Major print outlets including The New York Times and papers reprinting Associated Press content faced widespread criticism from LGBTQ advocates for publishing trans Supreme Court plaintiff Aimee Stephens’ deadname, or former name, following her May 12 death. But this transgression is actually part of a broader pattern in coverage across top U.S. newspapers.
In fact, the 10 U.S. newspapers with the largest circulation numbers have all needlessly used deadnames in reports on either Stephens or former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning since January 2019.
Deadnaming is the act of referring to a trans person by “the name they used before they transitioned” rather than their affirming name. It is a form of harassment that can undermine a trans person’s identity. It also goes against journalistic standards, including those set by the Times and The Associated Press (AP), which both subsequently apologized and removed Stephens’ deadname from their reports.
Stephens was the transgender woman who was fired from her job after coming out and is at the center of a landmark Supreme Court case that will decide whether it’s legal to fire someone for being trans.
Top U.S. newspapers have repeatedly deadnamed Stephens since the Supreme Court decided to hear her case in 2019. They have also repeatedly made this error when reporting on whistleblower and former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning, even though she came out as trans in 2013 and has explicitly told members of the press to not use her former name.
All of the top 10 newspapers in the US have deadnamed Stephens or Manning since January 2019
A Media Matters review of the top 10 U.S. newspapers by circulation, as identified by Cision, found that every outlet has deadnamed Manning or Stephens in its original reporting or reprints from January 1, 2019, through May 14, 2020. These newspapers are:
- The Boston Globe
- The Chicago Tribune
- The Los Angeles Times
- NewsDay (New York City)
- The New York Post
- The New York Times
- The Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
- USA Today
- The Washington Post
- The Wall Street Journal.
Nearly all of the top 10 newspapers have deadnamed Stephens in the past
Though major newspapers apologized for deadnaming Stephens following her death, nine of the top 10 newspapers had already done so many times in past reports; The Boston Globe was the only outlet that did not make this error during the time period studied. There were at least 19 articles across those outlets that used Stephens’ deadname; 10 were original reports, and nine were reprints of AP stories.
The Washington Post published five articles that deadnamed Stephens, more than any other paper studied. Three of them were AP reprints. The New York Times, the New York Post, and USA Today each published three articles, including reprints, that made this error. Newsday, the Star Tribune, and the Chicago Tribune did not publish original content using Stephens’ former name but did publish stories from the AP or Washington Post that did so. Overall, there were three distinct AP reports that deadnamed Stephens and were published in the top 10 papers.
The missteps occurred in multiple types of content. Two of the articles were op-eds, one by Supreme Court journalist Linda Greenhouse in The New York Times and another by Ryan T. Anderson in the New York Post. (Anderson is a senior research fellow at the right-wing Heritage Foundation who has used his position to attack the rights of the LGBTQ community and advocate for the discredited practice of conversion therapy.) The Wall Street Journal and New York Post’s editorial boards deadnamed Stephens as well.
Top newspapers have also repeatedly deadnamed Manning, including when reporting on a suicide attempt
Eight of the top 10 newspapers have deadnamed Manning in their reporting since January 2019. Newsday in New York and the Star Tribune in Minnesota were the only outlets of the 10 that did not. There were at least 36 articles that did so across those outlets; 30 articles were original reports, and six were reprints from the AP, New York Times, Washington Post, or Baltimore Sun.
Several outlets made the error in five or more articles, all of which were original reports. They were:
- The Washington Post, with nine;
- USA Today, with eight;
- The New York Times, with seven; and
- The Wall Street Journal, with five.
USA Today’s Kevin Johnson was the author or co-author of four of these articles, and the Chicago Tribune’s editorial board deadnamed Manning as well.
After Manning survived a suicide attempt in jail in March, The New York Times, USA Today, and the Wall Street Journal all published her former name in their reports. It’s worth noting that referring to trans people by their correct name can reduce their risk of suicide and depression. The New York Times appears to have updated an April 2019 article to remove Manning’s deadname, though it did not issue a correction or update in the piece.
News outlets’ deadnaming problem underscores the importance of intentional reporting and editing when covering the trans community
In addition to guidelines in the AP Stylebook and created by The New York Times, leading advocates have commented on why journalists must respect an individual’s current name and pronouns. As Chase Strangio, a trans activist and staff attorney at the ACLU who represented Stephens, explained in a May 14 NBC News op-ed: