Antonio French has a post up about Saint Louis Mayor Francis Slay allegedly buying good coverage by the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, the largest daily paper in the state. A couple of weeks ago, the Saint Louis American exposed Slay money funneled to a couple of local African-American newspapers, and there’s no question that the P-D’s coverage of Slay has been pretty favorable.
However, the way Slay is supposedly paying off the P-D is… well, cheap. Slay has apparently directed city lobbyists to press Jeff City to “support local newspapers” in the upcoming legislative sessions. That’s a triple bank shot, at least. I can’t imagine that they would give him years of favorable coverage only on the vague promise of some city lobbying to an unsympathetic target like the Republican-dominated lege.
More likely, the editors and/or reporters just plain like Slay, and their comfort and ease with him lead them to blind spots regarding his weaknesses. It’s happened with all sorts of leaders, from George W. Bush to John F. Kennedy.
I found a greater scandal (which is to say not that big a deal) in something Antonio mentioned in comments, namely that the P-D has a Community Advisory Board which advises them on editorial stances. Sounds harmless, but a) it assumes that the reporters who cover the city are clueless and distant from the communities they are covering, and b) the CAB includes people like the mayor, the mayor’s chief of staff, and Paul McKee, some of the very people the P-D should have been investigating.
WillyK said:
since, in spite of all the talk about the decline of Newspapers, the Post-Dispatch is still an important source of information for lots of people. I suppose the paper would say that their openness about the makeup of this group makes this situation alright, but I bet lots of people don’t know about who is on the CAB (or even abut the CAB).
I have also noticed that Kit Bond often seems to get a pass –but have just assumed that the staff have just happened to slip into the habit of deference that often seems to happens with somebody both near and powerful.
maryb2004 said:
on this “that the P-D has a Community Advisory Board which advises them on editorial stances”. WTF?
I don’t think it has anything to do with reporters though. When you read a newspaper editorial you assume that it is the opinion of the editorial staff and not the reporters; you don’t even have to assume that they read their own reporting (look at the difference between the reporting in the Wall Street Journal and the WSJ editorials).
ashriver said:
From what I can tell, most of the editorials are right on the money, whereas the political “reporting” is pretty terrible and, IMO, often one-sided. So while I agree that the CAB looks like a bad idea, I haven’t seen much evidence of it being a problem in the content of the editorials. Although, I suppose, a lack of editorials on certain subjects might also be a result of the CAB.