The Wall Street Journal - Reporting Bias

Reporting Bias

The Journal's editors stress the independence and impartiality of their reporters. In a 2004 study, Tim Groseclose, a self-described "conservative professor" and Jeff Milyo, a fellow at the conservative Hoover Institute, calculated the ideological bias of 20 media outlets by counting the frequency they cited particular think tanks and comparing that to the frequency that legislators cited the same think tanks. They found that the news reporting of The Journal was the most liberal, more liberal than NPR or The New York Times. The study did not factor in editorials. Mark Liberman criticized the model used to calculate bias in the study and argued that the model unequally affected liberals and conservatives and that "think tank ideologyonly matters to liberals."

The company's planned and eventual acquisition by News Corp. in 2007 led to significant media criticism and discussion about whether the news pages would exhibit a rightward slant under Rupert Murdoch. An August 1 editorial responded to the questions by asserting that Murdoch intended to "maintain the values and integrity of the Journal."

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