Until only recently, Justin Trudeau enjoyed what appears to have been the longest media honeymoon of perhaps any prime minister. And yet, when the opposition Conservatives point out the obvious bias, or avoid media questions, reporters and columnists gasp as if democracy is crumbling before them.
Pierre Poilievre is accused of all sorts of nefarious and evil actions and intensions. A grand narrative is always asserted, but rarely is it ever backed up.
Examples are not hard to find. A Toronto Star columnist
has argued Poilievre would try to claim elections Conservatives lost were illegitimate, or rigged. No evidence was cited.
A Canadian Press story
accused Poilievre of spreading conspiracy theories. Again, no evidence was cited.
A CBC
story accused the Conservative leader of pandering to an extremist group called Diagolon and the only evidence cited was that he walked past a door with some graffiti scrawled on the bottom.
Much of the same media has been remarkably incurious about any number of Liberal government scandals. Chinese election interference? Actually Poilievre is the one to blame for making such a big deal of it, according to some writers.
Pressuring the attorney general not to prosecute a politically important Quebec company? Why should we care about that?
Inflation? an invention of Poilievre’s imagination. And on and on and on it goes, media parroting Liberal talking points, running interference for Trudeau, and imagining the worst of Poilievre.
For those worried about polarization in our society, all news media need to take better care to ensure they are reporting in good faith. This behaviour doesn’t relent, even in the face of actual media malpractice that goes well beyond bias. So it was when a
CTV News report last month featured a clip of Poilievre speaking that was altered to make it sound like he was bringing a non-confidence motion to topple the government as a way to stop dental care, which was a fabrication.
Here is what Poilievre had actually said: “That’s why it’s time to put forward a motion for a carbon tax election.”
And here is what CTV had him say: “That’s why we need to put forward a motion,” which apparently fit better with the story on dental care.
All newsrooms should take care to report in good faith
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It was egregious conduct and those responsible were rightly removed from CTV News, but not until Poilievre’s Conservatives demanded an apology that admitted the nature of the manipulated clip, and said they would boycott any interviews with CTV.
Ask most journalists in Toronto, as well as any Liberal MP, what they think of this mess and, predictably, they respond by clutching their pearls. How dare the Conservatives bully the media? How dare CTV cave?
When comparable behaviour comes from Liberals, such as after the media accurately reported on the SNC-Lavalin scandal (
“the allegations in the Globe story this morning are false”) or, again, accurately reported on foreign election interference (it is the media that is guilty of
“foreign interference”), or the fact the Liberal gun ban initially included hunting rifles (“misinformation”), you can’t throw a stone without finding a reporter or a pundit willing to back the government.
But, when Poilievre responds negatively to a media report that was clearly doctored, they blame him rather than those responsible.
Case in point comes from Globe and Mail columnist
Andrew Coyne, who argued last week that the reaction to the manipulated clip was overblown. The CTV employees weren’t rightfully removed from the newsroom for failing the most basic of journalistic principles, they were, according to Coyne, canned as a “sacrifice” to placate Poilievre??? Seriously?
As for the offence itself, one can almost hear Coyne rolling his eyes, “It’s one quote in one story on one network on one day.” Well, no, it isn’t just one story on one network on one day, it is the clearest example of a general anti-Conservative bias in the media that has long existed. Perhaps the extent of the bias is exaggerated from time to time, but the fact it exists is unmistakable.
Even so, the issue with CTV’s manipulated story isn’t bias, it’s about integrity. It shouldn’t be a partisan issue, and the fact that some journalists wish to make it partisan suggests a bias.
Coyne went on to assign motives to CTV executives and intentions to Poilievre that he had no way of knowing. When it came to CTV’s statement announcing it dismissed the two employees in question — it read “we sincerely and unreservedly apologize” and acknowledged the offence “violated our editorial standards” — Coyne attributed that to “fear.” As for the motivations behind the Conservatives, Coyne argued that the Tories are not merely trying to “work the refs,” but “trying to take the refs out of the game altogether.”
We at National Post are old friends with Andrew Coyne, but he is wrong here. That the Conservatives would want its supporters to listen to them, to trust them, and not the media is hardly surprising. All political parties, and all governments, have complicated relationships with the media. Suggesting Poilievre is trying to take the “refs” out isn’t backed up.
Regardless, we all have a duty to get it right. Integrity is the news media’s best resource, and if clear violations of integrity are dismissed because they involve a politician the media doesn’t like, more serious problems abound than simple bias.
All newsrooms should take care to report in good faith
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