New York Times Admits Shutting Out Single-Payer [1]
Submitted by Anne Landman [2] on
The media analysis group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting [3] (FAIR) issued an action alert September 22 titled "NYT Slams Single-Payer" [4] that described lopsided reporting in a New York Times article about "Medicare for all," a form of a single-payer health care system [5]. FAIR noted that the article, titled "Medicare for All? ‘Crazy,’ ‘Socialized’ and Unlikely" [6], laid out a list of arguments against single-payer while failing to include any balancing responses from the option's supporters. In explaining the slant, article author Katharine Seelye said she was trying to explain why Medicare-for-all was "not going anywhere." "I thought the substance of [single-payer] had been dealt with elsewhere many times," she said. On October 13, Times public editor Clark Hoyt conceded that FAIR "had a point," and agreed that the article excluded the point of view of single-payer health care system supporters. FAIR said it finds Seelye's defense "alarming," and points out that the Times, like the rest of the corporate-owned media, has given the issue of single-payer health care "scant attention."