Journalism's Gates
Keepers...
by Tim Schwab
August 21, 2020
from
CJR Website
Spanish version
Last August, NPR (National
Public Radio) profiled a Harvard-led experiment to help
low-income families find housing in wealthier neighborhoods,
giving their children access to better schools and an
opportunity to "break the cycle of poverty."
According to
researchers cited in the article, these children could see
$183,000 greater earnings over their lifetimes - a striking
forecast for a housing program still in its experimental stage.
If you squint as you read the story, you'll notice that every
quoted expert is connected to the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, which helps fund the project.
And if you're
really paying attention, you'll also see the editor's note at
the end of the story, which reveals that NPR itself receives
funding from
Gates.
NPR's funding from Gates,
"was not a factor in why or how we did
the story," reporter Pam Fessler says, adding that her reporting
went beyond the voices quoted in her article.
The story,
nevertheless, is one of hundreds NPR has reported about the
Gates Foundation or the work it funds, including myriad
favorable pieces written from the perspective of Gates or its
grantees.
And that speaks
to a larger trend - and ethical issue - with billionaire
philanthropists' bankrolling the news.
The Broad
Foundation, whose philanthropic agenda includes promoting
charter schools, at one point funded part of the
LA Times'
reporting on education.
Charles Koch
has made charitable donations to journalistic institutions such
as the Poynter Institute, as well as to news organizations such as
the Daily Caller News Foundation, that support his conservative
politics.
And the Rockefeller Foundation
funds Vox's
Future Perfect,
a reporting project that examines the world "through
the lens of effective altruism"
- often looking at philanthropy.
As
philanthropists increasingly fill in the funding gaps at news
organizations - a role that is almost certain to expand in the
media downturn following the coronavirus pandemic - an
underexamined worry is how this will affect the ways newsrooms
report on their benefactors.
Nowhere does
this concern loom larger than with the Gates Foundation, a
leading donor to newsrooms and a frequent subject of favorable
news coverage.
I recently
examined nearly twenty thousand charitable grants the Gates
Foundation had made through the end of June and found more than
$250 million going toward journalism.
Recipients
included,
-
news
operations
like the BBC, NBC, Al Jazeera, ProPublica,
National Journal,
The Guardian,
Univision, Medium, the
Financial Times,
The
Atlantic,
the Texas Tribune, Gannett,
Washington Monthly,
Le Monde,
and the Center for Investigative Reporting
-
charitable organizations
affiliated with news outlets, like BBC Media Action and
the New York Times' Neediest Cases Fund
-
media companies
such as Participant, whose documentary
Waiting for "Superman"
supports Gates's agenda on charter schools
-
journalistic organizations
such as the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, the
National Press Foundation, and the International Center
for Journalists
-
a
variety of other groups creating news
content or working on journalism, such as the Leo
Burnett Company, an ad agency that Gates commissioned to
create a "news site" to promote the success of aid
groups
In some cases,
recipients say they distributed part of the funding as subgrants
to other journalistic organizations - which makes it difficult
to see the full picture of Gates's funding into the fourth
estate.
The foundation
even helped fund a
2016 report from the
American Press Institute
that was used to develop
guidelines
on how newsrooms can maintain editorial independence from
philanthropic funders.
A top-level
finding:
"There is
little evidence that funders insist on or have any editorial
review."
Notably, the
study's underlying survey data showed that nearly a third of
funders reported having seen at least some content they funded
before publication.
Gates's
generosity appears to have helped foster an increasingly
friendly media environment for the world's most visible charity.
Twenty years ago, journalists scrutinized Bill Gates's initial
foray into philanthropy
as a vehicle
to enrich his software company, or a
PR exercise
to salvage his battered reputation following Microsoft's
bruising antitrust battle with the Department of Justice.
Today,
the foundation is most often the subject of soft profiles and
glowing editorials describing its 'good' works.
During the
pandemic, news outlets have widely looked to Bill Gates as a
public health 'expert' on
covid - even though Gates has no medical training and is
not a public official.
PolitiFact
and
USA Today
(run by the Poynter Institute and Gannett, respectively - both
of which have received funds from the Gates Foundation) have
even used their fact-checking platforms to defend Gates from
"false conspiracy theories" and "misinformation," like the idea
that the foundation has financial investments in companies
developing covid
vaccines and therapies.
In fact, the foundation's website
and most recent tax forms clearly show investments in such
companies, including
Gilead
and
CureVac.
In the same way
that the news media has given Gates an outsize voice in the
pandemic, the foundation has long used its charitable giving to
shape the public discourse on everything from global health to
education to agriculture - a level of influence that has landed
Bill Gates on
Forbes's
list of the most powerful people in the world.
The Gates Foundation can point to
important charitable accomplishments over the past two decades -
like helping drive down polio and putting new funds into
fighting malaria - but even these efforts have drawn expert
detractors who say that Gates may actually be
introducing harm,
or
distracting
us from more important, lifesaving public health projects.
From virtually
any of Gates's good deeds, reporters can also find problems with
the foundation's
outsize power,
if they choose to look.
But readers
don't hear these critical voices in the news as often or as
loudly as Bill and Melinda's.
News about Gates these days is
often filtered through the perspectives of the many academics,
nonprofits, and think tanks that Gates funds.
Sometimes it is
delivered to readers by newsrooms with financial ties to the
foundation.
The Gates
Foundation declined multiple interview requests for this story
and would not provide its own accounting of
how much money it
has put toward journalism...
In response to
questions sent via email, a spokesperson for the foundation said
that a,
"guiding principle" of its journalism funding is
"ensuring creative and editorial independence."
The spokesperson
also noted that, because of financial pressures in journalism,
many of the issues the foundation works on,
"do not get
the in-depth, consistent media coverage they once did...
When
well-respected media outlets have an opportunity to produce
coverage of under-researched and under-reported issues, they
have the power to educate the public and encourage the
adoption and implementation of evidence-based policies in
both the public and private sectors."
As
CJR
was
finalizing its fact check of this article, the Gates Foundation
offered a more pointed response:
"Recipients
of foundation journalism grants have been and continue to be
some of the most respected journalism outlets in the
world...
The line of
questioning for this story implies that these organizations
have compromised their integrity and independence by
reporting on global health, development, and education with
foundation funding.
We strongly
dispute this notion."
The foundation's
response also volunteered other ties it has to the news media,
including,
"participating in dozens of conferences, such as the
Perugia Journalism Festival,
the
Global Editors Network,
or the
World Conference of Science
Journalism," as
well as "help[ing] build capacity through the likes of the
Innovation in Development
Reporting fund."
The full scope
of Gates's giving to the news media remains unknown because the
foundation only publicly discloses money awarded through
charitable grants, not through contracts.
In response to
questions, Gates only disclosed one contract -
Vox's
- but did describe how some of this contract money is spent:
producing
sponsored content, and occasionally funding,
"non-media
nonprofit entities to support efforts such as journalist
trainings, media convenings, and attendance at events."
In the same way
that the news media has given Gates an outsize voice in the
pandemic, the foundation has long used its charitable giving to
shape the public discourse on everything from global health to
education to agriculture.
Over the years,
reporters have investigated the apparent blind spots in how the
news media covers the Gates Foundation, though such reflective
reporting has waned in recent years.
In 2015,
Vox
ran an article examining the
widespread uncritical journalistic coverage surrounding the
foundation - coverage that comes even as many experts and
scholars raise red flags.
Vox
didn't cite Gates's charitable giving to newsrooms as a
contributing factor, nor did it address Bill Gates's month-long
stint as guest editor for The Verge, a Vox
subsidiary, earlier that year.
Still, the news
outlet did raise critical questions about journalists' tendency
to cover the Gates Foundation as a dispassionate charity instead
of a structure of power.
Five years
earlier, in 2010,
CJR
published a two-part series that examined, in part, the millions
of dollars going toward PBS NewsHour, which it found to
reliably avoid critical reporting on Gates.
In 2011, the
Seattle Times
detailed concerns
over the ways in which Gates Foundation funding might hamper
independent reporting:
To garner
attention for the issues it cares about, the foundation has
invested millions in training programs for journalists.
It funds
research on the most effective ways to craft media messages.
Gates-backed think tanks turn out media fact sheets and
newspaper opinion pieces.
Magazines
and scientific journals get Gates money to publish research
and articles.
Experts
coached in Gates-funded programs write columns that appear
in media outlets from The New York Times to The Huffington
Post, while digital portals blur the line between journalism
and spin.
Two years after
the story appeared, the
Seattle Times
accepted substantial funding from the Gates Foundation for
an education reporting project.
These stories
offered compelling evidence of Gates's editorial influence, but
they didn't attempt to investigate the full scope of the
foundation's financial reach into the fourth estate. (For
perspective, $250 million is the same amount that
Jeff Bezos
paid for the Washington
Post.)
When Gates gives
money to newsrooms, it restricts how the money is used - often
for topics, like global health and education, on which the
foundation works - which can help elevate its agenda in the news
media.
For example, in
2015 Gates gave $383,000 to the Poynter Institute, a widely
cited authority on journalism ethics (and an occasional partner
of CJR's), earmarking the funds,
"to improve
the accuracy in worldwide media of claims related to global
health and development."
Poynter senior
vice president
Kelly McBride said Gates's money was passed on to
media fact-checking sites, including
Africa Check, and noted
that,
she is "absolutely confident" that no bias or blind spots
emerged from the work, though she acknowledged that she has not
reviewed it herself.
I found sixteen
examples of Africa Check examining media claims related to
Gates.
This body of work overwhelmingly seems to support or
defend Bill and Melinda Gates and their foundation, which has
spent
billions of dollars
on development efforts in Africa.
The only example I found of
Africa Check even remotely challenging its patron was when a
foundation employee tweeted an incorrect
statistic
- that a child dies of malaria every 60 seconds, instead of
every 108.
Africa Check
says it went on to receive an additional $1.5 million from Gates
in 2017 and 2019.
"Our funders
or supporters have no influence over the claims we
fact-check… and the conclusions we reach in our reports,"
said Noko Makgato, executive director of Africa Check, in a
statement to CJR.
"With all
fact-checks involving our funders, we include a disclosure
note to inform the reader."
Earlier this
year, McBride added NPR public editor to her list of duties, as
part of a contract between NPR and Poynter.
Since 2000, the
Gates Foundation has given NPR $17.5 million through ten
charitable grants - all of them earmarked for coverage of global
health and education, specific issues on which Gates works.
NPR covers the
Gates Foundation extensively.
By the end of
2019, a spokesperson said, NPR had mentioned the foundation more
than 560 times in its reporting, including 95 times on Goats
and Soda, the outlet's "global
health and development blog,"
which Gates helps fund.
"Funding
from corporate sponsors and philanthropic donors is separate
from the editorial decision-making process in NPR's
newsroom," the spokesperson noted.
NPR does
occasionally hold a critical lens to the Gates Foundation.
Last September,
it covered
a decision by the foundation to give a humanitarian award to
Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi, despite Modi's dismal
record on human rights and freedom of expression.
(That story
was widely covered by news outlets - a rare bad news cycle for
Gates.)
On the same day,
the foundation appeared in another NPR headline:
"Gates
Foundation Says World Not on Track to Meet Goal of Ending
Poverty by 2030."
That story cites
only two sources:
The lack of
independent perspectives is hard to miss.
Bill Gates is the
second-richest man in the world and might reasonably be viewed
as a totem of economic inequality, but NPR
has
transformed him into a 'moral' authority on poverty.
Given Gates's
large funding role at NPR, one could imagine editors insisting
that reporters seek out financially independent voices or
include sources who can offer critical perspectives.
(Many NPR
stories on Gates don't:
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here.)
Likewise, NPR
could seek a measure of independence from Gates by rejecting
donations that are earmarked for reporting on Gates's favored
topics.
Even when NPR
publishes critical reporting on Gates, it can feel scripted.
In
February 2018, NPR ran a story headlined "Bill
Gates Addresses 'Tough Questions' on Poverty and Power."
The "tough questions" NPR posed
in this Q&A were mostly based on
a list curated by Gates
himself, which he previously answered in
a letter
posted to his
foundation's website.
With no irony at
all, reporter
Ari Shapiro
asked,
"How do
you… encourage people to be frank with you, even at risk of
perhaps alienating their funder?"
In the
interview, Gates said that critics are voicing their concerns
and the foundation is listening.
In 2007, the
LA Times
published
one of the only critical investigative series on the Gates
Foundation, part of which examined the foundation's endowment
holdings in companies that hurt those people the foundation
claimed to help, like chocolate companies linked to child labor...
Charles Piller,
the lead reporter on the series, says he made strenuous efforts
to get responses from the Gates Foundation during the
investigation.
"For the
most part they were unwilling to engage with me.
They were
unwilling to answer questions and pretty much refused to
respond in any sort of way, except in the most minimal way,
for most of my stories," Piller said.
"That's
very, very typical of big companies, government agencies -
to try to hope that whatever controversial issues have been
raised in reporting will have limited shelf life, and
they'll be able to go back to business as usual."
Asked about the
dearth of hard reporting on Gates, Piller says the foundation's
funding may prompt newsrooms to find other targets.
"I think
they would be kidding themselves to suggest that those
donations to their organizations have no impact on editorial
decisions," he says.
"It's just
the way of the world."
Two journalists
who have investigated Gates more recently cite what appear to be
more explicit efforts by the foundation to exercise editorial
influence.
Writing in
De Correspondent,
freelance journalists
Robert Fortner
and
Alex Park
examined the limitations and inadvertent consequences of the
Gates Foundation's relentless efforts to eradicate polio.
In
HuffPost,
the two journalists showed how Gates's outsize funding of global
health initiatives has steered the world's aid agenda toward the
foundation's own goals (like polio eradication) and away from
issues such as emergency preparedness to respond to disease
outbreaks, like the Ebola crisis.
(This narrative has been lost in
the current covid-19
news cycle, as outlets from the
LA Times to
PBS
to
STAT
have portrayed
Gates as a 'visionary' leader on pandemics...)
During the
course of Fortner and Park's reporting these two stories, the
foundation went over their heads to seek an audience with their
editors.
Editors at both
publications say this raised questions about Gates attempting to
influence editorial direction on the stories.
"They've
dodged our questions and sought to undermine our coverage,"
says Park.
During Park and
Fortner's investigation for De Correspondent, the head
of Gates's polio communications team,
Rachel Lonsdale,
made an unusual offer to the duo's editor, writing,
"We
typically like to have a phone conversation with the editor
of a publication employing freelancers we are engaging with,
both to fully understand how we can help you with the
specific project and to form a longer term relationship that
could transcend the freelance assignment."
The news outlet
said it rejected the proposition because of its potential to
compromise the independence and integrity of its journalistic
work.
In a statement,
the foundation said Lonsdale,
"was
conducting normal media relations work as part of her role
as a senior program officer. As we wrote to Tim in December
2019,
'As with
many organizations, the foundation has an in-house media
relations team that cultivates relationships with
journalists and editors in order to serve as a resource
for information gathering and to help facilitate
thorough and accurate coverage of our issues'."
Park says his
editors stood behind his work on both stories, but he doesn't
discount the foundation's efforts to put,
"a wedge
between us and the publication…if not to assert influence
outright, to give themselves a channel through which they
could assert influence later."
Fortner,
meanwhile, says he mostly avoids pitching articles to
Gates-funded news outlets because of the conflict of interest
this presents.
"Gates
funding, for me, makes a good-faith pitching process
impossible," he says.
Fortner, who
authored
CJR's 2010 story
on Gates's journalism funding, self-published a
follow-up
in 2016 that
examined how Gates funding is not always disclosed in news
articles, including fifty-nine news stories the Pulitzer Center
on Crisis Reporting funded in part with Gates's money.
The center also
declined to tell Fortner which fifty-nine articles had Gates's
funding.
If critical
reporting about the Gates Foundation is rare, it is largely
beside the point in "solutions journalism," a new-ish brand of
reporting that focuses on solutions to problems, not just the
problems themselves.
That more upbeat orientation has drawn the
patronage of the Gates Foundation, which directed $6.3 million
to the Solutions Journalism Network (SJN) to train journalists
and fund reporting projects.
Gates is the
largest donor to SJN - supplying around one-fifth of the
organization's lifetime funding. SJN says more than half of this
money has been distributed as subgrants, including to Education
Lab, its partnership with the
Seattle Times.
SJN acknowledges
on its
website,
"that there are potential conflicts of interest inherent" in
taking philanthropic funding to produce solutions journalism,
which SJN cofounder David Bornstein elaborated on in an
interview.
"If you are
covering global health or education and you are writing
about interesting models," Bornstein said, "the chances that
an organization [you are covering] is getting money from the
Gates Foundation are very high because they basically
blanket the whole world with their funding, and they're the
major funder in those two areas."
Asked if he
could provide examples of any critical reporting about Gates
emerging from SJN,
David Bornstein took issue with the question.
"Most of the
stories that we fund are stories that look at efforts to
solve problems, so they tend to be not as critical as
traditional journalism," he said.
That is also the
case for the journalism Bornstein and fellow SJN cofounder
Tina Rosenberg
produce for the
New York Times.
As contract writers for the
"Fixes" opinion column, the two have favorably profiled
Gates-funded
education,
agriculture,
and
global health
programs over the years - without disclosing that they work for
an organization that receives millions of dollars from Gates.
Twice in 2019, for example,
Rosenberg's columns exalted the
World Mosquito Project,
whose sponsor page lands on a picture of Bill Gates.
"We do
disclose our relationship with SJN in every column, and
SJN's funders are listed on our website.
But you are
correct that when we write about projects that get Gates
funding, we should specifically say that SJN receives Gates
funding as well," Rosenberg noted in an email.
"Our policy
going forward with the NY Times will be clearer and will
ensure disclosures."
My cursory
review of the Fixes column turned up fifteen installments where
the writers explicitly mention Bill and Melinda Gates, their
foundation, or Gates-funded organizations.
Bornstein and
Rosenberg said they asked their editors at the
Times to belatedly add
financial disclosures to several of these columns, but they also
cited six they thought did
not need disclosure.
Rosenberg's
2016 profile
of Bridge
International
Academies, for example, notes that Bill Gates personally helps
fund the project.
The writers argue that SJN's ties are to the
Gates Foundation, not to Bill Gates himself, so no disclosure is
needed.
"This is a
significant distinction," Rosenberg and Bornstein stated in an
email.
Months after
Bornstein and Rosenberg say they asked their editors to add
financial disclosures to their columns, those pieces remain
uncorrected.
Marc Charney, a senior editor at
the Times,
said he wasn't sure if or when the paper would add the
disclosures, citing technical difficulties and other newsroom
priorities.
Likewise, NPR
said it would add a financial disclosure to a
2012 story
it published on the Gates Foundation, but did not follow
through. (In the vast majority of articles about Gates, NPR
makes disclosures.)
Even perfect
disclosure of Gates funding doesn't mean the money can't still
introduce bias.
At the same
time, Gates funding, alone, doesn't fully explain why so much of
the news about the foundation is positive. Even news outlets
with no obvious financial ties to Gates - the foundation isn't
required to publicly report all of the money it gives to
journalism, making the full extent of its giving unknown - tend
to report favorably on the foundation.
That may be
because Gates's expansive giving over the decades has helped
influence a larger media narrative about its work. And it may
also be because
the news media is always, and especially right
now, looking for 'heroes'...
A larger worry
is the precedent the prevailing coverage of Gates sets for how
we report on the next generation of tech
billionaires-turned-philanthropists, including
Jeff Bezos
and
Mark
Zuckerberg.
Bill Gates has
shown how seamlessly the most controversial industry captain can
transform his public image from tech
villain
to 'benevolent' philanthropist.
Insofar as journalists are supposed to
scrutinize wealth and power, Gates should probably be one of the
most investigated people on earth - not the most admired...