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One person was making the argument that since he's no longer holding office, he's downgraded to a private citizen, so it doesn't matter if he has a slew of love children.
You are correct that there are questions about payouts ;probably coming from Edwards campaign war chest.
Up until the moment this was revealed Edwards was a viable prospect for either a VP candidate or a slot as a Sec. in an Obama adm.
The MSM would not have given a prominent Republican such slack .
Even the NY Slimes Public Editor takes on his own publication for ignoring the Edwards story while promoting the lies about McCain(but he claims that liberal bias had nothing to do with it... bwaaahaaahaaa!! ) .
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Before Edwards's admission, The Times never made a serious effort to investigate the story, even as the Enquirer wrote one sensational report after another: a 2:40 a.m. ambush by the tabloid's reporters at the Beverly Hilton hotel in Los Angeles after Edwards spent hours in a room with Hunter and her baby; an allegation of $15,000 a month in “hush money;” a grainy “spy photo” of him with a baby.
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I do not think liberal bias had anything to do with it. But I think The Times — like The Washington Post, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, major networks and wire services — was far too squeamish about tackling the story. The Times did not want to regurgitate the Enquirer's reporting without verifying it, which is responsible. But The Times did not try to verify it, beyond a few perfunctory efforts, which I think was wrong.
The Public Editor - Sometimes, There's News in the Gutter - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com
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I would not have published the allegation of a McCain affair, because The Times did not convincingly establish its truth. I would not have recycled the National Enquirer story, either. But I think it was a mistake for Times editors to turn up their noses and not pursue it. “There was a tendency, fair or not, to dismiss what you read in the National Enquirer,” Keller said. “I know they are sometimes right.” When the Enquirer published its first “love child” report, The Times was going energetically after the McCain story. It should have pursued the other story as well.