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http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000962804Survey Finds Editorial Coverage of 'Downing Street Memo' Mixed
By E&P Staff
Published: June 15, 2005 10:00 PM ET
NEW YORK A survey today of editorial pages of American newspapers produced a mixed picture of their treatment of the so-called Downing Street Memo, a secret 2002 British intelligence memo suggesting that the Bush administration manipulated intelligence to support its case for war in Iraq.
The liberal Web site Media Matters for America found that editorials in four of the five largest U.S. newspapers -- USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times – “have remained conspicuously silent about the controversy surrounding the document.”
But the group’s survey of U.S. newspaper coverage from May 1 to June 15 found at least 20 editorial pages across the country that addressed the memo, from large-circulation papers such as The Dallas Morning News to smaller papers such as the Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette. It said 18 of the 20 “emphasized the importance of the document, many calling for further investigation into the explosive questions it raises. The dissenters were editorials in The Denver Post and The Washington Post, both of which claimed that the memo merely reinforces what was already known from other sources and argued that U.S. attention is best focused on how to win the war in Iraq.”
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Reader representatives critical of the coverage of the memo by their own paper or the media at large were The Washington Post’s Michael Getler, The Palm Beach Post’s C.B. Hanif, San Diego Union-Tribune’s Gina Lubrano, Orlando Sentinel’s Manning Pynn and the Minneapolis Star-Tribune’s Kate Parry.
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