[Art by Mark Fiore, Pulitzer-Prize-winning cartoonist, my friend and colleague here on Substack and former colleague at KQED.]
***
(From April 2024.)
NPR’s decision to suspend senior editor Uri Berliner for five days after his online essay criticizing the network’s alleged liberal bias is not the first such controversy in the public broadcasting system’s history.
In 2010, for example, NPR cancelled commentator Juan Williams’s contract after comments about Muslims that he made during an appearance on the conservative Fox network.
When people ask me as a former public media executive whether those who work there are mostly liberal, I always answer, “Of course!” The workforce at NPR and at member stations throughout the system tends to be well-educated — and well-educated people skew toward the liberal end of the political spectrum.
Beyond that, public broadcasting employees tend to be thoughtful people, interested in public policy, and supportive of social changes that hold the promise of making our democratic system more inclusive, diverse, and progressive.
Such tendencies can be easily mischaracterized as the kind of knee-jerk “wokeness” so decried by conservatives as a dangerous force in American culture. I’m not sure that such a danger actually exists, but if it does it comes nowhere close to rivaling the threat demonstrated by the Capitol rioters on Jan. 6th, 2021.
Nevertheless, the critics’ point-of-view is worth taking seriously.
Liberals, when they do achieve some measure of power, should always practice what they preach, and that definitely incudes tolerance for diverse points of view.
Which brings me back to the news hook for this column. I wasn't privy to the discussions leading up to Berliner’s suspension, but it certainly doesn’t make NPR look good. I read Berliner’s essay and found it to be a relatively mild critique of the network’s liberal bias through flawed coverage of three important stories.
Whereas Berliner ascribes a liberal bias to the network’s failure to fully execute on those stories, and he may well be right, another view might be that these were routine journalistic failures, not political ones.
Either way, the leaders at NPR probably need to grow thicker skin when it comes to criticism from within their organization. Ideally they should welcome it, though I know that in real life that can be extremely hard to do.
Controversies over coverage happen not infrequently inside newsrooms, and I view them as healthy exercises. If I were running NPR, I’d probably hold out an olive branch to Berliner, with a gentle suggestion that the next time would he please try to keep the dialogue a little more inside the family circle.
Meanwhile, this very public controversy is already being seized upon by right-wingers to call for ending government support for public broadcasting, so let me be clear. NPR, whatever its flaws, is a national treasure. You can trust the journalism — it’s fair, balanced and relatively unbiased.
And at a time when our democracy is under serious assault, we need a healthy public media system now more than ever.
(I worked at NPR affiliate KQED in 1994-’5 and again from 2013-’19. Thanks to my friend and veteran journalist Bruce Koon for talking this issue through with me. He is of course not responsible for what I’ve written. That’s on me)
HEADLINES:
What Will Funding Cuts Do to NPR and PBS? (NYT)
Here’s where public broadcasting cuts hit the hardest (WP)
‘The ghost of Epstein is haunting Trump’s presidency’: inside the ‘Maga’ revolt (Guardian)
What is publicly known about Trump’s yearslong relationship with Jeffrey Epstein (PBS)
5 big questions about Trump’s ties to Epstein (CNN)
How MAGA influencers put pressure on Trump, Bondi over Epstein (WP)
Trump sues WSJ over Epstein report (Rueters)
Trump requests release of Epstein court documents but says ‘nothing will be enough for the troublemakers’ – as it happened (Guardian)
National security elites accept Trump is creating a new world order (Politico)
Trade partners have realized America is ‘simply not reliable’ after Trump’s tariff regime, says Elizabeth Warren—believing impact will be felt for generations to come (Fortune)
The unspoken truth abut the baby bust (Financial Times)
The Real Conspiracy Behind the Texas Floods (Reveal)
How the transgender rights movement lost at the Supreme Court (NYT)
A Classic Profile on the King of Late Night (By Stephen Colbert/New Yorker)
Palestinian Health Ministry says 73 people killed while waiting for aid in Gaza (Guardian)
How Ukraine’s allies helped Zelensky recover his standing with Trump (WP)
Israel and Syria agree to a ceasefire, U.S. envoy says (Axios)
Syria’s Druze bury scores of dead (Reuters)
OpenAI Quietly Turns to Google to Stay Online (Gizmodo)
DOJ Removes All Mentions Of Justice From Website (The Onion)
MUSIC: