CNSNews.com managing editor Michael W. Chapman wrote a ridiculously fawning Aug. 10 piece touting how “A new poll by the grassroots organization Tea Party Patriots shows that 98.4% of its supporters would like to see conservative Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) as the next Speaker of the House of Representatives, should the Republicans hold onto Congress after the mid-term elections in November.” After copiously quoting sycophantic quotes about Jordan from the Tea Party Caucus, Chapman then made his own appeal, noting that “Some of the Republicans who say they support Jordan for Speaker include Freedom Caucus Chairman Rep. Mark Meadows (N.C.), Rep. Matt Gaetz (Fla.), Rep. Dave Brat (Va.), Rep. Andy Biggs (Ariz.), former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli. The conservative group FreedomWorks has also announced its support for Jordan.” Chapman also promoted Jordan’s platform: “In a July 26 letter to Republican members of the House, Jordan said the GOP members should push for ‘actually repealing Obamacare,’ reforming welfare across-the-board, building a real wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, making the 2017 tax cuts permanent, ending taxpayer funding of Planned Parenthood, and ‘enacting meaningful, immediate spending cuts to ensure that we never see $1 trillion deficits.'”
Chapman declared in his final paragraph: “Jim Jordan, 54, is in his sixth term in Congress. He is married to Polly Jordan.” Never mind that Jordan’s first name and length of service in Congress had already been established earlier in the article; apparently Chapman simply copied-and-pasted that from elsewhere and didn’t bother to edit it.
What Chapman didn’t report: the fact that several former athletes at Ohio State University, where Jordan served as a wrestling coach, have accused Jordan of knowing about sexual abuse of athletes by a team doctor but doing nothing about it — despite those accusations being around for a good month before Chapman’s article appeared.
In fact, CNS has never published a story — “news,” blog or otherwise — regarding the allegations against Jordan. It has, however, published numerous articles featuring Jordan, mainly in his role as member of a Republican-dominated House committee looking into links between Russia and President Trump — including a separate July 27 article on Jordan announcing he planned to seek the House speaker position. The only thing that even alludes to it is an Aug. 17 post (again, well past a month after the accusations first became public) that is only a headline, a video and a link to a post at sister website NewsBusters complaining about a Democratic ad likening Jordan to Joe Paterno, who also allegedly turned a blind eye to abuse allegations.
In other words, CNS is very much attuned to Jordan’s importance in the current political scene. Which means that the only possible reason CNS has failed to report on the abuse allegations regarding Jordan is that it is deliberately censoring them from its readers.