Hard To Believe, But A War Is Brewing At NYTimes!

Annie

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bcalame - 10:43 AM ET September 16, 2005 (#12 of 12)

Columnist Correction Policy Isn't Being Applied to Krugman

An Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times who makes an error "is expected to promptly correct it in the column." That's the established policy of Gail Collins, editor of the editorial page. Her written policy encourages "a uniform approach, with the correction made at the bottom of the piece."

Two weeks have passed since my previous post spelled out the errors made by columnist Paul Krugman in writing about news media recounts of the 2000 Florida vote for president. Mr. Krugman still hasn't been required to comply with the policy by publishing a formal correction. Ms. Collins hasn't offered any explanation.

As a result, readers of nytimes.com who simply search for "Krugman" won't find any indication that there are uncorrected errors in the columns the query turns up. Nor will those who access Mr. Krugman's columns in an electronic database such as Nexis or Factiva. Corrections would have been appended in all those places if Mr. Krugman had complied with Ms. Collins' policy and corrected the errors in his column in the print version of The Times. (Essentially, to become part of the official archive of The Times, material has to have been published in the print paper.)

All Mr. Krugman has offered so far is a faux correction. Each Op-Ed columnist has a page in nytimes.com that includes his or her past columns and biographical information. Mr. Krugman has been allowed to post a note on his page that acknowledges his initial error, but doesn't explain that his initial correction of that error was also wrong. Since it hasn't been officially published, that posting doesn't cause the correction to be appended to any of the relevant columns.

If the problem is that Mr. Krugman doesn't want to give up precious space in his column for a correction, there are alternatives. Perhaps some space could be found elsewhere on the Op-Ed page so that readers—especially those using electronic versions of his pieces -- could get the accurate information they deserve.

A bottom-line question: Does a corrections policy not enforced damage The Times's credibility more than having no policy at all?
 
Link loaded:

http://patterico.com/2005/09/16/3589/paul-krugman-prettifies-his-own-history-of-misstatements/

9/16/2005
Paul Krugman Prettifies His Own History of Misstatements
Filed under: Media Bias, Scum — Patterico @ 12:52 am

Paul Krugman has — ever so quietly — issued yet another correction to his recent misstatements about the 2000 election. And guess what? Mr. “Don’t Prettify Our History” has buried the correction online. It never saw the print edition, and has not been appended to the columns that made the original misstatements.

What an incredibly dishonest putz.

Here are the details:

I’m not going to repeat the entire background. I’ve written plenty of posts on the topic in which the whole sordid incident is set forth:

* An August 23 post titled Krugman vs. the Truth

* An August 24 post titled My Letter to The New York Times Ombudsman and Paul Krugman

* An August 26 post titled Paul Krugman Just Can’t Get It Right

* A comprehensive August 30 post titled My Hopefully Final Word (Well, More Like a Whole Lotta Words) on the Krugman Election Controversy, Responding to the Half-Hearted Defense of Krugman Proposed by Tom Maguire

* And finally, an August 31 post summarizing the comprehensive post, titled Krugman Rant — The Short Version

In my comprehensive August 31 post, I noted several problems with the following Krugman assertion:

Two out of three hypothetical statewide counts would have given the election to Mr. Gore.

Among the many problems with this statement, I mentioned this one:

Krugman’s formulation is a play on words that describes two standards favoring Bush (“two-corner detachments” and “clear punches”) as only one (“at least two corners detached”), making it seem like Bush won under only one standard.

As far as I know, I was the first to publicly make this observation. (I noticed it after Tom Maguire had brought Krugman’s likely defense to my attention.) I expressed the observation again in my follow-up summary post on August 31:

Krugman collapses two standards where Bush was the winner into one, using cleverly deceptive language. The original study actually examined four standards, not three — and Bush won two, not one.

As it happens, Don Luskin had independently picked up on this exact point, and verified my observation by talking to the former managing editor of the Miami Herald. Luskin published his findings on August 31, the same day I summarized my post from the day before. Luskin called for a correction — as did I.

Well, guess what? Krugman issued one, on September 2 — and it bore out exactly what Luskin and I had been saying:

In describing the results of the ballot study by the group led by the Miami Herald, I relied on the Herald’s own report, which listed only three hypothetical statewide recounts, two of which went to Al Gore. There was, however, a fourth recount, which would have gone to George W. Bush. In this case, the two stricter-standard recounts went to Mr. Bush.

Krugman also had to acknowledge that he had gotten something else wrong — his earlier assertion that “a more definitive study by a larger consortium that included The New York Times . . . showed Al Gore winning all statewide manual recounts.” As it turns out, no it didn’t:

The later study, by a group including the New York Times, used two methods to count ballots: relying on the judgment of a majority of those examining each ballot, or requiring unanimity. Mr. Gore “won” all six hypothetical recounts on the majority basis. He lost one – in this case, the one using the loosest standard – on the unanimity basis.

Why didn’t you hear about these corrections until now? Don Luskin reported the answer yesterday (h/t Malkin):

Krugman’s admission was never published in the print edition of the Times, so the majority of Times readers have never seen it. And archival versions of the three prior Krugman columns bearing his falsehoods about the consortium’s results remain uncorrected to this day on the Times’s own website and in the Lexis-Nexis and ProQuest databases. So generations of future readers of the “newspaper of record” will see uncorrected falsehoods, even when those falsehoods have been admitted to by their author.

This is pathetic. What is Krugman’s likely defense for this?

I think you can find the answer in Krugman’s barely whispered online correction, in which Krugman claimed that none of the corrections really mattered anyway:

None of this has any bearing on my original point, which was not that the outcome would have been different if the U.S. Supreme Court had not intervened - the Florida Supreme Court had not, in fact, called for a full statewide manual recount - but that the recorded vote was so close that, when you combine that fact with the effects of vote suppression and ballot design, it becomes reasonably clear that the voters of Florida, as well as those of the United States as a whole, tried to choose Mr. Gore.

Hmmm. Well, no, Paul. Your original point was this:

Two different news media consortiums reviewed Florida’s ballots; both found that a full manual recount would have given the election to Mr. Gore.

But that was clearly wrong, so then you said this:

Unlike a more definitive study by a larger consortium that included The New York Times, an analysis that showed Al Gore winning all statewide manual recounts, the earlier study showed him winning two out of three.

But that turns out to be wrong as well — on both counts. The New York Times analysis didn’t show Gore winning all statewide recounts, and the earlier study showed Bush winning two out of four.

But your true overarching point was well stated in the title of your August 22 column: Don’t Prettify Our History.

Ironic, isn’t it, that a column bearing such a title would even today deliberately omit two separate corrections that undercut the partisan point of the column.

P.S. Feel free to write the Public Editor about this. But be prepared to feel like you’re beating your head against the trunk of a tree. They never responded to my e-mails on this, and they’re not gonna respond to yours, either.

UPDATE: Actually, after I wrote this post the Public Editor’s office did send me an e-mail noting that the Public Editor has written about this topic. Go here for details.

UPDATE x2: Tom Maguire, whose excellent research uncovered Krugman’s likely defense so that I could respond to it ahead of time, has more here.
 

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