In presidential race, everyone picks a side

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Two days later, the front page had a big picture of Schilling along with a story about his campaign appearance in his hometown of Colona with House Speaker John Boehner and former Speaker Dennis Hastert. Bustos was represented only with a few paragraphs at the end of the story that quoted one of her campaign aides.

People who want to see bias – Democratic or Republican – could use one of those editions as evidence.

On balance, our approach to reporting on the news pages is as neutral as the news allows.

But often, truth itself has a bias.

OPINION PAGES ARE different.

They belong to the newspaper owner, who usually was the publisher in the days before newspaper groups.

Because newspapers historically were aligned with one political party or another, publishers often didn’t allow dissenting opinions on the editorial page.

Two- and three-newspaper cities were common, and each publication had its political allegiance and proudly displayed its partisanship.

But that began to change in the middle of the 20th century, as the Society of Professional Journalists advocated truth and fairness in the press and the rise of secondary journalism education promoted professionalism in the business.

And as more and more cities found themselves with only one newspaper, publishers realized the need to more fairly represent the interests of all citizens.

These days, most newspapers play it down the middle on the news pages, and most editorial pages carry a wide range of viewpoints. Readers are even free to criticize newspapers, which dutifully print the criticisms.

Newspapers have no legal obligation to allow that, but they do so in the public interest.

Believe it or not.

JERRY’S EMAIL ALSO questioned last week’s endorsement.

“Your newspaper endorsed Romney. Why didn’t the Salt Lake Tribune?” he asked. “That city has the largest concentration of Mormons in the world.”

Well, the Salt Lake Tribune has endorsed thousands of Mormons over the years.

So, we have a lot of catching up to do.

Just kidding.

Despite Bret’s concern expressed at the top of this column, presidential endorsements are common among newspapers.

In addition to winning support from the Salt Lake Tribune, President Obama has been endorsed by the Tampa Bay Times, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Denver Post, Los Angeles Times and Arizona Star, among many others.

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