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NPR: A case study in left-wing bias

The headquarters for National Public Radio, or NPR, are seen in Washington, DC, September 17, 2013. The USD 201 million building, which opened in 2013, serves as the headquarters of the media organization that creates and distributes news, information and music programming to 975 independent radio stations throughout the US, reaching 26 million listeners each week.
The headquarters for National Public Radio, or NPR, are seen in Washington, DC, September 17, 2013. The USD 201 million building, which opened in 2013, serves as the headquarters of the media organization that creates and distributes news, information and music programming to 975 independent radio stations throughout the US, reaching 26 million listeners each week. | AFP via Getty Image/Saul Loeb

Although National Public Radio (NPR) receives only a small percentage of its funding from federal grants, its name represents a claim that a study of its news coverage renders suspect.

“National Public” infers an effort not only to access the entire country but also to represent the people — the public — of that country. America is now a nation of sharp edges. Theologically, politically, philosophically, and even in the way one understands the nature and role of science in public debate, the divisions are increasing and deepening. Yet those differences do not diminish something profoundly important: We remain one country, and the sincerely-held and quite distinct beliefs of all citizens merit faithful representation in public forums.

So, you would think that an organization that “was founded on a mission to create a more informed public” would at least be interested in fairness. If so, think again — at least when it comes to one of the biggest stories of recent years, June’s Supreme Court decision to return abortion policy to the states.

From January through September 30, 2022, NPR ran scores, perhaps hundreds, of stories, long and short, on abortion. In a review of their headlines, not one of them indicates anything favorable about the Dobbs ruling ending the abortion-on-demand regime of Roe v. Wade. Here is a small sampling:

March 1, 2022: “Doctors’ worst fears about the Texas abortion law are coming true.”

May 24, 2022: “Why Abortion Access Is Important For A Healthy Community.”

May 30, 2022: “A counselor at Mississippi’s only abortion clinic shares her story.”

June 27, 2022: “A woman reevaluates her anti-abortion rights views after adopting a child.”

July 1, 2022: “As the Supreme Court Ends Its Term, the Christian Nationalist Right Keeps Winning.”

October 12, 2022: “Misinformation about abortion targets Spanish speakers, galvanizing Latino voters.”

There is not even a pretense of evenhandedness in these and the copious other stories presented by NPR on abortion. The headlines are repetitively indignant, fear-mongering, and biased. This is not news. It is propaganda.

What is most irksome about NPR’s anti-natalism crusade is that the network describes its journalists as “watchdogs,” committed “to the core principles of honesty, integrity, independence, accuracy, contextual truth, transparency, respect, and fairness for the people we serve and the people we cover. We know that truth is not possible without the active pursuit of a diversity of voices, especially those most at risk of being left out.”

When it comes to abortion, there is no “diversity of voices” on NPR, only a choir of liberal incantation. The beauty and simple scientific reality of personhood within the womb is never mentioned in its massive coverage of American abortion policy. I use the term “never” not rhetorically but quite literally.

Here are some questions a journalist with “honesty, integrity,” etc. would ask of the next abortion “rights” advocate to appear on NPR:

  • Does an unborn child have any value independent of the will of her mother to carry her to term?
  • Why do we show sympathy to women who miscarry but celebrate women who abort? Is the value of the child related entirely to the preference of his mother?
  • Is an unborn child more similar to a diseased organ than a nascent person?
  • Do you believe there should be any restrictions on abortion? Should it be allowed up to the moment the baby enters the birth canal?
  • Should the unborn child be anesthetized prior to her dismemberment?
  • Have you seen the evidence that Planned Parenthood centers often do not show women ultrasounds of their unborn children since to do so would discourage abortion?
  • On what is personhood based — birth? Age? Health? Is a person with Down syndrome less human than you or me? If not, why are their abortions and the abortions of other disabled unborn children so common?

This is not a comprehensive list, but represents at least some of the questions NPR’s “watchdogs” fail to ask. And are unlikely to, unless the organization hires some journalists who at least respect the scores of millions of Americans who do not find in abortion a moral or medically necessary practice.

Advocacy journalism has its place. There is nothing wrong with having and articulating a point of view. What’s maddening is when a reporter or a news outlet pretends to be a guardian of fair and dispassionate truth-telling all the while offering only one perspective on any given issue.

“There is always inequity in life,” John F. Kennedy observed. “Some men are killed in a war and some men are wounded, and some men never leave the country. … It’s very hard in military or in personal life to assure complete equality. Life is unfair.”

True enough. But while life might be unfair, true journalism shouldn’t be. Especially when the stakes are matters of life and death for those with no voice, the little ones in the womb.


Originally published at The Washington Stand. 

Rob Schwarzwalder is Senior Lecturer in Regent University’s Honors College. Before coming to Regent University, Schwarzwalder was senior vice president at the Family Research Council for more than seven years, and previously served as chief of staff to two members of Congress. He was also a communications and media aide to a U.S. senator and senior speechwriter for the Hon. Tommy Thompson, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. For several years, he was director of Communications at the National Association of Manufacturers. While on Capitol Hill, Schwarzwalder served on the staffs of members of both Senate and House Armed Services Committees and the Senate Committee with oversight of federal health care policy. His writing has been carried in such diverse publications as the New York Times, U.S. News, Time Magazine, Christianity Today, the Public Interest, and the Federalist.

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