280 Wall Street Journal reporters have sent a letter to publisher Almar Latour, registering their grievances about the paper’s opinion section and its “lack of fact-checking and transparency, and its apparent disregard for evidence” — a problem, they say, which “undermine our readers' trust and our ability to gain credibility with sources.”
However, the letter writers misunderstand the fundamental issue here: The problem is not that The Wall Street Journal’s opinion section undermines the newsroom’s credibility — it’s that in the right-wing media environment, especially under the ownership of the Murdoch empire, the newsroom only exists in order to help confer a patina of credibility on the opinion section as it spreads right-wing falsehoods. And this should become all that much clearer when looking at the opinion section’s responses and its total lack of accountability.
As Vanity Fair’s Joe Pompeo notes, the newsroom staff’s consternation about the opinion section goes back at least to 2017, and problems have also flared up in recent months.
One of the letter’s proposed remedies even seems to imply that the newsroom remains subservient to the opinion pages in the corporate pecking order — that falsehoods in the opinion pages eclipse any facts in the news sections.
The full text of the letter was posted on Twitter by New York Times media reporter Marc Tracy: