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Judy Miller Protected Scooter Libby, and Now She's a Saint?
With the Senate set to vote on a new federal shield law for journalists, Judy Miller, the former Times reporter-cum-shield law advocate, has bubbled back into the news.
Last week, she spoke about the issue at the Foreign Correspondent's Club in Hong Kong, and was the subject of a lengthy Q&A published yesterday online at U.S. News and World Report.
It's a classic example of When Bad Spokespeople Happen to Good Issues.
I fully support a federal shield law for journalists to augment the laws designed to safeguard journalists and their sources already on the books in 49 states. Indeed, I don't think the proposed Congressional legislation goes far enough, especially since it leaves open the question of whether it would cover bloggers and other independent journalists.
But having Judy Miller be the face of such laws is like having Amy Winehouse doing PSAs for the Partnership for a Drug Free America.
Don't forget, Miller didn't go to jail to preserve the integrity of journalism; she went to jail to protect Scooter Libby -- and her complicity in the Bush administration's successful selling of a bogus war, as well as the White House's desperate attempts to keep its misleading of the American people under wraps.
It would make a lot more sense to make Josh Wolf the poster child for the shield law. He's the freelance journalist who spent 226 days in jail for refusing to turn over videotapes of a nonviolent protest. Or Vanessa Leggett, who served 168 days to protect her sources.
But Miller's U.S. News interview does contain a few nuggets worth chewing on -- and a thudding misrepresentation that needs correcting. First, the nuggets:
Miller believes "it would be crazy" for bloggers not to be covered by shield laws: "I think it's pretty clear that the intention of our Founding Fathers was to protect the lonely pamphleteer." I couldn't agree more.
She says that her time in jail has made her "very opposed to mandatory drug laws." Again, I fully agree.
When asked if she has any regrets about her actions while at the Times, Miller replies: "I wouldn't do anything differently." Really, Judy? Nothing? Not the inaccurate reporting? Not the willingness to put forth erroneous stories your neocon pals in the administration then used to manufacture a casus belli for the war? Not the Iraqi scientist in the baseball cap who you called the "silver bullet" of the WMD investigation, but who turned out to be nothing of the sort? Not the trading of your journalistic principles for access? Not the aluminum tubes? Not Curveball? Not Chalabi? Not agreeing to refer to Libby, then Dick Cheney's chief of staff, as "a former Hill staffer"? Nothing? I'll have to side with Times managing editor Jill Abramson who, when asked in 2005 what she regretted about the Times' handling of the Miller matter replied: "The entire thing."
As for the thudding misrepresentation, there was this exchange:
You took a lot of heat for your role in the Valerie Plame affair. If you could name one of each -- what criticism do you think was fair and what criticism do you think was unfair?
Well, there was a stream of absolutely factually wrong stories from Arianna Huffington, who never apologized or corrected the record. She was wrong about everything. I didn't go to jail to protect myself because I was the source. I didn't go to jail for a book contract. I fully intended never to write anything until Scooter Libby's legal plight was adjudicated. I felt it was inappropriate to do so. And unethical.Wrong about everything? Hmm...
Tagged as: new york times, independent media, bloggers, josh wolf, judy miller, federal shield law for jo
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