Inside the editorial page
Inside the editorial page

This blog is designed to give readers a glimpse of our editorial-page operation and how we make our decisions. We’ll let you know who we’re meeting with, what they’re telling us, what events and issues we’re looking at. We’ll also pass on information and observations that may not make our print editions. In addition to the editorial board members who post on this blog, the board includes Publisher David Zeeck, Executive Editor Karen Peterson and Managing Editor Dale Phelps.

Editorial board bloggers

Editorial page editor Patrick O’Callahan oversees the online and printed opinion sections of The News Tribune. He came to The News Tribune in 1987 and has worked at Washington newspapers since 1979. E-mail him at patrick.ocallahan@thenewstribune.com

Editorial writer Cheryl Tucker, in addition to writing commentary, manages the daily production of the editorial and op-ed pages and edits letters to the editor. She began her journalism career in 1974 at a Virginia newspaper and came to The News Tribune in 1978. E-mail her at cheryl.tucker@thenewstribune.com.

Editorial writer Kim Bradford manages the online opinion section of The News Tribune and writes commentary. She joined The News Tribune in 2005 after working 11 years at newspapers in Washington and Maryland. E-mail her at kim.bradford@thenewstribune.com.

Guest bloggers

Editor emeritus David Seago retired from The News Tribune in 2008 after 41 years at The News Tribune. E-mail him at sds99@harbornet.com.

Richard Davis’ column on state politics frequently runs in the print edition of The News Tribune. He was president of the Washington Research Council, a statewide think tank, from 1986 through 2006. Currently, as a principal with The Simeon Partnership, Inc. he coordinates the activities of the Washington Alliance for a Competitive Economy, a business coalition founded by the Research Council, the Association of Washington Business and the Washington Roundtable.

Karen Irwin of University Place, a mother of four, has been a frequent contributor to The News Tribune's print editions. She has also written for Seattle's Child, Puget Sound Parent, the Tacoma Weekly, the Fayetteville Observer Times and the political blog Right Meets Left. She graduated from California Lutheran University with a degree in English literature and is currently working toward a history degree.

Michael Allen, professor of history at the University of Washington Tacoma, was born and raised in Ellensburg. He served with the U.S. Marines in Vietnam from 1969-70. He has written five books, including the prize-winning "Patriot's History of the United States: From Columbus' Great Discovery to the War on Terror," "Rodeo Cowboys in the North American Imagination" and "Western Rivermen, 1763-1861: Ohio and Mississippi Boatmen and the Myth of the Alligator Horse." Allen lives in Tacoma and Ellensburg and has three children.

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What's on the minds of Tacoma News Tribune editorial writers
Monday, December 29th, 2008
Posted by Kim Bradford @ 08:30:39 pm

This editorial will appear in tomorrow's print edition.

WaMu wasn’t merely neglecting to check borrowers’ qualifications. It was telling them they didn’t need qualifications.

Reckless American home buyers and lax federal regulation deserve a healthy share of the responsibility for the international credit crisis. But there’s no calculating the blame that belongs to reckless mortgage lenders.

The New York Times this week detailed the loan-mongering frenzy that brought down Seattle-based Washington Mutual in the biggest bank failure in history. It’s an appalling portrait of a once-responsible corporate culture gone rogue.

Under the leadership of CEO Kerry Killinger, WaMu morphed from a well-run company into a giant medicine show touting high-risk loans.

=> Read more!

Categories: What's coming
Posted by Kim Bradford @ 08:17:09 pm

This editorial will appear in tomorrow's print edition.

Answering a former employee’s charges publicly can only aid the social service agency’s efforts to repair its reputation.

Silence was anything but golden for Centro Latino’s leaders.

The organization’s board members clammed up last month at the worst possible time: after being hit with a lawsuit from a former executive director who alleged she was fired for exposing improprieties.

The agency’s leaders say they didn’t want to try the case in the media. Their motives may have been pure, but the effect was to leave some serious charges hanging out there, unanswered.

=> Read more!

Categories: What's coming
Posted by Patrick O'Callahan @ 06:15:42 pm

As an editor, I'm going to mourn our dropping of the New York Times lineup for non-ideological reasons: It pains me to take anything away from readers.

That said, I – like anyone else – haven't been as fond of some columnists as others.

The ones I'll miss the most are Thomas Friedman and David Brooks. And I haven't stopped missing William Safire.

Friedman is a phenomenon; I don't think any journalist alive has a better grasp of what's going on beyond the borders of the United States. Brooks is a genial conservative whose good nature comes across in everything he writes. Both of them are consistently interesting.

I am unfond of Paul Krugman. When he's on the subject of economics – a specialty in which he has won the Nobel prize – he's got a lot to say.

But when he decides to be a general-purpose pontificator, he tends to be a grating johnny-one-note, blaming every ill of humanity on Bush and conservatives. Krugman didn't like Obama, early on, because he wasn't nasty enough.

=> Read more!

Categories: Taking notice
Posted by Richard S. Davis @ 04:14:18 pm

In the words of an old country song, or so I'm told, "How can I miss you if you won't go away?"

Few things in the media approach the ubiquity of Thomas Friedman, Maureen Dowd, Paul Krugman, David Brooks, Nicholas Kristof and others in the New York Times' stable of columnists. Like Chickenman, "they're everywhere." Read them online (for free after the Times famously unsuccessful attempt to put them behind a subscription-only firewall). Watch them chat with each other on television. Or pick up one of the papers in the discard pile at your favorite coffeehouse. You can't shuffle down the street without tripping over a NYT column.

Their absence from The News Tribune's op-ed page has, I think, been too thoroughly mourned here and here and here. Sure, they're excellent writers, well-connected, and highly informed. But are they the only ones worth reading? I subscribe to three daily newspapers and read several others online. Too often, that means I get access to the same Krugman/Friedman/Dowd column at least twice.

We hear a lot about shrinking newspapers meaning fewer views reach readers hungry for news and comment. And then, when we open the paper, we get the same stuff we could get anywhere. I'm looking forward to reading some fresh, new regional and national writers.

Categories: Taking notice
Posted by Kim Bradford @ 11:35:18 am

We’ve now got a harrowing inside picture of the corporate culture of reckless mortgage-mongering that led to WaMu’s collapse. Anyone wondering how the financial sector could have come to the brink of total collapse in 2008 need only look at this bank’s practices.

Centro Latino leaders may have had good reasons to fire their executive director, who claims she was a whistleblower. A court will decide. In the meantime, the organization's defense of the termination could help it win back some lost support.

If you have comments or questions about these topics, please email them to patrick.ocallahan@thenewstribune.com. Editorials represent the consensus view of The News Tribune's editorial board.

Want to sit in on a daily ed board meeting? Email cheryl.tucker@thenewstribune.com to make an appointment.

Categories: What's coming
Posted by Karen Irwin @ 11:04:35 am

There are two kinds of people in this world: There are the folks who look back fondly at the good old days and there are those who think civilization, however slowly, is evolving into more cooperative and open societies. Even in spite of the world’s problems, of which there are many, on any given day, I would categorize myself into the latter camp. Call it naiveté, but I like to think things are getting better.

Yesterday changed all that.

Learning that the News Tribune lost the NY Times columnists I am now officially in the former column. On the very same day Israel launches rockets into Gaza killing 300 people, the largest single attack in decades, we are told that we have been cut off from Thomas Friedman, the defining voice in the great American discussion on Middle East policies.

=> Read more!

Categories: Taking notice
Posted by Cheryl Tucker @ 05:37:36 am

If you read Pat O'Callahan's earlier posting on The News Tribune's discontinuation of the New York Times wire (and its editorial columnists), you'll notice that he mentioned some of the writers whose work we will rely on more to fill the vacuum.

One of those writers is Los Angeles Times columnist Joel Stein, who takes a humorous look at culture and politics – and where the two intersect. We've run him off and on and think readers might enjoy reading him more often.

Here's a column that moved late last week. It offers a good taste of his style.

By Joel Stein
I don’t love America. That’s what conservatives are always telling liberals like me. Their love, they insist, is truer, deeper and more complete. Then liberals, like all people who are accused of not loving something, stammer, get defensive and try to have sex with America even though America will then accuse us of wanting it for its body and not its soul.

When America gets like that, there’s no winning.
But I’ve come to believe conservatives are right. They do love America more.

=> Read more!