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Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition

June 05, 2006 Monday Jumadi-ul-Awwal 8, 1427


Reporting: progress towards reducing anonymity



By Deborah Howell


WASHINGTON: Anonymous sources can damage a newspaper’s credibility. The Post Stylebook says: “When we use an unnamed source, we are asking our readers to take an extra step to trust the credibility of the information we are providing. We must be certain in our own minds that the benefit to readers is worth the cost in credibility.”

The [Washington] Post began to clamp down on the use of anonymous sources in 2004 with a policy that says: “We want to make our reporting as transparent to the readers as possible so they may know how and where we got our information.”

A random survey of the second and third weeks of April in 2004, 2005 and 2006 shows progress toward that goal. The Post’s News Research Center pulled every staff-written story using unnamed sources in those April weeks, and I looked at them all. In those two weeks in April 2004, anonymous sources were quoted in 66 stories; in April 2005, the figure was 68; and in April 2006, 45.

The 2006 number is headed in the right direction: down. But there’s still work to do. Were all 45 instances justified? No. Many did not give a rationale for anonymity, as the policy calls for, and many stories simply quoted ‘sources’ without elaboration. The Stylebook says “attributions to ‘sources’ or ‘informed sources’” should be avoided.

But good for The Post for curbing the kind of pejorative anonymous quotes that are simply unfair: there have been blessedly few this year. The survey showed that the granting of anonymity was down in National, Metro and Business stories. There have been only a few instances in foreign coverage and Style stories.

Sports remains the section where anonymous sources — nearly half in my look — are used more than anywhere else in the paper, mainly in coverage of men’s professional sports.

Curiously, the reasons for using anonymous sources in sports sound similar to the reasons given in reporting on politics and national security.

“A culture of secrecy surrounds sports that has its roots in not wanting to help your opponent in any way,” said Emilio Garcia-Ruiz, assistant managing editor for sports. “And it’s gotten worse dealing with more aggressive press people who want to control the message.”

Garcia-Ruiz said that it used to be easier to talk to players. “Money changed everything. Everyone we cover is a multimillionaire. It’s not like politics. It’s Hollywood. It’s like covering Tom Cruise.”

Added to this is the ongoing power struggle among agents, team owners and unions. As sportswriters faced limits covering players up close, they found other avenues of information — the agents and the people around players. “The most important source now is the agent. They’re much more cooperative and accurate. But no agent wants to be named while they’re in negotiations,” Garcia-Ruiz said.

Whenever there’s questionable use of anonymity in the paper, there are complaints. Except in Sports. Not one negative comment on anonymous sources in Sports has come my way. That’s odd. Is it because Sports isn’t considered to have the gravity of other reporting? The Post’s standards are the same in all departments.

It’s certainly not that way in political reporting. David S. Broder, The Post’s venerable political reporter and columnist, said the practice became more prevalent after presidents, starting with Ronald Reagan, gave fewer interviews and news conferences. This led reporters to look for other sources, and most of them didn’t want to be named.

Another factor, he said, was the rise of political consultants, who, like sports agents, were available but demanded anonymity. “The consultants were such good sources, knowledgeable and candid. Reporters flocked to them — only they never wanted to be quoted on the record.”—Dawn/The Washington Post News Service






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