Daily Trade News

Politico writer knocks WaPo for scrubbing Steele dossier errors: ‘Is


Politico columnist Jack Schafer took aim at the Washington Post for the way it went about correcting its past reports on the infamous Steele dossier. 

The Post stunned the media landscape last week for issuing major corrections following revelations from the ongoing Durham probe that undermined the paper’s previous corroboration of claims made in the memo from ex-British spy Christopher Steele, which helped ignite the Russia collusion narrative during the Trump presidency. 

WASHINGTON POST CORRECTS, REMOVES REPORTING THAT RELIED ON DISCREDITED ANTI-TRUMP STEELE DOSSIER

“The Washington Post on Friday took the unusual step of correcting and removing large portions of two articles, published in March 2017 and February 2019, that had identified a Belarusan American businessman as a key source of the ‘Steele dossier,’ a collection of largely unverified reports that claimed the Russian government had compromising information about then-candidate Donald Trump,” Post media reporter Paul Farhi wrote

“The newspaper’s executive editor, Sally Buzbee, said The Post could no longer stand by the accuracy of those elements of the story. It had identified businessman Sergei Millian as ‘Source D,’ the unnamed figure who passed on the most salacious allegation in the dossier to its principal author, former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele,” Farhi continued. 

 

 
(ERIC BARADAT/AFP via Getty Images)

In a piece titled, “Let’s Not Consign Journalistic Transparency to the Memory Hole,” Shafer defended a principle once championed by newspapers that its articles are “the first rough draft of history,” even if that first draft isn’t completely accurate. 

“So when reporters uncover new information that undermines earlier copy, they write new stories, updating the record. What they don’t do is go back and erase the original, flawed version. But that’s what the Washington Post did last week,” Shafer wrote on Tuesday. 

Shafer saluted the Post for issuing corrections and praised its media critic Erik Wemple for his ongoing coverage calling out news outlets that hyped the Steele Dossier but accused Buzbee of “masking the editorial record,” writing “What’s peculiar about the Post’s method of error correction was its decision to vaporize the two original stories.”

WAPO MEDIA CRITIC SAYS DURHAM INDICTMENT IS ‘BAD NEWS’ FOR THOSE WHO HYPED STEELE DOSSIER

A Post spokesperson told Shafer the original reports could be found in the media database service Factiva, but the Politico columnist noted it costs roughly $249 a month, something many readers cannot afford. 

Shafer wrote, “Such heavy reworking of years-old copy is so rare it approaches the unprecedented, as American University media history professor W. Joseph Campbell told Farhi. Stephen Bates, a professor of journalism at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, concurs. ‘It’s hard to have a paper of record if the record keeps changing,’ Bates says.” 

The Washington Post corrected its coverage of Christopher Steele’s infamous dossier after the indictment of Igor Danchenko. 

The…



Read More: Politico writer knocks WaPo for scrubbing Steele dossier errors: ‘Is