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Media Check: Democrats, media freak out after Nikki Fried calls out Palm Beach post story as “fake news”




Several Florida journalists took to social media late Sunday, joined by far-left Democrats and activists in a collective, knee-jerk defense of a fellow media outlet after Democratic gubernatorial candidate Nikki Fried labeled a previously debunked Palm Beach Post story “fake news.”

According to initial news reports, Fried was kicking off her statewide bus tour on Sunday in Leon County when she was apparently confronted by a reporter asking about her environmental record. The reporter cited criticisms by the Sierra Club that Fried hadn’t done enough to curb pre-harvest sugar cane burning – a tactic used by sugar farmers to reduce waste and increase efficiency. Environmentalists have increased their criticisms of the sugar farming practice as part of their larger campaign against the Florida sugar cane farming industry in general.

In response to the reporter’s question, Fried correctly pointed out that funding for the Post’s year-long investigation came from third party sources with ties to the Knight Foundation, which has long-standing relationships and financial connections to South Florida environmental activist groups, including the Sierra Club, the Everglades Foundation, Paul Tudor Jones, and others.

Those ties were first exposed just over a year ago, when The Capitolist also obtained documents showing that Palm Beach Post reporter Lulu Ramadan’s annual salary had been paid in advance using funds that originated from the Knight Foundation, funneled to another left-leaning journalism organization called ProPublica, which ultimately transferred the cash to the Palm Beach Post.

Documents obtained by The Capitolist even show that Ramadan used research tools that were owned in part by a company financed by Tudor Jones, who is one of the largest funders of South Florida environmental activism.

The Post’s executive editor, Rick Christie, then told readers that the newspaper itself had spent a “great deal” of “time and money” on “investigative journalism.” However, The Capitolist caught up with Christie in a phone call, and he later changed his story, admitting that Ramadan’s entire salary had been funded not by the Post, but by outside groups.

The problem, of course, isn’t that the Post received third party dollars to fund its journalism. The problem is that the newspaper and its journalists tried to pass the finished product off to readers as though it was a fair and objective investigation about sugar cane harvesting.

Years ago, journalists had to justify their investigations to their editors by showing that their preliminary hunches might actually lead to something useful or interesting to readers. If convinced, the editors would let the investigation continue, and if not, he or she would pull the plug and assign the reporter to a new story.

That’s the right way to be objective.

But in this case with the Post, the entire concept was pitched in advance, money was awarded as a grant, and from that point forward, Lulu Ramadan and the Palm Beach Post were on the hook to deliver exactly what the Knight Foundation and its political allies had paid them to produce: a hard-hitting “news” story in line with the Sierra Club’s agenda.

And that’s exactly what they got.

So pleased was the Knight Foundation with Ramadan’s work that they later gave her an award – just for delivering exactly the kind of hard-hitting advocacy journalism they paid for up front.

Nikki Fried is right to point out that the Palm Beach Post’s story was fake news, because readers were told the investigation and subsequent series of news stories were conducted objectively and fairly.