Down goes Domenech

It’s official, Ben Domenech has resigned.

In the past 24 hours, we learned of allegations that Ben Domenech plagiarized material that appeared under his byline in various publications prior to washingtonpost.com contracting with him to write a blog that launched Tuesday.

An investigation into these allegations was ongoing, and in the interim, Domenech has resigned, effective immediately.

When we hired Domenech, we were not aware of any allegations that he had plagiarized any of his past writings. In any cases where allegations such as these are made, we will continue to investigate those charges thoroughly in order to maintain our journalistic integrity.

The above was written by Jim Brady, the executive editor of washingtonpost.com. I believe that Brady had no idea that Domenech plagiarized so much of his work, but the next question is why the Post didn’t do more to find out.

There will be some additional fall-out, but in the meantime, “Red America” is no more.

Update 1: Alec Oveis makes a point that I strongly agree with: “I think they should never have hired such a shrill, inexperienced hack in the first place, but I would have liked to have seen the Post show him the door after he put out a few more Corretta-Scott-King-is-a-Communist-like comments.”

Quite right. Plagiarism clearly was responsible for the demise of “Red America,” but it’s interesting that the WaPo was ready to stick with a far-right activist for one of the premier jobs in online journalism, right up until it found out he stole stuff. The fact remains the Post chose a rookie bombthrower for a prestigious writing gig for no other reason than to make the right happy. Plagiarism made this a fiasco, but it’d be a shame if the Post comes away from this mess thinking, “This would have been a great move if Domenech hadn’t stolen other people’s work.”

Update 2: On a similar note, Atrios also raises a good point: “[I]f the Post had announced a ‘Blue America’ along with ‘Red America’ Ben’s plagiarism likely would’ve never been discovered. The outrage was over the fact that once again conservatives succeeding in mau-mauing a mainstream media outlet into balancing reporters with conservatives.”

Update 3: A lot of what I’ve heard from others suggests Domenech’s resignation is the first step towards resolving the controversy, not the last. For the purposes of accountability, someone at the WaPo will now have to explain who was responsible for hiring Domenech, who reviewed his background, etc.

Update 4: Ezra assumes, probably correctly, that the Post will keep “Red America,” but find a slightly less controversial blogger-in-residence. He opens the floor to nominations. I’d vote for John Cole, though my sense is that the right wouldn’t accept him as nearly doctrinaire enough.

Let us give Jim Brady a lantern to go out and look for an honest conservative.

And good luck to him.

  • Amazing. How low has the Post sunk. The far right has truly been successful in bringing about the downfall of the national media. Our country is weaker for it.

  • “Our Long National Nightmare is Over” – ET

    That was the best laugh of the day.

    Thanks

  • “Red America” sounds facist anyways. I am amazed that he actally resigned, to have the gall to say the things he has, i thought he had no shame at all.

  • “but in the meantime, “Red America” is no more”

    Don’t bet on it. Mad Dog Domenech will no doubt be all over the echo-wing of the web bashing liberals for unfairly trashing the messenger to avoid the truth getting out, and slamming the liberal media for caving in and pushing him out.

  • An amazing turn of events, and it couldn’t have happened to a better guy… heh.

    Domenech may be a clever guy, but he now has a proven history of being lazy and sloppy. That’s what happened to him, and that’s why he deserved the can.

  • “In any cases where allegations such as these are made, we will continue to investigate those charges thoroughly in order to maintain our journalistic integrity.”

    Uh, Mr. Brady, shouldn’t it be your responsibility to investigate a prospective employee before he’s hired, and not sit back and do nothing unless somebody makes allegations after the fact?

    Just asking.

  • inexperienced, lazy, sloppy, dogmatic and lacking in his own ideas. really sounds perfect for most of the jobs in this administration.

  • Hoisted on their own petard or stuck with fork because they’re done, who got the worst of this episode of political appeasement? Ben Domenech will go back to blogging. Meanwhile, the WaPo keeps adding to their pile of dirty laundry (supporting Bush day and night, supporting the Iraq war, kissing the VRWC ass, etc.).

    Does the WaPo have a onsite dry cleaners, and do they remove stains from underwear? (spirit of the Rude Pundit doss possess me)

  • If they really want to have a “balanced” debate with bloggers, they should recruit Josh Marshall and maybe John Cole on the right-wing side to battle each other in a group blog. Both are very thoughtful. I don’t always agree with either, but Marshall is an outstanding, courageous, and tenacious reporter and would fit in well at any professional mainstream newspaper. Cole’s a right-winger, but he occasionally displays integrity and intelligence and I haven’t yet seen him do any of the drooling, racist, sexist shit that seems endemic amongst right-wing bloggers.

    Marshall broke the Plame story and stayed on top of it years before anyone thought it meant anything. He was the go-to guy on “Bamboozlepalooza” and kept a close watch on the anti-SocialSecurity guys. I think if anyone in blog-land deserves a paid reporting gig with the Post or the Times, it’d be Josh Marshall.

  • I am so sad.

    Ben was the perfect representative of GOP values — lie, steal, be racist, and try hard to deny it.

    I wish he were still at the Post so that more readers could see what true GOP values are.

  • It’ll turn out okay, Morris. They’re sure to find a Republican just as likely to lie, steal, and be racist but with much greater skill when it comes to covering it up!

    Goat: The last thing we want is for the Post to luck into a quality blogger. By now, association with the Washington Post does nothing for anyone’s reputation.

  • If you really want to see that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, go google “Doug Domenech.” Very, very interesting results in learning about the former Executive Director of the American Home Schooling Association.

    His son is certainly a sterling example of the kind of biped veal calf that results from that process.

  • “Red America”

    When I was growing up “red” was an epithet hurled at Democrats. When did the TV begin the practice of representing Republican (states) with the color red?

  • Good. I’m glad he’s gone.

    They had some stupid headline on WaPo today like “Some Readers See Red Over Blogger” and I didn’t check out the story but I bet it was some crap story about him. So it’s pleasing after that now they’ve got to put their tail between their legs.

  • I was thinking John Cole would be a good choice but then I remembered this post of his on the 23rd and realized the Red Staters and the crazies on NRO would blow a gasket (which is a good bonus)…

    The right wing of the Republican party has sold the libertarian/centrist wing of the party a bill of goods, and the modern ‘conservatives’ are clearly nothing more than statists who, rather than redistributing wealth like their brethern on the left, instead have decided that the state must have excessive rights in order to ‘protect’ us all from whatever the imagined fear du jour might be. Meanwhile, no one is left protecting us from the religionists and the the state itself.

    In the new Republican era, only fetuses , tax shelters, and ‘traditional’ marriage deserve protection. According to the actions of the current Republican party, the rest of us need to be wiretapped, monitored, have our homes inspected for whatever reason without warrants, and are incapable of making decisions on our own. My 20 year affair with the Republican party is coming to an end. I am not voting for any Republican in 2006 at any level, and I will be hard pressed to vote for this party in 2008- unless, of course, Cindy Sheehan is the Democratic candidate. These ‘conservatives’ need abut 10-15 years in the wilderness.

    http://www.balloon-juice.com/?p=6878

  • … we will continue to investigate those charges thoroughly in order to maintain our journalistic integrity …

    HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA
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    HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA
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    HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA
    HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!

  • I think young Ben has given us all the direction we need in this matter, in his post about the exposure of Jayson Blair back in 2003:

    ”The ultimate insult that we could pay towards this wretch would be to forget him. He deserves no more of our time.”

  • Ben responds at Red States.

    Virtually every other alleged instance of plagiarism that I’ve seen comes from a single semester’s worth of pieces that were printed under my name at my college paper, The Flat Hat, when I was 17.

    In one instance, I have been accused me of passing off P.J. O’Rourke’s writing as my own in a column for the paper. But the truth is that I had met P.J. at a Republican event and asked his permission to do a college-specific version of his classic piece on partying. He granted permission, the piece was cleared with my editors at the paper, and it ran as inspired by O’Rourke’s original.

    My critics have also accused me of plagiarism in multiple movie reviews for the college paper. I once caught an editor at the paper inserting a line from The New Yorker (which I read) into my copy and protested. When that editor was promoted, I resigned. Before that, insertions had been routinely made in my copy, which I did not question. I did not even at that time read the publications from which I am now alleged to have lifted material. When these insertions were made, I assumed, like most disgruntled writers would, that they were unnecessary but legitimate editorial additions.

    But all these specifics are beside the point. Considering that all of this happened almost eight years ago, and that there are no files or notes that I’ve kept from that brief stint, it is simply my word against the liberal blogosphere on these examples. It becomes a matter of who you believe.

    The truth is, a more responsible teenager would’ve nipped this sort of thing in the bud. A less sloppy writer would have made sure that material copied from other places never made it into a published piece, and never necessitated apologies or explanations that will do nothing to stop the critics. I was wrong not to do so.

    Ben shares with W. an inability to admit mistakes. Can you say Sociopath?

  • Ed,

    When did the TV begin the practice of representing Republican (states) with the color red?

    Its rooted in the presidential elections. A while back the networks agreed to use the two colors to show which states were going for which party. I can’t remember all the details on how the Dems ended up with blue and the GOP with red, but that’s the basis of the current pairing. I believe Kevin Drum (political animal blog at washington monthly)( had a post on it quite a while back; his search functionality is pretty good though if you are interested enough to look for it.

  • In Ben’s response [Thanks Rege!] he says that some plagiarized material was put into his stories without his knowledge by the editor of the college paper. Says he thought they were: unnecessary but legitimate editorial additions.

    Editorial INSERTIONS? Right. An “unnecessary but legitimate editorial insertion” is called a filler. Editors have a ready supply of them of all sizes to insert at the end of a piece that doesn’t run quite long enough to fill its alloted space. No editor, not even a college editor, would crib material from a New Yorker article and drop it into someone else’s story. To say otherwise is — to steal a phrase — incredible. But that’s beside the point. I’m sure someone in the next day or two will track down that editor and ask him or her to verify Ben’s version of the facts. I’m looking forward to it.

  • When did the TV begin the practice of representing Republican (states) with the color red?

    I have the sort of mind that traps a lot of information. Most of it useless. Here is what is stuck in my mind on this topic.
    My understanding of the color code is that it alternates from presidential election to presidential election. One cycle the incumbent party is Red. The next cycle the challenging party is red. In 2000 the incumbent color was blue. This made the Republican states red. In 2004 the incumbent color shifted to red, but this time the Republicans were the incumbent party. Hence the Republican state were again red. In 2008, if this convention is still used, Republican States will shift to blue.

  • What an arrogant idiot. Does he claim not to have written those movie reviews? Anyone who had anything to do with that should be held criminally liable. It’s such an obvious high school version of plagiarism, where a few sentences are slightly changed. I mean, if you are going to do that little, why bother? It’s truly pathetic. And to think that he could get this far and not realize that the one day he tries to legitimize himself by associating with a real (although this is now debatable) media source, someone might actually have the thought of giving him a thorough vetting. Obviously this is one Gen Y moron who isnt as up on technology as he should be. There are so many ways now to catch a plagiarist, and its so easy, that to not realize he would get caught eventually just shows you how stupid he is. And the fact that he is home schooled is probably why he has been inculcated rather than educated. His views are straight from his pathetic dad, who has given him everything he has ever needed, so he figures he might has well take what else he needs. Too bad his daddy couldnt bestow talent upon him, since he didnt have it to give either. And you wonder why these types hate public education – it’s directly because in public schooling someone might actually have to confront the narrowmindedness of their ideas. The best way to make racists is to have racists parents, just like the best way to make a moron is to keep him isolated from reality. This is just so pathetic on so many levels. His trying to wriggle out of it is the icing on the cake. Just shows you what a jerk he is. The similarities he shares with today’s administration are fascinating. The same haughtiness, the same ignorance, the same disregard for reality, the same loathing of the left, or anyone who examines things past the surface, the same failure to be responsible for anything. An amazing story – one that is a true symbol of how low we have sunk.

  • Is it blogging, technology, cronyism, the breakdown of meritocracy or something else that is allowing this sort of muck to bubble to the surface and almost achieve legitamacy, or has the rest of the political landscape and media sunk so low as to be indistinguishable from the ordinary rubbish that used to just pass around between disgruntled moronic and bitter nobodys?

  • One of the truly fascinating things Ive seen in a while is the commentary on Ben’s rebuttal of the charges against him, that he recently posted on redamerica. Almost invariably, there is a tone of faith, “we believe in you, Ben”, and a blatant disregard for the facts in the matter. A few wingnuts are trying to spin the conspiracy angle – that the editors set him up by posting his name to work that they plagiarized. Take a look. It’s rather illuminating, in that there is no way that (no matter how many smoking guns you might produce) these people will ever turn against their poster boy. Another worries about digital thuggery – awwwww, poor gentle Ben is being beat up by the reality police. Many just try to say that Ben’s effectiveness brought out the left’s hate against him. No, sorry folks, it’s not Ben we hate – he’s probably a likeable guy – but we wont put up with what he stands for – lies, irresponsibility, incompetence, denial. Here is a particularly useful comment :

    “I repeat: Should the entire American Left fall over dead tomorrow, I would rejoice, and order pizza to celebrate. They are not my countrymen; they are animals who happen to walk upright and make noises that approximate speech. They are below human. I look forward to seeing each and every one in Hell.” — Mike Krempasky (aka Moron)

    I guess he expects he is going to hell, or perhaps he’s just to stupid to realize what he wrote. Or perhaps he thinks he has some sort of Hellviewer. Lovely sentiments all around. Come to think about it, he’s right on one point – they are not his countrymen – because the people taking down Ben live in a counrty based on the truth, and Mike obviously has no clue about this and belongs elsewhere.

  • The supporters of Ben have this one thing in common – their allegiance is to God/Jesus, and that then passes on to anyone who, like them, also holds allegiance to God. They then must therefore believe fully in not just God, but also all those of faith. The facts matter not. Faith does not rely on facts, facts are awkward, troubling, and are thus banished as irrelevant. All allegiance is to leaders (of which Ben appears to be deemed as such) from the top down (God/Bush/Cheney/Frist/hack/crony/stooge/Ben) , to whatever pathetic young kid happens to be at the bottom of the faith heirarchy. There is no amount of truth that can get in the way, if that truth is based on earthly fact, since the only truth these people adhere to is scripture – God, Bush, Ben, say it is so, therefore it is. This is truly scary stuff, but it all fits together quite nicely. The reason it works is that these are not people that can handle the truth of our modern world – because if that truth shows them that their blind allegiance to the tenets of their faith could possibly be wrong, their whole system of belief crumbles to dust and they are left without their crutches, toppling over. It’s like a giant cult of personality, from God on down to Ben. The problem is, there is no way to argue against these people. You could show a video tape of Ben plagiarizing at his computer, and they would still deem it a conspiracy. Continuing down this path will lead us to abandon principles and ideas, and put our allegiance in our leaders, men or women, and at that point, we creep back to the dark ages and authoritarianism.

  • Following the Red State commentary on this is really fascinating. One poster pointed out Ben D’s incredibly obvious movie review plagiarism on NRO; his respondent replied citing a music review column. Then an entire thread changed the subject. Amazing–my preschooler used to play a game like this. He’d cover his own eyes and say, “You can’t see me!” ‘Course he was two at the time. The Bushbots still love that game. Sheesh.

  • I love Josh Marshal’s comment in response to Benny’s ‘at least you weren’t bashing America’ salvo:

    Ben, thank you. Thank you for taking all these blows on America’s behalf. Thank you lifting passages out of other people’s prose so America could take a breather. Thank you for slandering cherished American heroes for America’s sake.

    Most of all, though, Ben, thank you for illustrating Dr. Johnson’s dictum that ‘patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.’

    Vainglory, today, thy name is Ben.

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