By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 1.29.09 @ 6:08AM
The Slim balls at the New York Times prove both
predictable and controversial.
WASHINGTON -- Let us put an end to the dark murmurings over why
the New York Times did not renew its contract with its
lone conservative columnist, Bill Kristol. Some say it was a
matter of politics. Kristol is a Republican. The Times
is Obamist. For a certitude, the political disagreement was
there, but politics was not the ultimate cause of Kristol's
departure.
I can now report on copper bottom authority that the New York
Times let Kristol go owing to public health concerns. As the
Times' financial condition has grown fragile the
publisher of the Times, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr., has become
apprehensive that Kristol's conservative views could endanger the
health of some of the newspapers' neurotic liberal readers. Over
the past year, readers unexpectantly encountering Kristol in the
otherwise lenitive company of Paul Krugman and Bob Herbert have
complained on the correspondence page of various discomforts.
None appeared life threatening, but what if an aged
environmentalist or an infirm McGovernite lost in reveries of
1972 actually suffered a coronary? The trial lawyers would move
upon the Times in an instant. Mr. Sulzberger might not
survive.
Of course, the Times might not survive anyway. It labors
under $1.1 billion of debt. So precarious are its finances that
it recently had to accept a $250 million loan from a Mexican with
the unlikely name of Carlos Slim. Whether he really is a Mexican
is not clear, and the Times' team of investigative
reporters is now so tiny that executive editor Bill Keller has
not been able to spare even one reporter to inquire. So far as I
have been able to ascertain, no reporter has even googled to
verify Mr. Slim's nationality. He might be Portuguese. He could
be dangerously overweight. Actually, I am told that investigative
reporters at the Times now, in an effort to economize,
rarely leave their offices and conduct many of their
investigations on the telephone. Mr. Sulzberger likes them to
call collect.
Yet, to return to Kristol's departure -- frankly I shall miss
him. Over this past year, he rarely filed a boring column, which
doubtless offended many of his colleagues on the op-ed page.
"Boredom is a virtue," is their motto, and the only other
Times columnist who regularly breaks with the general
tedium is that perpetual high school rowdy, Maureen Dowd, who
often mistakes a cackle for a syllogism. Moreover, Kristol's
conservatism is usually sound, solidly reasoned, and often
amusing. This has led to charges from unnamed journalists in a
Washington Post
column by Howard Kurtz that Kristol was "predictable." This
is a charge liberals often file against conservatives, giving us
still more evidence of their double standard. The adherence to
principle that renders a conservative "predictable" in the eyes
of liberals is exalted as "highly principled" and even "heroic"
when exhibited by a liberal.
Another charge against Kristol from unnamed journalists is that
he has been cavalier about facts. Kurtz writes that Kristol "had
to correct three factual errors," presumably over the past year.
What the errors were Kurtz does not say, but the Times'
"Corrections" section overflows daily, rarely with Kristol's
name. Once a Times reporter had to interview me in an
attempt to correct errors in a news story that I had broken in
the New York Sun. When the "correction" appeared is was
still inaccurate.
Kurtz also reports that Kristol -- at least when he has written
in the Washington Post -- has been "controversial."
Well, at least he was not predictable, or was he? Kurtz reports
that in the summer of 2007 Kristol wrote that the presidency of
George W. Bush "will probably be a successful one." On that
judgment I would side with the herd of unnamed journalists,
though by using selective criteria Kristol can make a case.
Elsewhere Kurtz -- apparently in consultation with the herd --
adjudges "controversial" Kristol's 2007 observation that
"military progress on the ground in Iraq in the past few months
has been greater than even surge proponents like me expected." I
cannot find anything controversial about that.
This is not the first time Kristol has departed the mainstream
media. In the late 1990s he was a regular with George
Stephanopoulos, Cokie Roberts, and Sam Donaldson in a round-table
discussion on ABC's This Week. He left amid rumors that
ABC thought him too involved in politics. After a period of
reorganizing, ABC put Stephanopoulos in charge of the whole show.
Stephanopoulos had been a Democratic political apparatchik all
his adult life before joining ABC as a "political analyst." What
prepared him for journalism at ABC? In his 1999 autobiography he
admitted that while serving as a senior adviser to Bill Clinton
he would "spin" the press, beginning with the Gennifer Flowers
tape. Looking back on his years of spinning, Stephanopoulos
lamented that "I have been willing to suspend my disbelief about
some of his [Clinton's] more suspect denials." Suspension of
disbelief -- there is the mark of a great American journalist!
Kristol simply does not measure up.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Conservatism, New York Times