In presidential race, everyone picks a side

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Bret sent the editor an email this week to express his “deepest concern and disgust” with this newspaper’s editorial endorsement last weekend of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

“SVM is supposed to be unbiased and not support any one candidate,” he wrote. “... This is despicable and wrong. You have no right to tell your readers who they can and can’t vote for.”

He called the editorial a “one-sided, heavily-biased article.”

Later in the week, we published Bret’s letter endorsing Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson.

That might be irony.

SEVERAL ISSUES TO address here.

1. We try to keep our news report free of bias, but we make no such claim about our editorials.

2. The Opinion page is a place for ... well, opinions – ours as well as yours.

3. Opinions are, almost by definition, one-sided and biased – yours as well as ours.

4. Newspapers routinely endorse political candidates, especially in the presidential race. The free press provision in the First Amendment pretty much ensures their right to do so.

5. An endorsement is a recommendation, a suggestion to be considered as voters consume campaign information from many sources. Newspapers have no power to make you vote for someone.

6. The fact that this newspaper endorsed Governor Romney should come as no surprise. Four years ago, John McCain received our endorsement. Before that, George W. Bush. We have a record.

That’s no coincidence.

BASED ON 40 YEARS of newspaper journalism, this editor will tell you that SVM is unbiased in its reporting of the news.

Well, as unbiased as possible.

Objectivity does not exist. We all have opinions based on our values and experiences.

But good journalists are able to provide a fair and accurate report in the public interest, despite any personal biases they might have.

That’s not to say that every edition every day is perfectly balanced.

The front page of the Gazette on Oct. 17 had a big picture of Democratic congressional candidate Cheri Bustos along with a story about her campaign appearance in Freeport with U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin. Incumbent Republican Rep. Bobby Schilling was represented only with a few paragraphs at the end of the story that quoted his campaign spokesman.

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