The WaTimes Wall
Following our post yesterday about changes in the Washington Times’ editorial page lineup, there’s been some interesting fall-out.
Rob Redding reported that editorial writer Brian Dubose has “gotten the ax” from the paper.
From Richard Prince:
The others, including Brian DeBose, a former national political correspondent, were essentially fired, DeBose told Journal-isms, although he said they were told they could reapply for positions at the nonunion paper. DeBose, who is vice president of the Washington Association of Black Journalists, said eight to 11 people are affected.
Some folks (Times staffers and others) have written us complaining that the paper’s editorial page changes seem to blur the line between news and opinion, since former editorial page editor Deb Simmons and opinion columnist Tara Wall are joining the newsroom.
One anonymous reader wrote:
When John Solomon took over as exec editor at TWT he said there would be a “bright line between editorial and news.” The newsroom specifically asked if that meant a certain column would leave the news pages and be moved to editorial, and Solomin said it did mean that. But, Wes Pruden’s column [REDACTED FOR LANGUAGE] is still on page four. And and now Deb Simmons and and Tara Wall are leaving the editorial pages and will be “reporting.” Meanwhile, Don Lambro continues to “report” and write a column that is all opinion.
A Times staffer noted to us that “Don Lambro still writes an opinion column and news stories” and “Carrie Sheffield and David Dickson, both of whom were editorial writers, were moved into the newsroom. (Carrie has since left, but Dickson is reporting at the business desk.)”
Solomon did write back in February of this year that…
Every employee of the Times has an obligation to maintain the highest ethical standards for journalism and business. That commitment begins with ensuring that every story is accurate, precise, fair and balanced. It also requires that we maintain a bright line between news coverage and the advocacy of the editorial and opinion pages.
For its part, the paper is selling recent changes as “The Washington Times Begins Move to More Distinctive and Authoritative Opinion Pages.”
I chatted with Solomon this afternoon and he finds the complaints to be off the mark.
His comments after the jump…
“I’m really sensitive to things like this,” said Solomon, “and we really carefully mark things ‘Opinion’ when they’re opinion.”
“This is no different than David Broder writing an opinion piece for the Washington Post one day and an A1 reported story the next.”
“If you’re in the news side of the newsroom, you’re going to do journalism and if you’re in the opinion section, you’re going to opinion.”
“Wes Pruden is on a clearly marked opinion page. It’s not on a news page. It’s isolated.”
As for moving Simmons and Wall from the opinion side back to the newsroom, Solomon said that both have “impeccable journalism credentials” and cited each reporter’s resume of beat journalism.
“These are people who had long careers in journalism, went to the opinion side and are now coming back to the newsroom and they understand the difference.”
“When Don Lambro writes an opinion column, it is clearly marked as such and when he does journalism and news in the newsroom he abides by the rules of journalism and he’s edited by the news staff and we make sure he has fair and balanced reporting.”
“It’ll be honest to our readers: Opinion is opinion and news is news.”
Launch a social media campaign that will build your brand and deliver results in our online 


Nadine Cheung
Editor, The Job Post
FishbowlDC Twitter feed loading...