Readers see a bias – and we can’t deny it

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Partisans who make no claim to neutrality often pretend, nonetheless, to have the power to see bias in others.

“You’re biased.”

“No, you are.”

That’s the perfect political argument.

Both sides are right.

ON CONSECUTIVE days last week, we published letters that accused us of bias.

The first, from a Sterling reader, suggested this newspaper showed a conservative bias.

The second, from a Dixon reader, saw a consistent “liberal slant.”

An online poster this week read us this way: “[Y]ou will be hard pressed to get ‘fair’ coverage from a conservative newspaper in a conservative county.”

Four decades in the news business has taught this editor something about such assessments:

They say more about the political and ideological leanings of the accusers than about the newspaper.

How else could people see the same newspaper and reach such different conclusions?

IF WE HAVE SUCH a politically liberal orientation, wouldn’t we have put the story about the second term inauguration of President Obama on the front page?

Had we done that, we would have avoided a letter from the Sterling woman who complained that we “chose to bury the inauguration on page A13, and it was quite short, at that.”

“Can’t help but wonder whether it was politics or prejudice.”

We cannot deny that we have a strong prejudice – for local news.

So when Mr. Obama comes to town – as he did a couple of years ago for a surprise visit at the Whiteside County Fair – our coverage goes on Page 1, as it did then.

That’s local news, and we’re a local newspaper.

How do we handle a scripted, predictable ceremony in Washington, D.C.?

Page 13 sounds about right.

OF COURSE, MR. Obama’s historic election in 2008 and re-election last November was Page 1 news the next day.

And in our defense, we must point out that on the day after this second inauguration, on Jan. 22:

n “Obama calls for unity at inauguration” was the “teaser” in the top left corner of our front page, so the event was noted on Page 1. That in-paper promotion directed readers to our coverage of the ceremony on Page 13.

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Christopher Harrison wrote on February 15, 2013 3:13 p.m. ...
So where would you say that today's cartoon (2/15/13) would fall?

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