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| FACT CHECKING | |
October 21, 2004 | |
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News outlets are conducting their own analysis to verify the accuracy of politicians' statements. Terence Smith examines the benefits and risks of fact-checking for the news consumer. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by grants from the Pew Charitable Trusts and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. |
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NEWS CORRESPONDENT: Facts, the saying goes, are stubborn things. TERENCE SMITH: Checking up on whether the candidates' statements check out. NEWS CORRESPONDENT: -- and give you a reality check on what they said. TERENCE SMITH: After the first debate, CBS News correspondent Byron Pitts tested the candidates against reality. BYRON PITTS: There were times last night when both men exaggerated, oversimplified or simply got it wrong. Here's a reality check. When Senator Kerry said...
BYRON PITSS: Not quite. The cost of the war to date is actually just over $120 billion, but will top $200 billion eventually. TERENCE SMITH: After last week's closing debate, CNN's Jeanne Meserve found the two candidates' use of facts questionable. JEANNE MESERVE: For this one night at least, Tempe, Arizona, was the home of the whopper. Both candidates got facts wrong. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: I don't think I ever said I'm not worried about Osama bin Laden. It's kind of one of those exaggerations. JEANNE MESERVE: Well, he said something awfully close in March of 2002. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: I repeat what I said. I truly am not that concerned about him.
SEN. JOHN KERRY: Well, two leading national news networks have both said the president's characterization of my healthcare plan is incorrect. One called it fiction; the other called it untrue. PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: In all due respect, I'm not so sure it's credible to quote leading news organizations about... well, never mind, anyway. ( laughs )
But are all fact checks created equal? A memorandum recently circulated by Mark Halperin, the political director of ABC News, and leaked to conservative Internet gossip Matt Drudge, said the Bush campaign relies on distortion more than the Kerry campaign. Halperin wrote in part: "We have a responsibility to hold both sides accountable to the public interest, but that doesn't mean we reflexively and artificially hold both sides equally accountable when the facts don't warrant it." Several newspapers have also run articles echoing Halperin's concern. The Bush campaign has questioned the legitimacy of such reporting, saying they should be able to make arguments without being "reflexively dismissed as distorted." | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Background on fact-checking | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: Joining me now to discuss the art and science of fact-checking is Michael Getler, ombudsman for the Washington Post; Brooks Jackson, director of factcheck.org; and Jake Tapper, an ABC News correspondent who's been on the fact-check beat. Welcome to you all. Jake Tapper, tell us how you go about this, how many people are involved, how you decide fact from fiction.
TERENCE SMITH: Brooks Jackson, what is or should be the goal of this? I mean, it shouldn't be, I suppose, "gotcha" journalism. It should be something more than that?
TERENCE SMITH: What about this as a function for newspapers and news organizations, Mike Getler? Does it take it... it certainly takes it beyond the "he said, she said, you decide" type of journalism.
So in a sense, it's the very... one of the very best instincts of journalists to provide these kinds of fact-checks. On the other hand, it does make you a little bit vulnerable to one side or the other truly misrepresenting things if you present them in a totally balanced fashion as opposed to trying to sort it out for the reader if some of... if one or two of the misrepresentations are more serious than the others. | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Finding balance in fact-checking | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| TERENCE SMITH: What do you do, Jake Tapper, if in fact one side has been much more egregious in its distortions or exaggerations or misstatements than the other? I mean, do you achieve some sort of balance and, if so, is it an artificial balance?
Since then, I think Senator Kerry, we could probably all agree, has picked up the slack and in terms of his charges on the draft and flu and Social Security is probably about par with President Bush in terms of misstatements. You just have to represent the facts. I mean, you really... as I think Brooks said, you really have to be the advocate for the voter. It's not necessarily "he said, he said." You don't want to be equating a minor misstatement that one candidate says with a huge whopper that another makes, but if both candidates are sayings falsehoods, which is generally the case, you try to provide a balance... a balanced look. TERENCE SMITH: Brooks, you've been doing this for a dozen years for different organizations. How do you achieve a balance that is in... that does reflect the facts?
TERENCE SMITH: Mike Getler, what do you think about the statement of the Bush campaign representative who said, we ought to be able to get our arguments out there without having them in, in his word, "reflexively dismissed as distorted."
TERENCE SMITH: Jake, have you heard from the campaigns when you do this? Are they unhappy with you? JAKE TAPPER: Yeah. (Laughter) I think that's fair to say. They're both... see, it's very seldom that they don't have an argument to make. You might have the occasional just plain falsehood that they say, but often they're repeating facts and figures that are based on a public interest group that happens to be very liberal or very conservative, or their interpretation of what their opponent has said is one that is grounded in some sort of what they argue larger truth. I hate that larger truth argument because I'd rather have them stick to the smaller truths, at least for our purposes.
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| Fact-checking outside of the debates | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| TERENCE SMITH: Brooks, you've done this through several presidential cycles. Is... are the distortions or exaggerations or misstatements any more egregious or less in this campaign than previous ones? BROOKS JACKSON: I don't know how to measure that, Terry. We... it's certainly as bad as many that I've seen in the past, but I just don't know how you can objectively measure the degree of mendacity in any particular statement or in a group of statements. It would just be my opinion, and since I'm supposed to be fact- check and not "opinion" check, I'll just have to say I don't know. TERENCE SMITH: Mike, any opinion on that?
TERENCE SMITH: Jake, if it's worth doing after a debate, is it worth doing after every stump speech or advertisement is run? Is it worth doing year-round, not just in a campaign mode? JAKE TAPPER: Well, I think what you start to see, at least at ABC News what we've started to do after introducing the fact-check feature is it's now kind of making its way into individual stories. Brooks might recall from yesterday he appeared in a fact-check story that I did. I guess it was Tuesday. But he also appeared in a story that one of our men on the campaign trail did because the fact-check feature, in this case Brooks Jackson, was working its way into all sorts of journalism, not just the facts- check piece itself. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Looking ahead | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: Is there any down side to this in your view? I mean, it obviously could be a vehicle for favoring one campaign over another. MICHAEL GETLER: No. I think it's all a plus, a big plus. I think the problem is that politicians on all sides understand that the corrections never quite catch up with the statements. And when you have a huge audience, whether it's on television or a big campaign rally, they will go ahead and continue to use those misrepresentations despite the efforts of others to correct them. TERENCE SMITH: And, Brooks, after the election, what do you do? BROOKS JACKSON: Well, we'll... TERENCE SMITH: Do you continue? Does one do this on a continuing basis?
TERENCE SMITH: You know, the phrase "Teflon candidate" is heard again and again. It's being heard again this year, as though the candidates are not affected by criticisms of their accuracy or of the truth or falsity of their statements. Jake Tapper, is that prevalent or present this year? JAKE TAPPER: I guess I'm of two minds on that. On one level, I think that we do these fact-checks and as you see and as you've seen in the last few days and as we anticipate for the next week-and-a-half, certainly the lies are only getting more egregious, the statements more overblown.
But there are other ones, such as the $200 billion claim that Kerry made about the Iraq war, that he's backed off, that he's a lot more careful about. So I do think that while the lies are increasing because of the pending nature of the election, they have been a little bit more careful to take note of our fact-checks. MICHAEL GETLER: Yes, I would agree with that. It was odd to see Kerry continue with that $200 billion figure when it was, I think, thanks to Brooks, was pointed out it was incorrect. He finally did back off. I think it does have an effect that politicians know that they are more vulnerable to being criticized now and being caught in these misrepresentations, whether it's on television fact- checking or in print. And it adds to the value of this. TERENCE SMITH: Okay, gentlemen, thank you all three very much. | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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