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Published: February 22, 2008
NEW YORK - A New York Times story examining John McCain's relationship with a female lobbyist eight years ago has thrust the newspaper into the spotlight, with McCain slamming the story as a "hit-and-run smear campaign" and conservative pundits rallying to the senator's defense. The Times stood its ground.
Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh dismissed the story as "gossip" on his show, accusing the paper of sitting on it until just before McCain had the Republican nomination wrapped up - despite the fact that the Times' editorial board endorsed McCain on Jan. 25 for the New York state primary.
Separately, McCain's top aide, Mark Salter, told Time magazine he thought the Times ran with the story because The New Republic magazine was about to run its own story - which it did post, on Thursday - detailing the conflict within the newspaper over getting the article into print, and wanted to avoid embarrassment.
Bill Keller, the Times' executive editor, said in a written response to questions from The Associated Press that The New Republic story "had nothing whatsoever to do with our decision to publish, or with the timing."
In its story, The New Republic said the Times article came out only after three months of intense internal debate that left the reporters frustrated. The Drudge Report Web site had reported about those frustrations in December and said McCain had been pressuring the Times not to print the story.
"I doubt if anybody involved would call it 'dissent,'" Keller said in his e-mailed response. "As there always is on a big, long-running story, written by multiple reporters, there was lots of discussion along the way - ending in a strong consensus that we had an important story to tell."
Keller had said in an earlier statement that the story "speaks for itself." Nonetheless, the article has already taken on a life of its own, sparking a furious debate online - including the newspaper's own Web site. By Thursday afternoon, more than 2,000 comments about the story had been posted on NYTimes.com.
The issue is particularly sensitive for McCain because he has staked much of his career on standing up to special interests, a reputation he has worked on for years since being associated with an influence-peddling scandal in the late 1980s and early '90s.
"From the looks of it, the paper is going to have to fight for its story - and its ethics - in the court of public opinion, but this is not something the Times is ever comfortable doing," New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen said in a posting on The Huffington Post, a widely read online forum.
Just hours after the Times published its McCain story online Wednesday evening, The Washington Post followed up with a story of its own saying McCain aides had asked the lobbyist to distance herself from the senator. They told him it would undermine his message of opposing special interests, the Post reported.
The Washington newspaper had been working on a similar story for some time and was able to finish it after sources divulged more information following the Times report, Post Executive Editor Len Downie told the newspaper trade magazine Editor and Publisher.
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