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A word on WV-01

by: Carnacki

Tue Sep 21, 2010 at 17:21:30 PM EDT

Did David McKinley, the Republican candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in West Virginia's 1st District, call the President of the United States a "nigger" at a campaign event?

I have heard from several people that McKinley did. He was on private property at a non-union mine on Aug. 20 16. The people who heard him say it have not come forward apparently out of fear of losing their jobs. Had this been at a union mine, I suspect the miners would have stepped forward already.

As relayed to me, McKinley was trying to be one of the "guys" when he called the President of the United States a "nigger."

The Commander in Chief of our military as we wage military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, but to McKinley he is a "nigger."

This is not about partisan politics. As readers of this blog know, I have no love for Mike Oliverio, the Democratic candidate for the seat. The last time I wrote about WV-01 was a long post on how incumbent Alan Mollohan believed he was unfairly attacked in the primary.

As much as I dislike Republican Rep. Shelley Moore Capito in WV-02, I would never think she would ever speak of the President of the United States in such a way. Her father, Gov. Arch Moore, may have been a corrupt politician, but he took a bold stance for civil rights in the 1960s when many governors south of the Mason Dixon Line did not. And I have spoken of the credit he deserves for that before.

In 2008 and even before, when racism accusations were hurled against West Virginia, there was no more ardent defender of West Virginians -- Democrats AND Republicans. (See here, here, here, and here for examples.)

And the numbers backed me up. The white vote in West Virginia for Sen. John McCain and President Obama was no different statistically than the white vote nationally

West Virginia is a state filled with beautiful, decent, hard-working people who do not deserve to be cast in such a light. I hate to see that happen again.

Here is why, however, it is important that readers know what people told me:

* A candidate for the United States Congress referred to the President of the United States as a "nigger." We are talking about the President of the United States. And this was said not just by a private citizen, but a candidate running for the United States Congress. Even if one of the workers had said it, I would expect a Congressional candidate, a person running to represent the people of West Virginia, to say, "Sir, we should not refer to the President of the United States in such a manner."

* This shows incredibly poor judgment on McKinley's part. He is running for office and in front of people, including members of the press, he says that? How stupid is that? This is 2010. Does he think all blue-collar West Virginians are racists? Perhaps he felt safe since much of the state's press is owned by John Raese, the Republican senatorial candidate, and much of the rest of the press is owned by Ogden Nutting, a major supporter of Republicans.

McKinley has a documented history of denial when he is caught afterward with racist connections. For months, white supremacist and militia supporter Larry Pratt was national news for his racist and anti-semitic views before David McKinley, then a gubernatorial candidate, appeared at a rally with him in 1995.

In a 1996 Charleston Gazette article headlined, "McKinley disavows supremacist ties," McKinley claimed he did not know Pratt's views before appearing at the event although Pratt had crisscrossed the country expressing them.

"I certainly denounce anyone who is racist," McKinley said at the time.

Except he did not do so when he shared a stage with one when it benefited McKinley politically.

I hope, despite whatever he says publicly to deny it, I hope McKinley in his heart denounces his own actions and pledges to speak and think better in the future. If he wants to represent West Virginians, he should at least try to represent us in a positive way.

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

A letter from Alan Mollohan

by: WVaBlue

Wed Aug 11, 2010 at 13:25:41 PM EDT

From an email:

Congressman Alan B. Mollohan
August 9, 2010

Dear Friend:

           In the weeks since I lost the Democratic primary, many friends and supporters have let me know how disappointed they were in the outcome.  I appreciate every single one of those calls and visits - ironically, one of the few positive things about losing an election is being reminded of just how many friends you have.  

           At some point in these conversations, I am almost always asked how I'm doing.  And I answer, honestly, that I am doing fine.  I was disappointed in the election results, naturally, but I can accept losing an election.  

           What I cannot accept is any notion that I ever abused the trust my constituents gave me for more than a quarter century.  The fact is that during my 28 years of Congressional service, I have never violated my public trust.  I have never used my official position for personal gain.  Yet my opponent in the primary election, Michael Oliverio, used a four-year-old dishonest Republican smear campaign as the centerpiece of his race.  So, as I prepare to leave office, lingering questions about my ethical conduct float in the wake of the last campaign.

           My reason for writing today is to set that record straight, once and for all.  That is my sole purpose in writing, and I hope this letter receives your fair consideration.

How it started - the battle over ethics rules in the House . . .

           This attack against me began more than four years ago, after I played a pivotal role in the Ethics Committee's investigation of then-Majority Leader Tom DeLay.  

           At the time, I was the senior Democrat serving on the Ethics Committee.  After several ethics complaints were filed against Mr. DeLay in 2004, the Ethics Committee unanimously agreed on October 6, 2004 that Mr. DeLay had in fact violated House ethics standards on several occasions.  

           Although this was not a partisan action - every Republican and every Democrat serving on the Committee agreed that Mr. DeLay had violated House ethics standards - our votes so outraged Mr. DeLay and other national Republican leaders that they took a series of steps in an effort to make sure that Mr. DeLay would not be further sanctioned.  

* The Republican leadership replaced the Republican Ethics Committee Chairman and three of the five Republican committee members with more partisan figures.  

* The new Republican Chairman fired the committee's Chief Counsel and tried to replace him with his personal Chief of Staff.

* The Speaker of the House, Dennis Hastert, tried to change the Ethics Committee rules to make it impossible for the Ethics Committee to do its job.  

This transparent attempt to save Tom DeLay's political career at the expense of a working ethics process was highly controversial, both within Congress and on the editorial pages of the national newspapers.  As the ranking Democrat on the Committee, I was both the leader and public face of the opposition.  On March 10, 2005, my fellow Democrats and I voted to keep the Ethics Committee from organizing under the weakened rules.  I took every measure I could to fend off the partisan attack on the ethics process.  

           This was not a role I sought, but it is one I accepted.  I believed in the ethics process, and I was convinced that the Republican leadership's attack ultimately posed grave danger not only to both parties but, more importantly, the Congress itself.

           So began several months of stalemate and increasingly bitter rhetoric.  Resolutions were debated, speeches were delivered, op-ed pieces were published, but the Speaker and his leadership team refused to back down - until finally they began to lose the support of some of their own members.  Reading the writing on the wall, Speaker Hastert finally relented on April 27, 2005 and reinstated the existing rules.  The impasse over the staffing issue dragged on through June until the Republican Committee Chairman backed down over that as well.

The right-wing retaliates . . .

           We had won, but at what cost?  I was about to discover one very personal answer.  

           My efforts were strongly resented by the Republican leadership, and they began a major, negative campaign designed to destroy my political career.  Republican Speaker Hastert visited Parkersburg and openly said that "they [the national Republicans, including Karl Rove] were going to play offense with Mollohan."  

           And play offense they did.  Karl Rove, political operative and adviser to President George W. Bush, recruited Chris Wakim in the White House to run on the Republican ticket against me in 2006.  In October of 2005, Mr. Wakim bragged about being asked to come to the White House to be recruited by Karl Rove.  Mr. Wakim commented at the time that, in words or effect, he asked Mr. Rove, "how can I beat Congressman Mollohan?"  Mr. Wakim said Mr. Rove responded, in words or effect, that "when we get done with Mollohan you [Mr. Wakim] will win easily."

           That signaled the beginning of a multifaceted smear campaign, employing all the tools of the propagandist - lies, half truths, false association of facts, tabloid journalism, and name calling.

           There is an established game plan for this sort of campaign.  It begins with exhaustive negative research.  Such a negative research effort was undertaken against me by the so-called National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) - which advertises its mission as "promoting ethics in public life" but is a demonstrably right-wing attack organization.  The NLPC receives much of its funding from the Scaife Foundation, well-known for its support of right-wing political causes.

           The NLPC researched my wife Barbara's and my investments, and they scoured my Financial Disclosure Statements and my appropriations to nonprofit organizations in West Virginia.  The NLPC then constructed a narrative - a fictionalized story that combined perfectly legal investments and perfectly appropriate appropriations in a way to suggest that we used federal dollars to enrich ourselves.  

           They shopped this storyline to the national press and persuaded the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times to write long articles detailing our investments and my appropriations.  The Washington Post quickly followed suit.  

The Justice Department launches an investigation . . .

The NLPC also made a complaint to the U.S. Attorney in Washington, DC.  The NLPC refused to make its complaint public - and even admitted under questioning that "its contents might not be accurate" - but, after the high-profile articles in the national newspapers, the Justice Department had little choice but to pursue an investigation.  

           It is important to understand at the outset that the Justice Department never contacted me and there was never any allegation of wrongdoing.  There was only an ugly, and false, insinuation that something inappropriate must have occurred.  Having nothing specific to examine, the U.S. Attorney undertook an exhaustive review of our investments and my appropriations.  They looked into every investment and every detail of my financial life.  They examined every appropriation I directed to West Virginia.  

           I'm sometimes asked why the Justice Department spent so much time on this investigation if there was no inappropriate activity on my part.  The question answers itself - you always spend more time looking for something that just is not there.  And for four years - three under the Bush Administration and one under the Obama Administration - the Justice Department looked.  And looked . . . and looked . . .

And finds nothing . . .

           . . . and came up with nothing - because there was no wrongdoing to find.  

           On January 25th of this year, the Justice Department confirmed as much and said that the investigation was closed and that no charges would be filed.  

           "Case closed," you might think - figuratively and literally.  That's certainly what I thought.  I looked forward to a reelection campaign decided on real issues that affect people's lives - jobs, health care, the economy.  

           I had misjudged the quality of today's political discourse.  Rather than accept the Justice Department's conclusion, Dick Morris and other right-wing fringe elements theorized - or even reported as fact - that the Justice Department dropped the investigation in exchange for my vote for the health care bill!  

           Talk about a no-win situation - if the Justice Department filed charges, there would obviously be evidence of some wrongdoing; these right-wing bloggers were now suggesting that the Department's decision not to file charges must be evidence of some underhanded deal.

The media abandons its role ...                                                                                        

           The first time I saw this link between the Justice Department probe and the health care vote, I almost laughed out loud - surely no one could possibly believe such nonsense!  But, outrageous as it was, this particular slander persisted and even crept into the conventional media, especially the editorial pages of the Ogden newspaper chain.

           In retrospect, I should not have been surprised.  The Ogden papers - covering the Wheeling, Weirton, Parkersburg, and Elkins markets - had long since abandoned even the pretense of balanced reporting on my race.  They had instead linked arms with the NLPC and the National Republican Campaign Committee (NRCC) and spent months on a blatant and profoundly dishonest campaign to discredit me.  

           The Morgantown Dominion Post, owned in part and controlled by John Raese, had played a comparable role in 2006, when Republican Chris Wakim made this right-wing smear the centerpiece of his campaign.  John Raese was at the time running against Senator Byrd for the United States Senate (and is today running to succeed him).  

           Never once did the Ogden papers - or the Dominion Post four years earlier - question the truthfulness or the motives of the NLPC or the NRCC.  This was particularly reprehensible in the case of the Ogden newspapers, since they pursued their attack well after the Justice Department had cleared me.  

           This smear campaign cried out for genuine investigatory journalism.  There is a real story here - who started this attack, what their purpose was, who backed them financially, what their political goals were - but the two dominant newspaper organizations in my District not only didn't answer those questions, they didn't even ask them.  

The "watchdogs" market their lists at the expense of truth . . .

           This hostile media regularly sought validation from credible "watchdog" organizations.  Two figured prominently in this smear - Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) and the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP).  Neither group had cause to attack me, but both allowed themselves to be used by those who did.

           CREW's role was especially irresponsible.  Dedicated to "promoting ethics and accountability in government," the organization operated in relative anonymity for a number of years before coming up with a new marketing device - it would publish an annual list of the "most corrupt" Members of Congress and disseminate that list across the country in a series of press releases.

           It was a brilliant public relations coup.  As any visit to the dentist's waiting room will show, we're all naturally drawn to these sorts of lists - the best books of the year, the richest persons in the country, the best-looking stars in Hollywood, the most corrupt politicians in Washington.  The only problem is that in compiling its list, CREW relies almost entirely on published news articles - in my case the exact same articles that had been engineered by the NLPC and its right-wing sponsors and that predated the Justice Department decision to close the investigation.

           CREW's "most corrupt" list draws attention to its legitimate mission, but only by sacrificing any fairness towards the individual.  It willingly became part of the mindless echo chamber that perpetuated questions about my ethical conduct well after the Justice Department had emphatically answered them.

           The Center for Responsive Politics employs a similar media-driven gimmick with an annual list of the wealthiest Members of Congress.  Its most recent list counted me as the 24th richest Member of the House, with an estimated net worth of more than $13 million.  That figure gave weight to the central theme of the four-year-old attack against me - that I had somehow enriched myself through inappropriate earmarks.  There's only one problem with that $13 million figure - it is wildly inaccurate.  I wish that Barbara and I were that well off, but I assure you that our net worth is much, much smaller.

           The CRP gets its information from the financial disclosure forms Members of Congress are required to complete every year.  Those forms require Members to list their assets and liabilities in wide ranges.  The information is intended to guard against conflicts of interest and is not useful in calculating net worth.  As the CRP concedes, all it can really deduce from the financial disclosure forms is that my actual net worth could lie anywhere between a negative $268,000 and a positive $27 million.  

           In an effort to appeal to its media audience - which values simplicity above accuracy - the CRP selects the mid-point of the range and, consequently, reported our estimated net worth as the $13 million figure.  While our actual net worth is far closer to the low end of the range, the CRP's annual list enabled editorial writers to call me - inaccurately - the 24th richest Member of the House, worth up to $27 million.  It's easy to understand how someone reading a newspaper in Wheeling might lift an eyebrow at those figures.

A few final thoughts . . .      

           In conclusion, the smear campaign ran against me in this year's Democratic primary is based on the lie that I enriched myself by benefiting from appropriations dollars.

           The source of this lie goes back more than four years when Dennis Hastert, Tom DeLay, and Karl Rove, resenting my service on the Ethics Committee during the Tom DeLay investigations, decided, in Speaker Hastert's words, "to play offense with Alan Mollohan."  

           These operatives employed a right-wing attack group - the National Legal and Policy Center - to research my personal financial life and my appropriations work and then construct a narrative suggesting that "something" must be bad about Alan Mollohan.

           The NLPC shopped this narrative to the press, which, of course, is always eager to find the next political scandal.  The NLPC also made a complaint to the U.S. Justice Department, which, in this highly charged political environment, undertook an investigation.

           The Justice Department investigation did two things.  It gave the smear campaign a patina of credibility, and, since the Justice Department never releases information about ongoing investigations, it essentially froze the entire narrative in place for as long as the investigation was underway.     That made the entire matter ripe for political exploitation - a tool to be used during a political campaign.  

           In 2006, the Republican candidate made that tool the centerpiece of his campaign to unseat me.  He failed.  

           In 2010 - even though the Justice Department had by then exonerated me - Mike Oliverio picked up that very same tool and made it the centerpiece of his campaign.  Ironically, this package of lies, built by Republicans for a Republican candidate, was successful only when used in this Democratic primary.

           I have a 28-year relationship with my constituents.  Aside from my family, it is the most important and the most enduring thing in my life.  

           Again, my only purpose in writing is to assure you that I have never dishonored that relationship.  I have never, not once, violated my public trust.  

           Thank you for taking the time to consider this letter.

                                                                       Most sincerely,

Alan B. Mollohan

Discuss :: (5 Comments)

Rep. Mollohan ahead in primary race

by: Clem Guttata

Tue Apr 27, 2010 at 06:04:18 AM EDT

By Clem Guttata

Yesterday, there was excitement around the Internets as "leaked" Oliverio campaign polling numbers were discussed. I didn't post about it because the numbers looked unbelievable to me and, frankly, any campaign can leak a couple of numbers without any details anytime they want to generate a little bit of supporter buzz.

In response, Rep. Mollohan has done something that campaigns rarely do. He's released the entire details of a campaign tracking poll--the entire details including all of the polls questions, the poll methodology, and results. These are the essential details required to make sure the pollster isn't manipulating results through question order or question wording.

Here's the press release from Rep. Mollohan:

Mollohan Campaign Dismisses Oliverio Poll Claims and Releases Tracking Poll Results

Congressman Alan B. Mollohan's campaign today released poll results showing that Mollohan is leading his opponent in the Democratic primary by 9 percentage points.

The poll shows Mollohan ahead of Mike Oliverio 45% to 36%, with 19% undecided.  It was conducted by Frederick Polls, a highly-respected, national research firm.  It was based upon interviews with 400 likely primary voters and was completed April 21-22, 2010.

The Mollohan campaign publically released the question, sequence and methodology used by Frederick Polls to conduct the survey.

"These results show that the voters of the First District are not buying what Mike Oliverio is trying to sell - a right-wing agenda to cut federal support for Medicare, Social Security, and veterans and pass even more 'free-trade' laws that have already sent thousands of our steel and manufacturing jobs overseas." said Pam Van Horn, Mollohan's campaign manager.

"West Virginians are looking for answers on jobs, health care, retirement security, education, and the other issues important to their families," Van Horn added, "and that's exactly what Alan Mollohan works for each day in the United States Congress."

Mollohan is not only solidly ahead of Oliverio in the head-to-head match-up, his favorable rating is also 10 points higher than Oliverio's.  Pointing to his high favorable rating among the undecided voters, Keith Frederick, president of the polling firm, said that, "Mollohan is also in good shape to gain enough of the undecided voters to achieve victory."

Van Horn dismissed poll results recently released by Oliverio's campaign as "just the latest sign of Mike Oliverio's shaky grasp on the truth.  First, he broke his promise that he was running not 'to tear Alan Mollohan down.'  Then he pretended that he doesn't chair an organization working to privatize Social Security and restrict workers' rights - when his group's agenda has been well documented in the public record.  And now he releases results from a self-serving poll conducted by his campaign manager."

Van Horn emphasized that Keith Frederick's poll was carefully structured to eliminate poll information bias.

"There are many ways a pollster can ask a question to get whatever result he wants," Van Horn said.  "He can sample some parts of the District more heavily than others, he can fail to limit responses to likely Democratic primary voters, or he can bias the responses by providing false information before asking the head-to-head match-up question.  Keith Frederick is a nationally-respected pollster, and he is not going to attach his name to anything less than an honest poll."

For those interested, I've uploaded the PDF file the Rep. Mollohan campaign released from Keith Frederick's poll. The details show that Rep. Mollohan is in good shape, but cannot let up in the final two weeks of the primary campaign.

There are a small opening here for Oliverio -- Mollohan is below 50% and Oliverio still has room to improve his name recognition. But, that's a nearly impossible opening to exploit via negative campaign advertising. Oliverio will have to present an alternative positive vision for WV-01 to win over undecideds and make a name for himself. He's running out of time to do that.

Meanwhile, Mollohan needs to close the deal with those undecideds and make sure to get out the vote.

Discuss :: (8 Comments)

Rep. Mollohan Campaign Denounces Mike Oliverio's Television Ad

by: Clem Guttata

Sat Apr 17, 2010 at 17:01:42 PM EDT

From an Email

News From Mollohan For Congress
For Release: April 17, 2010

Campaign Denounces Mike Oliverio's Television Ad Attacking Congressman Alan Mollohan

Congressman Alan B. Mollohan's campaign denounced Mike Oliverio for resorting to "the politics of personal destruction" in his campaign for Congress.

"It is disappointing that Mike Oliverio has decided to ignore the issues important to West Virginians and engage in this sort of personal attack instead," said Pam Van Horn, Mollohan's campaign manager.  "Oliverio opened his campaign by making two promises, that he would not 'tear down Alan Mollohan' and that his campaign would instead 'build up the country.'  It is clear that he is failing both tests."

"He has yet to articulate any vision for West Virginia's future.  He cannot point to any jobs he has created.  He can't decide whether he's for or against legislation that will ensure laid-off workers have access to health care," Van Horn said.  "He opposed legislation that brought hundreds of millions of federal dollars into West Virginia for roads, sewers, schools, hospitals, broadband infrastructure and police departments - investments that have resulted in 14,000 jobs in our state."

"Unable to explain what he would do for the 1st congressional district, he has chosen instead to recycle discredited allegations invented in 2006 as part of a right-wing smear campaign against Congressman Mollohan," Van Horn said.  "He knows that those allegations are false.  He knows that they were launched to undermine Alan Mollohan's role in keeping then-Majority Leader Tom Delay from wrecking Congressional ethics rules.  Michael Oliverio knows that the Department of Justice firmly rejected the allegations after a four-year investigation, completely exonerating the Congressman."

"What Oliverio seems not to know is what the voters of West Virginia need this year - someone who will fight for them in tough economic times and take on the special interests to create jobs, expand health care and protect workers," Van Horn said.  "Alan Mollohan has a proven record of standing up for West Virginia.  Apparently, all Mike Oliverio has is a dusted off, right-wing playbook, which the voters of the 1st district rejected before and will again."

As of 3/31/2010, Oliverio had  $138,264 cash on hand compared to  $280,803 for Mollohan. However, Mollohan has been far out fund-raising (and out-spending) Oliverio, with Q1 fund-raising of  $706,727 for Rep. Mollohan and $240,160 raised by Oliverio.  

Discuss :: (21 Comments)

Sunday Open Thread

by: Clem Guttata

Sun Nov 22, 2009 at 13:09:32 PM EST

By Clem Guttata

What's on your mind this fine Sunday afternoon?

(below the fold: The Raconteurs "Steady, As She Goes")

There's More... :: (4 Comments, 14 words in story)

Remember When The Journal Talked Like A Pirate Day?

by: CA Berkeley WV

Tue Oct 13, 2009 at 02:54:47 AM EDT

by CA Berkeley WV

Must have been just a coinky-dink in Martinsburg.

Remember when The Journal was responsible enough to challenge completely outrageous claims by those contributing letters in late September?

One-and-a-half million came to Washington, D.C., on Sept. 12 to express more than passion. Armed with the facts and fears of losing liberties, voices from more than 45 states were echoing frustrations from health care to cap and trade.
::::::::
Editor's note: Though initially reported as exceeding 1 million, that was considered to be incorrect. Depending upon the source, crowds for the recent rally in Washington have been estimated at around 70,000 for the Sept. 12 event.

Well, I do but evidently someone who reviews the letters to the editor before they are published does not.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 484 words in story)

Flag Upside [UPDATED]

by: CA Berkeley WV

Sun Sep 13, 2009 at 15:22:49 PM EDT

by CA Berkeley WV

Does Ogden Pay TEA Party Organizers to Lie?

The picture on the front page of Sunday edition of The Journal has no credit. Is it cropped to not show the empty grass? The Journal spent subscribers' money to send reporter Jenni Vincent to accompany the local group in Washington.

ABC News, who was misquoted, has asked the organizers to stop lying about the crowd size.

approximately 60,000 to 70,000 people flooded Pennsylvania Ave, according to the Washington DC Fire Department.

In another story "reporter" Jenni Vincent in the local Ogden bird cage liner:

Event organizers said Capitol Police estimated that 1.2 million people protested Saturday.
::::::::
Seventy-seven of those individuals were members of the Berkeley County-based Blue Ridge Patriots, said organizer Barb Miller.
:::::::::
Delegate Jonathon Miller, R-Berkeley, said he was "amazed" at the number of people and signs in the protest.

I'd be amazed if they did not have to lie to feel better about the turnout. After all, That One had 1.8 million at the inauguration and shut down DC. After all, the Promise Keepers march fifteen years ago attracted over one million, so why not just reuse the pictures? Promise Keepers. How did that work out Sen. Ensign?

Where are the organizers getting their number?

Matt Kibbe, president of FreedomWorks, the group that organized the event, said on stage at the rally that ABC News was reporting that 1 million to 1.5 million people were in attendance.

At no time did ABC News, or its affiliates, report a number anywhere near as large. ABCNews.com reported an approximate figure of 60,000 to 70,000 protesters, attributed to the Washington, D.C., fire department. In its reports, ABC News Radio described the crowd as "tens of thousands."

Maybe they were just disappointed this crowd was less than the April Tax Day protest and had to compensate. Maybe all the news is not reporting the 20 fold increase they want to claim. Those who attended the inauguration know what over one million people does to the streets and Metro in DC. And no one on the ground who lives in DC is reporting that the city was paralyzed yesterday.

This cannot stand.

UPDATE: Missing Protesters found, not by Ms. Vincent:

September 12 just happened to be the 24th-annual Black Family Reunion, which ran from 7th Street all the way to the Washington Monument.
Discuss :: (14 Comments)

Standards at the Martinsburg Journal

by: WVaBlue

Sat Jul 18, 2009 at 15:04:05 PM EDT

Posted by WVaBlue

Long time readers of West Virginia Blue are aware of our many complaints about the Martinsburg Journal (here's one example). It's embarrassing to say a (Hagerstown) Maryland paper covers the Eastern W.Va. Panhandle much better than the home town West Virginia one does.

The Martinsburg Journal's political coverage fails to meet basic standards of journalism and regularly favors Republicans. Over many years, the Martinsburg Journal has shown a right-wing slant it many aspects of its operation.

An identical diary and comment appeared today by a commenter claiming to be Matt Bieniek, the former city editor at the Martinsburg Journal. (There's no reason to doubt that; the comment history is consistent with the author being Matt Bieniek.) DINO69, a.k.a. Matt Beineke, lays blame on the paper's owners and senior managers for an overt bias to Republican candidates and decisions inconsistent with basic standards of journalism.

Hello all,

I (Matthew Bieniek) am no longer employed by The Journal(I know some of you are cheering!).

Therefore, I feel I'm under no obligation to conceal what I know and in fact, feel an obligation to let people know what is going on at the local newspaper in Martinsburg. Before I move on in my job search, I'll be posting  afew items of interest. The first is from an internal complaint I filed in March 2009:

Work of employee Jenni Vincent the Saturday before Election Day, Nov. 2008.

Employee Jenni Vincent was called into work by Publisher Craig Bartoldson on her day off and required to work to produce either one or two stories after extensive interviews with two local Republican Delegates, Craig Blair and Jonathan Miller. I am not sure whether the delegates may be personal friends of the publisher.  I was the Saturday supervisor in the newsroom that day. The story was their response to charges in an ad apparently opposing their elections, essentially allowing them an unpaid ad at the last minute before the election... .I made my objections on this matter clear to several individuals and eventually to Bartoldson, who became angry and responded by falsely accusing me of unethical practices. The publisher was aware that Saturday was not a scheduled work day for Vincent.

Required suppression of news items

Matthew Burdette sent an email on Feb 25 or 26 to the city editors and copy editors, apparently with the approval, direct or tacit, of Henline and Bartoldson, requiring suppression of news about the newspaper industry and other media and suppression of most global warming stories. This obviously unethical practice is a disservice to readers, would bring ridicule to the company if it became generally known, and probably will fail to meet whatever bizarre goals it is designed to accomplish.

(I made slight formatting changes for readability.)

Discuss :: (10 Comments)

Ogden newspaper publishes assassinate Obama ad

by: WV26003

Thu May 28, 2009 at 16:58:58 PM EDT

Yes, you read it correctly. Currently, this story is the most recommended diary on dailykos.

Today, the Times-Observer of Warren, PA published a classified ad which read:

May Obama follow in the footsteps of Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy!

Now what do Presidents Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, and Kennedy have in common? Ah yes; they were all assassinated. You can see the ad for yourself in this PDF version of the applicable page.

Who owns the Warren Times-Observer? None other than Wheeling's own Ogden Nutting and his company Ogden Newspapers Inc. (ONI)

There's More... :: (12 Comments, 122 words in story)

Just think of his reaction if he read West Virgininia's newspapers

by: Carnacki

Tue Feb 24, 2009 at 13:56:46 PM EST

Just think if Glenn Greenwald read the Ogden-owned newspapers in West Virginia. He'd be even more pessimistic.

Is it even theoretically possible to have a worse, more deceitful and more moronic press than the one we have?

Many of the commenters have mentioned how bad the Martinsburg Journal and other Ogden papers are at covering their communities. Instead of the old adage of a newspaper's role to "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable," they use their opinion columns, and often their news stories as well, to comfort the comfortable and afflict the afflicted.

Discuss :: (5 Comments)

Call to Action --- Cancel Your Ogden Newspaper!

by: WV26003

Thu Nov 20, 2008 at 17:34:11 PM EST

( - promoted by Carnacki)

I write this brief diary nearly in tears. Beginning tomorrow, for the first time in my life, neither the Wheeling News-Register nor the Wheeling Intelligencer will be delivered to my home. I have decided to cancel my subscription until further notice, and I am urging you to do the same. Over the past few years, Ogden Publishing has become more extreme, more partisan, more biased, and more divisive in its reporting and editorial pages. So now it's time you join me in taking action.
There's More... :: (23 Comments, 659 words in story)
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