Washington Post reporter/blogger Dave Weigel, who is
tasked with covering conservatives, has come under fire in the
past several days for derisive comments he’s made about some
conservatives on the liberal listserv JournoList. You could read
more background on the story
here. I should disclose at the outset of this post that I
consider Dave a good friend. So you can dismiss what I have to
say if you want, but I felt compelled to add some broader context
to this latest media controversy.
To start with, it’s important to note that all of the comments at
the center of the recent uproar were made on a private email list
that was supposed to be off the record. Just for a moment, think
of the things that you’d say if you were joking or venting anger
among friends, and imagine if they became public with context
removed. If everything we said privately were public, I wonder
how many of us would be able to maintain jobs or friendships.
Weigel is being attacked for writing that the world would be
better if Matt Drudge could “set himself on fire.” But people
make off hand remarks like that all the time without literally
wishing bodily harm upon other humans.
This and other private comments by Weigel have contributed to the
charge that he’s hostile toward conservatives and a standard
issue liberal, but I don’t think that’s accurate. I could just as
easily report on private conversations in which he’s revealed a
fondness for Ronald Reagan, a willingness to vote for Bobby
Jindal as president, and agreed that Van Jones should have been
fired for his 9/11 trutherism. Plus, it should be noted that in
the past, he’s even contributed to
the American Spectator.
It should also be noted that he went on Keith Olbermann’s show
and
shot down a story about Sarah Palin committing perjury that
had been lighting up the liberal blogs and
defended Cato’s Michael Cannon against a “dishonest and
unfair hit” by the Center for American Progress.
I’ve disagreed with Weigel on a number of occasions, and have
called him out when I’ve felt he’s placed an inordinate amount of
focus on fringe characters or extreme statements made by
conservatives. But I also know that he isn’t some “drive by”
journalist. He knows his subject matter well, reads constantly,
goes to lots of conservative events, maintains friendships with
conservatives, and talks to a lot of conservatives for his
articles and quotes them accurately.
UPDATE: Since I posted this, it’s come to my attention that Dave
Weigel has
resigned.