When Your Newsroom Gets It Wrong
Support Journal-ismsThe Democratic National Convention Committee released excerpts from the Wednesday night remarks of Sen. Kamala Harris, nominee for vice president. (video)
When Your Newsroom Gets It Wrong
At least two journalists of color have called out their news organizations over their reporting on Kamala Harris, and a third, a columnist, wrote this week that, in the words of the headline, “I wasn’t a fan of Kamala Harris. It took President Trump to change my mind.”
“What’s changed for me, and I suspect for a lot of Black people who were initially less than enthusiastic about Harris as VP, has been the constant stream of racist attacks against her from Trump and his various minion mouthpieces,” Erika D. Smith wrote in the Los Angeles Times. “Lukewarm about her before, now we’re fired up and defensive.”
Former vice president Joe Biden’s selection of Sen. Harris, D-Calif., as his vice presidential running mate has many ecstatic. Too ecstatic, wrote Tom Jones, media columnist for the Poynter Institute, who called out one Black reporter as “so over-the-top in her praise of Harris that it bordered on out-and-out cheerleading.” (scroll down)
But it is true, as Emily DeRuy wrote for the Bay Area News Group Saturday, updated Wednesday, that Harris inspires several demographic groups. She “looks like the Bay Area,” DuRuy said.
“It was no accident that Kamala Harris’ first interview as Joe Biden’s running mate was with The 19th,” Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy wrote Friday for their “Reliable Sources” newsletter for CNN. “Harris, who spoke with Errin Haines during The 19th’s inaugural summit on Friday, confirmed that it was done ‘on purpose.’ During the interview, Harris was asked about the message it sends to America that someone with her background was selected for a major party’s presidential ticket. ‘Errin let me also say this. I am not unique,’ Harris said. ‘There are a lot of people like me, there are a lot of books where I come from. I come from people.’ “
“She is Black and Asian-American, born in Oakland to a mother from India and a father from Jamaica who met in graduate school at UC Berkeley. She is Baptist, with a Sanskrit name that means ‘lotus’ from her Hindu heritage, but is known to her Jewish stepchildren as ‘Momala,’ a play on her first name and an endearing Yiddish term for ‘little mama.’
“She also looks like the future of America, where demographers say, by 2043 white people are expected to be a minority group. The number of multiracial Americans is expected to triple by 2060 to about 26.7 million.
“Yet,” DeRuy continued, “it took less than 48 hours from Joe Biden’s naming Harris his running mate for her blended background to become a campaign issue. While Democrats quickly celebrated what former President Barack Obama called Harris’ ‘life story … that I and so many others can see ourselves in,’ President Donald Trump stoked an incendiary claim that questioned Harris’ eligibility to serve as vice president because her parents were born outside the U.S.”
And that’s when the spit hit the fan.
Bill Grueskin reported in Columbia Journalism Review about NBC’s Geoff Bennett (pictured) and NPR’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro. “Bennett is not afraid to push back,” Grueskin wrote. “And we saw that intensity again late Thursday night, shortly after the official Twitter account for NBC News posted this: President Trump told reporters he had ‘heard’ rumors that Sen. Harris, a Black woman and U.S.-born citizen, does not meet the requirement to serve in the White House.
“The president said he considered the rumors ‘very serious.’ Within minutes, Bennett went public, castigating his own newsroom with a quote-tweet to his 100,000 or so followers: ‘This tweet stops short of saying Kamala Harris is fully eligible to serve and to suggest otherwise is a desperate and racist lie.’
“Minutes later, NBC deleted its tweet and posted a new one, with a tone much closer to Bennett’s: ‘Sen. Harris’ eligibility to be president is not in doubt, despite racist birtherism suggestions that were echoed by the president Thursday.’
“Then, to make sure everyone got the message, the network pinned that new tweet to the top of its feed — and left it there for several days so it would be the first thing that NBC News’s 7.7 million followers would see. . . .
“Nor was Bennett the only journalist to go public with concerns. After Trump’s press conference, NPR led its story much the way NBC had framed its tweet: ‘President Trump stoked a controversial theory being promoted by supporters — and his campaign — that Sen. Kamala Harris of California is not eligible for the vice presidency.’
“Lulu Garcia-Navarro, (pictured) the host of NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday who has won Peabody and duPont awards, told her 78,500 Twitter followers that ‘this language does our audience a grave disservice. It’s not a “theory.” It’s a lie.’ NPR changed the phrase ‘controversial theory’ to ‘an untrue conspiracy theory’ and went on to acknowledge on Twitter that its language hadn’t been ‘clear enough that suggestions Sen. Harris isn’t eligible are lies.’ Minutes later, Garcia-Navarro tweeted, ‘This is what a credible news organization does. I am proud to work at NPR.’
“And even some Newsweek journalists — including a top correspondent and a senior editor — went public with their disgust. . . .”
Newsweek was first up among well-known media outlets to impugn Harris’ right to run. It felt the consequences. “Editor-in-Chief Nancy Cooper and the magazine’s recently hired opinion editor, Trump-backing conservative activist and attorney Josh Hammer, apologized on Friday after nearly a week of defending a right-wing law professor’s op-ed questioning Sen. Kamala Harris’ U.S. citizenship and her eligibility to be Joe Biden’s running mate,” Lloyd Grove reported for the Daily Beast.
Newsweek’s admitted wrongheadedness was reminiscent of the conflict last month at The New York Times, where an op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., calling for the use of troops in American cities infuriated the newsroom and ended in the resignation of its top Opinion editor.
“Members of an internal group called Black@NYT organized the effort in a new Slack channel and agreed on a carefully drafted response,” Ben Smith wrote in The New York Times. “They would say that Mr. Cotton’s column ‘endangered’ black staff members, a choice of words intended to ‘focus on the work’ and ‘avoid being construed as hyperpartisan,’ one said.”
At Newsweek, it is not clear that Black reporters exist. When asked, spokesman Ken Frydman told Journal-isms by telephone Monday, “We don’t discuss personnel issues.”
- ABC News: ABC News lands the first joint network interviews with former VP Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris
- Yvonne Abraham, Boston Globe: A moment of celebration at the prospect of Kamala Harris as vice president — before the ugly deluge
- Jon Allsop, Columbia Journalism Review: Stop asking how Trump is ‘defining’ Biden and Harris
- Robin Andersen, Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting: Not All Criticism of Kamala Harris Is Created Equal
- Paul Anderson, City News Service: OC Professor Defends Saying Kamala Harris Ineligible for VP, Echoing ‘Birther’ Lie
- Associated Press: Picture book on Kamala Harris coming Aug. 25
- Maggie Astor and Sydney Ember, New York Times: What to Know About Kamala Harris, Joe Biden’s V.P. Choice
- BET: BET BUZZ: Black Women In Politics Tweet Support For Kamala Harris (video)
- David Brennan, Newsweek: From China to Israel, Where Kamala Harris Stands on Foreign Policy
- DeNeen L. Brown, Washington Post: Kamala Harris’s dad was from Jamaica, where a fierce woman warrior once fought slavery
- Sara Burnett and Amanda Seitz, Associated Press: Women say they will fight sexism, ‘ugly’ attacks on Harris
- Tommy Christopher, Mediaite: Newsweek Gets Dragged for ‘Birther 2.0’ Column Questioning Kamala Harris’ Eligibility for VP: ‘Racist Nonsense’
- Mary C. Curtis, Roll Call: ‘Democrats offer virtual vision for an inclusive America. Your turn, Republicans
- Angela P. Dodson, Philadelphia Inquirer: On the momentum of Kamala Harris, U.S. women should continue to lead the vote
- Caleb Ecarma, Vanity Fair: Women’s Group Warns Media Execs: Avoid Sexist, Racist Coverage of Biden’s V.P. Pick (Aug. 7)
- Editorial, Jamaica Gleaner: Diaspora Policy In Light Of Kamala Harris
- Editorial, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Why Biden blew it
- David Folkenflik, NPR: As Harris Launches Candidacy, Conservatives Take Aim At Her Black And Indian Heritage
- Todd J. Gillman and Gromer Jeffers Jr., Dallas Morning News: Biden selects Kamala Harris as vice presidential pick, thrilling Texas Democrats
- Maureen Groppe, USA Today: Mike Pence vs. Kamala Harris: Here’s where they might clash
- Emil Guillermo, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund: Better Asian American or just better than Trump? (Aug. 12)
- Donald J. Harris, guyaneseonline: Reflections of a Jamaican Father (2018) [PDF]
- Astead W. Herndon, New York Times: Kamala Harris
- Roy S. Johnson, al.com: Kamala Harris may be Blacker than you
- Tom Jones, Poynter Institute: Kamala Harris was born in the United States. The media needs to stop asking questions about it.
- Jen Juneau, People: All the Reactions to Kamala Harris as Biden’s VP Pick: Celebs, Her Family, Trump & More
- Yunkyo Kim, AsAmNews: Newsweek responds to criticisms on birther op-ed (Aug. 15)
- Colbert I. King, Washington Post: Kamala Harris’s HBCU experience prepares her to take on Trump
- Chryl N. Laird, New York Times: We Got a Black Woman on the Ticket. At Last. (Aug. 11)
- Maureen Lee Lenker, Entertainment Weekly: Maya Rudolph reacts to Kamala Harris VP pick: ‘Oh s—‘
- Shefali Luthra, The 19th: Kamala Harris applauds Biden’s “audacity to choose a Black woman to be his running mate”
- Julianne Malveaux, National Newspaper Publishers Association: Black Women Rising Despite Obstacles (Aug. 12)
- Branko Marcetic, Jacobin: The Two Faces of Kamala Harris
- Jonathan Martin and Astead W. Herndon, New York Times: In Kamala Harris, a Choice at Once Safe and Energizing
- Mary McNamara, Los Angeles Times: ‘Safe’ is not the word to describe Kamala Harris. Here’s why.
- Jennifer Medina and Evan Nicole Brown, New York Times: Black Women Asked Their Party for What They Wanted. What Happens Next?
- Ruben Navarrette Jr., Washington Post Writers Group: A master at playing the race card
- Ruben Navarrette Jr., The Kamala Harris Birtherism Charge Is Straight-Up Racism and Xenophobia
- Cassandra Negley, Yahoo Sports: NBA says photographer who posted offensive Kamala Harris meme is no longer in bubble
- Tarisai Ngangura, Vanity Fair: The Kamala Harris Birther Bulls–t Is Already Taking Off
- Nadra Nittle, NBC Think: Kamala Harris is Asian and Black. That shouldn’t be confusing in 2020 — but it is to some. (Aug. 12)
- Dave Nemetz, TVLine: Fox News Host Tucker Carlson Mispronounces Kamala Harris’ Name, Scoffs When Corrected: ‘So What?’
- Michele L. Norris, Washington Post: Trump wants to define what it means to be truly American. His Kamala Harris nickname exemplifies that.
- Ernest Owens, Daily Beast: Everything My Elders Love About Kamala Harris Leaves Me Cold
- Ewan Palmer, Newsweek: Everything Rush Limbaugh Has Said About Kamala Harris
- Sonali Paul and Joseph Ax, Reuters: Australian newspaper cartoon of U.S. candidates Harris and Biden criticized as racist
- Steven Petrow, USA Today: Kamala Harris’ name isn’t difficult to pronounce. There’s no excuse for getting it wrong
- Melanye Price, New York Times: This Is Not Just a Victory for Kamala Harris
- Daina Ramey Berry and Kali Nicole Gross, Politico Magazine: The Century of Black Women Activists Who Paved the Way for Kamala Harris
- Richard Reddick, CNN: The part of Kamala Harris’ story that fills Jamaicans with pride
- Reuters Television: Indians erect banners, pray for Kamala Harris to win U.S. election
- Josh Rivera, USA Today: Amazon removes clothing with derogatory term toward Kamala Harris
- Eugene Scott with Brooke Gladstone, “On the Media,” WNYC-FM: Is the Press Better at Calling Out Birther Lies? (podcast) (added Aug. 23)
- Eugene Scott, Washington Post: The media was far less likely to let birtherism attacks slide this time
- Sharmila Sen, Washington Post: Indians should use the historic VP selection of Kamala Harris to reckon with our own anti-Blackness
- David Smiley, Miami Herald: ‘Forgotten voting blocs.’ Florida’s Black Caribbean voters identify with Kamala Harris (Jacqueline Charles contributed)
- Mark Joseph Stern with Brooke Gladstone, “On the Media,” WNYC-FM: The ‘Think Tank’ Behind the Kamala Harris Birther Lie (podcast) (added Aug. 23)
- Mark Joseph Stern, Slate: The White Supremacist “Scholars” Pushing the Kamala Harris Birther Lie
- Juana Summers, NPR: Howard University Shaped Kamala Harris’ Path To Political Heights
- Melba Tolliver, Morning Call, Allentown, Pa.: Your View by former TV news anchor: Let’s judge Biden’s VP pick by character and not coded labels (Aug. 6)
- Adrian Walker, Boston Globe: Harris gives Biden a bridge to the future
- Vanessa Williams, Washington Post: Kamala Harris is Asian and Black. That shouldn’t be confusing in 2020 — but it is to some.
- Matthew Yglesias, vox.com: Birtherism 2.0, explained
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