February 1, 2010

Game changed or rules broken?

By: AF Editors

Game Change, by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, stole the spotlight by informing us that Harry Reid thought of Barack Obama as a “light-skinned”, um, “Negro”. That quote was quite accurate, since the source was none other than Harry Reid. Yet the more people look at the book, on both the left and right, the more it emerges as the worst possible example of unverifiable gossip journalism, which gives anonymous sources the opportunity to claim whatever they want without any sort of accountability.

Clark Hoyt, the public editor of the NY Times, devoted his most recent column to describing just how little the contents of Game Change seem to match up to reality. The unlikely heroine of Hoyt’s tale? Maureen Dowd. According to Hoyt,

I was curious about one incident involving Maureen Dowd, the star Times Op-Ed columnist, who in early 2007 quoted David Geffen, the Hollywood mogul, disowning Bill and Hillary Clinton. Geffen, who raised millions for Bill Clinton and then became disenchanted, said of both Clintons, “Everybody in politics lies, but they do it with such ease, it’s troubling.” The column had an enormous impact at the time.

According to “Game Change,” Dowd persuaded Geffen to give her an interview by telling him that, when it was over, if he did not want her to use it, she would not. She read the finished column to Geffen, the book said, warned him it would be explosive and asked if he wanted to take back anything. If true, Dowd would, in effect, have surrendered editorial control to her source, an unacceptable situation.

The book also implied that Dowd attended a private $2,300-per-person Obama fund-raiser the following night. Afterward, it said, she was among a small group of 35 who “repaired to Geffen’s mansion” for a dinner for the Obamas.

Dowd said it didn’t happen that way. “I never gave David Geffen veto power over the column,” she said. She said she did not read the column to him, warn him that it would be explosive or ask if he wanted to take back his words, and she did not attend the Hollywood fund-raising event at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. She was a guest at the dinner later, she said, although the candidate’s camp sought to have her barred.

Dowd said that, as is often her practice, she told Geffen which quotes she was using and checked them for accuracy and context. He had been unsure whether he wanted to say some of the things he told her but agreed to all of it, she said.

Geffen, who did not want to get embroiled in a controversy among journalists, would only say: “I don’t think anyone imagines Maureen would allow anyone to edit her column. I certainly didn’t.”

Dowd said the authors did not interview her for the book but that Halperin called at some point to “check a few — but not all — of the details.”

So, what is a person to believe: someone speaking on the record, or the word of — whom? And what does it say about other parts of “Game Change?”

Halperin and Heilemann would not answer specific questions about the discrepancies in the accounts. “We stand by everything that’s in the book,” Halperin said.

Which isn’t all that hard, since there are no actual sources to defend.