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By Arianna Huffington
The regret clings to his posting like cheap cologne.
Shhh... Be very quiet for just a second and listen. Do
you hear that muffled rumbling sound?
That's Byron "Barney" Calame, the distinguished
and much-honored public editor for The New York Times,
insisting that the paper publish "a full explanation
of the [Judy Miller] situation. Now."
Now before you go rushing off to re-check your paper, wondering
how you might have missed this, don't bother.
It didn't appear in the paper. Instead, Calame posted it
yesterday afternoon on his Times Web Journal -- a place,
according to the Journal, where he comments "on matters
that aren't appropriate for his column in the Sunday Op-Ed
pages, or won't fit."
In his 4:45 p.m. posting -- entitled "Now Is the
Time" -- Calame crosses his fingers and expresses
his expectation that "the Times will publish its explanation
as soon as possible." (And, indeed, my sources tell
me it's slated for this Sunday.)
You have to feel for Barney. As the public editor it's
his job to evaluate for Times readers the way the Times
has been handling the Miller matter -- but he's found
himself hamstrung by the cone of silence that has descended
over West 43rd.
The regret clings to his posting like cheap cologne.
"As public editor, I have been asking some basic questions
of the key players at the Times since July 12. But they declined
to fully respond to my fundamental questions because, they
said, of the legal entanglements of Ms. Miller and the paper.
With Ms. Miller in jail and the legal situation unclear,
I felt it would be unfair to publicly castigate them for
their caution."
But now that the "legal entanglements" have been
unknotted, is Calame ready to have a full go at the paper's
Judy-culpa?
Well, sort of.
He offers the less-than-reassuring news that "a representative
of Ms. Miller has indicated she will talk to me at some
point." A representative? After Judge Hogan lifted
the contempt order on Miller, Bob Bennett said he was delighted
that "Judy is now completely free to go about her
great reporting as a very principled and honorable reporter." Since
when does a principled and honorable reporter need a representative
to deal with her paper's public editor -- especially
a representative who will only "indicate" that
Miller will talk "at some point"? This doesn't
bode well.
But fear not, truth seekers, Calame does assure, "I
would expect to have access to both Mr. Keller and Arthur
Sulzberger Jr., the publisher, if necessary." If necessary?
Are there any circumstances under which it would not be
necessary to talk to the architects of the Times' Judy
policy?
Next thing you know, we'll hear that Calame's column and
Web Journal will only be available via TimesSelect, assuring
that they will reach the smallest audience possible.
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