Post's Kurtz on ombudsman Howell's false Abramoff claims: "inartfully worded," could "have been more accurate"
SUMMARY: In an online chat, The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz acknowledged that Post ombudsman Deborah Howell's false claims that Democrats received campaign contributions from Jack Abramoff were "inartfully worded" and could "have been more accurate."
In a January 17 washingtonpost.com "Media Backtalk" online discussion, Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz acknowledged that Post ombudsman Deborah Howell's false claims that Democrats received campaign contributions from former Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff were "inartfully worded" and could "have been more accurate." As Media Matters for America documented, Howell, in her January 15 Post column, twice mischaracterized the reporting of her colleagues to claim Abramoff "had made substantial campaign contributions to both major parties," and that Democrats "have gotten Abramoff campaign money."
When first asked by a reader about Howell's falsehoods concerning Democrats receiving money from Abramoff, Kurtz quoted just one of two instances from Howell's January 15 column in which she made the false claim, and attempted to explain away her assertion. According to Kurtz, Howell's claim that Democrats "have gotten Abramoff campaign money" was "inartfully worded."
From the January 17 online discussion:
Fort Washington, Md.: Reporter Sue Schmidt and ombudsman Deborah Howell have both asserted repeatedly that Jack Abramoff gave money to Democrats as well as Republicans. The FEC shows no record of any Democrat getting any money from Abramoff, period. Some Indian tribes who were among Abramoff's victims contributed funds to some Democrats, but suggesting that that somehow is a donation from Abramoff defies logic. How does the Post justify passing on what appears to be nothing but GOP spin as fact?
Howard Kurtz: Howell's column Sunday said that a number of Democrats "have gotten Abramoff campaign money." That was inartfully worded. I believe what she was trying to say, and I have not discussed this with her, is that some Democrats have received campaign cash from Abramoff clients, and that this may have been orchestrated by the convicted lobbyist. That's why you have a number of Democrats (as well as many Republicans, now including [Speaker of the House] Denny Hastert [R-IL]) giving back the tainted dough or donating it to charity. Even National Review Editor Rich Lowry says this is basically a Republican scandal -- we are talking about a Bush fundraiser and [former House Majority Leader] Tom DeLay [R-TX] pal -- but where the tangled web has extended to Democrats, we need to mention that too.
When his response was later challenged by another reader who noted that, in the same column, Howell also falsely claimed that Abramoff "had made substantial campaign contributions to both major parties," Kurtz then acknowledged that Howell's claims were less than accurate:
Washington, D.C.: Your response to Fort Washington, Md. missed the point. Howell falsely claimed in her column of Abramoff that "he had made substantial campaign contributions to both major parties." Your additional quote from her column does not make that claim less false.
Why did she make that false claim, and what is The Post going to do about it.
And why did you change the subject in your response to Fort Washington?
Howard Kurtz: I have not delved deeply into this myself, but I believe it would have been more accurate to say that Abramoff steered contributions to politicians of both parties.
Unaddressed by Kurtz was the fact that Howell's false assertion of Abramoff's contributions was based on her mischaracterization of reporting by Post staff writer Susan Schmidt and business reporter Jeffrey H. Birnbaum.

















A "NEWS" publication can publish FACTS, and if they err, those facts should be immediatly CORRECTED.
In fact, correcting FACTS is the ombudsmans's ONLY JOB.
So, there are FACTS, and they need no further definition.
Then, there are LIES, propaganda, distortions, innuendo, and partisan demagoguery, which instead of being CORRECTED, are instead rationalized by being defined as "inartfully worded" or "could have been more accurate."
This is the behavior of a "NEWS" publication that has no intention of GETTING IT RIGHT. They intend to continue pushing the White House's talking points, and making excuses when challenged.
the news stopped being about the FACTS a long time ago. It's always amused me how the FCC will make a big stink about a "wardrobe malfunction" but has no penalty for lying to the American public. Worse yet, the news media make big deals out of emotional stories that, in general, have no impact on our individual lives. I feel for the families of those who died in the Sago mine, but do not need to see the memorial on the news. People I don't know die every day - it doesn't impact my life directly in any way. I DO care about how lax enforcement of regulations allowed that tragedy to happen - that's the difference. They cover the emotional issues deeply, and gloss over the real issues. The saddest part? On a forum such as this, we're pretty much preaching to the choir - those that could really learn something - even if they disagree with the conclusions - aren't looking here. At best, we might get to reform a few of the O'Reilly fans who come here out of curiousity.
like laughing lefty, I'm curious to how an ombudsman would know this. Perhaps he does a little investigative reporting on the side. mcob
LeftofCenter wrote:
the news stopped being about the FACTS a long time ago. It's always amused me how the FCC will make a big stink about a "wardrobe malfunction" but has no penalty for lying to the American public.
Not to take sides in this or dismiss in any way any of the points Left is making, but the Federal Communications Commission oversees the nation's airwaves, not the print media. That's meant as a clarification of Left's post, not a criticism of it. Cheers.
Howard Kurtz is clearly trying to play a slight of hand to depict this as a bi-partisan scandal. What evidence does he have that Abramoff "steered" contributions from Indian tribes to Democrats? None! Even if he did, were these contributions illegal? Apparently not, he acts as if the illegality of Abramoff's donations to Republicans was not the relevant issue. Well, what more can we expect from a guy who acts as a conduit for a GOP orchestrated smear against a decorated war hero like Rep. Murtha? Kurtz and Howell are calculating f*ckups who consistently err in favour of Republicans. These are no accidents, it must be intentional. We need to wake up to the fact that the corporate media isn't just biased, it's partisan.
Ambramoff in all likelihood did advise Indian tribes to make sizable contributions to democratic candidates who were or would be in a position to influence pending gaming legislation. The man didn't get to be as powerful as he was by not being good at his job. The Tribes had multi-billion dollar enterprises at stake. They made sizable contributions to ALL the candidates. They would have been incredibly foolish not to. And, since it's how the game is played, Ambramoff would have been incredibly incompetent not to steer contributions to the people who would be most beholden for the support.
And all that is sort of beside the point. If Ambramoff suggested that the Tribes invest heavily in Girl Scout cookies, it wouldn't make the Girls Scouts guilty of illegal activity -- even if the Tribes' motivation for buying the cookies was less than honorable.
I love that term, I think I'll use that phrase next time I get caught obfuscating.
Can't wait to see how the W. Post will spin the facts when the Ambramoff scandal really gets going in court. MMFA will have to keep me posted on the Post because I wouldn't spend a dime on one of their rags.
I think you mean lying.
Is it really that difficult for a reporter of editor to recognize the meaning of the plain English language? Jeesh.
Inartfully worded? What a hoot! That ranks right up there with "I misspoke," those who "courageously" take the "responsibility" (but not the "blame") for a screw-up, and the classic "we never actually said the word 'imminent'."
And for the record: Those Democrats who received money from tribes which were Abramoff clients had relationships with those Democrats that preceded their association with Mr. A. - and the amount of money those tribe gave to Democrats went down after they became clients.
Good point.
Where did you get this information? I have been having an ongoing debate with a Republican friend and have been looking for just this kind of ammo on this issue.