We can argue about George Will’s political views. But there’s no need
to debate his professional ethics.
Late December brought to light a pair of self-inflicted wounds to the
famous columnist’s ethical pretensions. He broke an elementary rule of
journalism -- and then, when the New York Times called him on it,
proclaimed the transgression to be no one’s business but his own.
It turns out that George Will was among a number of prominent
individuals to receive $25,000 per day of conversation on a board of
advisers for Hollinger International, a newspaper firm controlled by
magnate Conrad Black. Although Will has often scorned the convenient
forgetfulness of others, the Times reported that “Mr. Will could not
recall how many meetings he attended.” But an aide confirmed the annual
$25,000 fee.
Even for a wealthy commentator, that’s a hefty paycheck for one day
of talk. But it didn’t stop Will from lavishing praise on Black in
print -- without a word about their financial tie.
In early March, Will wrote a syndicated piece that blasted critics of
President Bush’s plans to launch an all-out war on Iraq. Several
paragraphs of the column featured quotations from a speech by Black. The
laudatory treatment began high in the column as Will referred to some
criticisms of Bush policies and then wrote: “Into this welter of
foolishness has waded Conrad Black.”
The column did not contain the slightest hint that this wonderful foe
of “foolishness” had provided checks to fatten the columnist’s assets at
$25,000 a pop.
But Will claimed in a December interview that nothing was amiss.
“Asked in the interview if he should have told his readers of the payments
he had received from Hollinger,” a New York Times article reported on Dec.
22, “Mr. Will said he saw no reason to do so.”
The Times quoted Will as saying: “My business is my business. Got
it?”
Yeah. We get it, George. The only question is whether the editors who
keep printing your stuff will get it, too.
After three decades as a superstar pundit, Will continues to
flourish. Several hundred newspapers publish his syndicated column,
Newsweek prints two-dozen essays per year, and he appears each Sunday on
ABC’s “This Week” television show.
The syndicate with a very big stake in George Will cannot be
indifferent to the latest flap, but there’s obvious reticence to singe the
right-winged golden goose. The man who’s the Washington Post Writers Group
editorial director and general manager, Alan Shearer, said: “I think I
would have liked to have known.”
A week later, via a letter in the New York Times, a more forthright
response came from Gilbert Cranberg, former chairman of the professional
standards committee of the National Conference of Editorial Writers: “When
a syndicated journalist writes favorably about a benefactor, that is very
much the business of Mr. Will’s editors and readers.”
Cranberg quoted from the National Conference of Editorial Writers
code of ethics, which includes provisions that “the writer should be
constantly alert to conflicts of interest, real or apparent” -- including
“those that may arise from financial holdings” and “secondary employment.”
Noting that “timely public disclosure can minimize suspicion,” the code
adds: “Editors should seek to hold syndicates to these standards.”
But will they? George Will is a syndicated powerhouse. And he has
gotten away with hiding other big conflicts of interest over the last
quarter-century.
In October 1980, Will appeared on the ABC television program
“Nightline” to praise Ronald Reagan’s “thoroughbred performance” in a
debate with incumbent President Jimmy Carter. But Will did not disclose to
viewers that he’d helped coach Reagan for the debate -- and, in the
process, had read Carter briefing materials stolen from the White House.
When, much later, Will’s “debategate” duplicity came to light, his
media colleagues let him off with a polite scolding. The incident faded
from media memory. Thus, in autumn 1992, when Will reminisced on ABC’s
“This Week” about the 1980 Carter-Reagan debate, he didn’t mention his own
devious role, and none of his journalistic buddies in the studio were
impolite enough to say anything about it.
Will has also played fast and loose with ethics in the midst of other
contests for the presidency. At the media watch group FAIR (where I’m an
associate), senior analyst Steve Rendall pointed out: “During the 1996
campaign, Will caught some criticism for commenting on the presidential
race while his second wife, Mari Maseng Will, was a senior staffer for the
Dole presidential campaign. Defending a Dole speech on ABC News (1/28/96),
Will, according to Washingtonian magazine (3/96), ‘failed to mention ...
that his wife not only counseled Dole to give the speech but also helped
write it.’”
In 2000, Will “suffered another ethical lapse,” Rendall recounts in
Extra!, FAIR’s magazine. The renowned columnist “met with George W. Bush
just before the Republican candidate was to appear on ABC’s ‘This Week.’
Later, in a column (3/4/01), Will admitted that he’d met with Bush to
preview questions, not wanting to ‘ambush him with unfamiliar material.’
In the meeting, Will provided Bush with a 3-by-5 card containing a crucial
question he would later ask the candidate on the air.”
George Will has long been fond of denouncing moral deficiencies.
Typical was this fulmination in a March 1994 column: “Taught that their
sincerity legitimized their intentions, the children of the 1960s grew up
convinced they could not do wrong. Hence the Clinton administration’s
genuine bewilderment when accused of ethical lapses.”
In what can be understood as a case of psychological projection, Will
derisively added: “It is a theoretical impossibility for people in ‘the
party of compassion’ to behave badly because good behavior is whatever
they do.”
During the past three decades, Will -- who chose to become a
syndicated Washington Post columnist in the early 1970s rather than
continue as a speech writer for Sen. Jesse Helms -- has been fond of
commenting on the moral failures of black people while depicting programs
for equity as ripoff artistry. In February 1991, for instance, he wrote:
“The rickety structure of affirmative action, quotas and the rest of the
racial spoils system depends on victimology -- winning for certain groups
the lucrative status of victim.”
In subsequent years, not satisfied with his own very lucrative
status, Will made a quiet pact with corporate wheeler-dealer Conrad Black.
When exposed, Will compounded his malfeasance by declaring that it was
only “my business.”
Words that George Will wrote 10 years ago now aptly describe his own
stance: “It is a theoretical impossibility” that he behaved badly. “Good
behavior” is whatever he does.
Nice work if he can get it. And he can.
Got it?
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Background link:
“The Hypocrisy of George Will” by Steve Rendall -- Extra!, Sept./Oct. 2003
www.fair.org/extra/0309/will.html
_______________________________
Norman Solomon is co-author, with Reese Erlich, of “Target Iraq: What the
News Media Didn’t Tell You.”