While most mainstream media outlets earned the scorn that has been
heaped upon them for their stenographic reporting of the Bush
Administration's prewar claims about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction,
one newspaper chain's Washington bureau was consistently--and, it turns
out, correctly--skeptical of the White House. Before the war began,
Knight Ridder's small but able team of reporters was the exception to a
bad rule, producing a steady stream of now widely praised articles with
headlines that referred to the "Failure to find weapons in Iraq" and
"Troubling questions over justification for war in Iraq."
But the war that might have been averted by more skeptical reporting
from the rest of the media will outlast Knight Ridder. Pressed by
investors who grumbled about the company's putting too much money into
journalism and returning too little profit, Knight Ridder sold out to
the California-based McClatchy chain, which paid $4.5 billion and then
announced it would auction off, by summer, a dozen Knight Ridder papers,
including eight represented by the Newspaper Guild. The end of Knight
Ridder, whose thirty-two newspapers--including the Philadelphia
Inquirer, the Akron Beacon Journal and the San Jose
Mercury News--had earned a combined eighty-four Pulitzer Prizes,
illustrates the peril of practicing the craft of journalism in times
like these. No conspiracy took Knight Ridder down; it was Wall Street's
line that profit margins of 19 or 20 percent--which the chain posted in
recent years--no longer suffice.
Though McClatchy officials weren't saying as much, the decision to sell
off newly acquired papers in Philadelphia and San Jose, which are rated
among the best in the country, was an admission that doing journalism
right in some of the nation's most diverse cities costs more than the
new owners are ready to spend. And that makes this a scary moment for
anyone who recognizes the role that strong daily newspapers still play
in gathering news, promoting debate and--in the case of most of the
editorial pages of Knight Ridder's dailies that are for
sale--challenging the new orthodoxies of the right. Who buys these
papers will matter, not just to the communities where they are located
but to the political and social fabric of the states where they publish
and to the national discourse.
There may come a time when new media begin to produce a steady flow of
quality reporting, but as of now, according to the latest report from
the Project for Excellence in Journalism, while the number of media
outlets is growing, fewer stories are being covered and in less depth.
"The worry is not the wondrous addition of citizen media, but the
decline of full-time, professional monitoring of powerful institutions,"
the report argues. As the Project's director, Tom Rosenstiel, warns,
"The content has to come from somewhere, and as older news-gathering
media decline, some of the strengths they offer in monitoring the
powerful and verifying the facts may be weakening as well."
What's needed is a new model for old-media ownership, and it's just
possible that one could come out of the Knight Ridder debacle. A
union-friendly private-equity firm, Yucaipa Companies, is bidding
against several of the country's more unsavory chains for the twelve
papers, most of which are unionized. If it succeeds, newspaper employees
could over time buy ownership of a new corporation set up to run the
papers. "It will start off 100 percent owned by Yucaipa and then more
and more by employees," explains Newspaper Guild president Linda Foley.
"We would like it to be majority-owned by employees, eventually 100
percent."
McClatchy has erected barriers to the bid from Yucaipa, a firm run by
billionaire Ronald Burkle. And even if Yucaipa overcomes those obstacles
and buys all or most of the dailies, the papers will still have to
struggle with the shifting realities of a newspaper business where
circulation rates and advertising revenues are generally in decline, and
where the costs of paying reporters, maintaining news bureaus and
pursuing investigations keep going up. Even a model that frees
newspapers from the pressures imposed by the greediest investors will
not necessarily usher in an era of journalistic freedom and excellence.
But the Yucaipa bid offers some hope that, while the Project for
Excellence in Journalism is right that "the news industry is beginning
to move into the next era," newspaper journalists may still be able to
earn a fair wage for asking tough questions of those in power.
John Nichols, The Nation's Washington correspondent, has covered progressive politics and activism in the United States and abroad for more than a decade. He is currently the editor of the editorial page of Madison, Wisconsin's Capital Times. Nichols is the author of two books: It's the Media, Stupid and Jews for Buchanan.
© 2006 The Nation
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