: So your issue is that journalists should only write about election-related news/information during elections?
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Replying to @ericgeller
They should strive to provide voters with information that is most pertinent to the decision they will make.
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Replying to @ericgeller
Email server=real story, disproportionate coverage. Campaign internal discussions=mostly trivia unless corruption or fraud.
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Replying to @zeynep
: You still didn't answer my question. Are journalists allowed to report on non-election-related material during elections?
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Replying to @ericgeller
The question isn't allowed. Of course they are "allowed". The question is: what does good journalism look like and focus on.
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Replying to @zeynep
: Again, different reporters focus on different things. Breaking news reporters are different from enterprise reporters.
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Replying to @ericgeller
Maybe breaking news reporters should notice, hey, we are being fed fairly minor stuff everyday, and think how to respond.
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Replying to @zeynep
: Maybe. But maybe they should do their jobs within their areas of responsibility while enterprise/investigative reporters do theirs.
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Replying to @ericgeller
I literally saw WaPo's front page feature what some random HuffPost blogger emailed to a Clinton staffer a year ago on Sanders.
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Email wasn't even some revelation. Some dude thought Sanders may have appeal. One month before the election. Front page of WaPo.
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