverage of Obama changing his mind on gay marriage.

“It just happened to coincide with the time when President Obama made his statement. We factored it in and that was the decision not to run it in print on Thursday,” Merida told me.

What’s funny is that he would say “gee, I hope not” to allegations they’re working hand in glove with the White House. The real point is this: Would the Post need to make a phone call to plan this timing any better with Team Obama?

They also claimed this convenient arrangement gave the Romney camp more time to answer the Post’s attack piece. Then there was this amazing claim:

“We’re a competitive news organization,” Merida said. “In the real-time journalism environment that we operate it in, we felt it was best to publish when we had it ready. You always run the risk that people have heard about it and someone else will publish before you.”

He said this after they explained they sat on it until Obama received his front-page “history” treatment. In fact, the Post story went up online by mid-morning to gain maximum publicity almost a day ahead of the print edition.

But the real joke of “we’re a competitive news organization” is how the Post has sat for months on investigations of Democrats. With the Clinton sex scandals in particular, its timing was delayed for months both with Paula Jones claiming sexual harassment in 1994 and with Juanita Broaddrick claiming sexual assault in 1999. Back then, they needed months to "double-check" – or they needed a political event to occur. They published the Jones story when Clinton hired a defense lawyer. They published the Broaddrick story after the Clinton impeachment trial ended.

Pexton should really address how his newspaper has a serious appearance problem with politicized story timing.

Comments

#1 In other words, they were wrong and they stand by their error.

It's a real mark of cowardice when a story is proven to be false and the teller refuses to admit being wrong.

It's also a confirmation that the Washington Post is a Democrat propagandist rag not fit for a bird cage. It probably even makes fish go bad after five minutes.

#2 "Macaca"...it won't work this

"Macaca"...it won't work this time...

#3 just how thick IS the media bubble?

Does the paper not see how silly this makes them look?

#4 Romney

I don't care if Romney kicked the dog sh*t out the guy - it was 45 years ago!!!!!!!!

Curly

#5 Romney is such a wimp!

He could have hired a limo and had sex in the backseat with the male driver while doing coke, like Obama did!

It's true because I have sources. Honest, I read it somewhere.

Come on Mitt. Admit to something more "politically correct" than helping give some guy a haircut. Prove you're as cool and hip as Da One.

Comrade Bubba

#6 Feather-weight story

As in, WaPo defends their story and the timing of the story to coincide with the president's open support of GM? You could've knocked me down with a feather.

Actually, I thought WaPo delayed the story long enough for them to coordinate with NYT on front-page stories with more details of the secret agent who was the second underwear bomber in Al Queda in the Arabian Peninsula.

#7 CO2, this was designed from the outset

to cover the fact that an administration official leaked the story of the ongoing U.S.-Saudi intel operation, regarding the underwear bombs.  From the staged "conversion" of Obama to the follow-up story on Romney.  That was an ongoing operation, up until the time that the guy's life was put in more danger by another administration big mouth.  And, it worked.

Most everyone knows that Obama had come out in favor of gay marriage back in 96.  Then he changed his wide stance on the subject to get elected, now he changed again, to open the money spigots.  He(Obama) was for it, before he was against it, before he was for it.

To re-elect Obama would be like the Titanic backing up and hitting the iceberg again.

#8 So this is the new standard for the WaPo??!!!

As long as they don't get any specific complaints about inaccuracies, the story is considered "accurate"?

So Jason Blair of the infamous NYT would never have been fired by the WaPo, because since he made up his stories, including fictional subjects and fictional sources, there could not have been any complaints of SPECIFIC inaccuracies.

And to coordinate with a sitting President on a hit piece on his opponent, let alone timing the story for the day after a political announcement from said sitting President, is extremely creepy, scary and Stalin-esque.

It certainly calls into question the unbiased and "neutral" claim by the WaPo, as well as their ability to fairly report any news at all be it political or other. Additionally, this admission needs to be investigated by the FEC as it is likely, IMO, an illegal political contribution.

 

Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it! 

#9 Patrick Pexton goes into a barbershop........

and asks for the KRAMER!

"Someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets". - Robert DeNiro, Taxi Driver (1976).

#10 It's all OK

You haters need to stop being so critical of the WaPo on this. Don't you understand that the story is 100% legitimate and correct? It must be. After all it was "....edited by The Post’s Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and associate editor...."

And we all know that Pulitzer Prizes aren't handed out to just anyone. (Kind of like Nobel Peace prizes.) You have to be a really really "perfessional joornolist" to get you one of them things.

/sarc

#11 CBS again?

"fake but accurate"........

"Eventually, Socialists run out of other peoples' money...." MARGARET THATCHER

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