### Editorial - Writing by Ate PDF
### Editorial - Writing by Ate PDF
### Editorial - Writing by Ate PDF
BY
Dedication
Forward
Acknowledge
Chapter One
Meaning of Editorial
Editorial Writers
Chapter Two
Types of Editorials
Functions Editorials
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Editorial Audience
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Bibliography
CHAPTER 1
MEANING OF EDITORIAL
The mass media as a social institution is a court of public opinion.
Through Radio, TV, Newspaper expressed to members of the public. The mass
media also serve as an avenue for marketing of ideas as they determine public
thinking and set agenda for public discourse. The media is a tool for altitudinal
change and public orientation.
Editorials in print media especially newspaper have profound powers of
bringing robust change in the society. This chapter takes a look at the meaning
of editorial.
The term editorial is defined by different scholars and professional from
different perspectives. A veteran Newspaper editor, William Allen White once
described editorial as “an expression of opinion based on factors which present
truth in a new light; something that everyone knows which no one ever thought
of.”
Lion Flint in his book, The Editorial sees editorial as an expression of the
editor while M. Spencer captured the subject matter as “a presentation of facts
and opinion in concise, logical, pleasing order for the sake of entertaining or
interpreting significant news in such a way that its importance to the average
reader will be clear.”
The opinion function of the mass media has made editorial writing a
celebrated concept for serious-minded newspapers just as news commentary is
to broadcast media. From historical angle, the term editorial used to mean an
article written by the Editor. In the early part of the nineteenth century, a notion
of journalistic objectivity was developed. It was reasoned that there was need to
separate news from the editor’s opinion. This was to enable the reader to be
exposed to news without fear or favour and to give the opinion column
appropriate labeling.
As far back in 1830, the term editorial was used as a label to designate a
statement of the editor’s opinion. Later in the 20th century, the history of
editorials witnessed a remarkable breakthrough. Around this period, newspapers
across the globe had designated a separate editorial page for editorials and
letters to the editor.
This distinctive location or positioning of the editorial page around this
era is worth noting. It is always in a left hand page, usually in the front section.
Today, modern newspapers have expanded, dignified and enriched the
editorial page to an extent that they use the facing page for lengthier opinions by
columnist and guest writers. This is known as op-ed, meaning, opposite the
editorial page.
Editorial as a concept conveys deeper meaning. Iyorkyaa (1996) defines
editorials as “a journalistic essay which attempts to: (a) inform or explain; (b)
persuade or convince; (c) stimulate insight in an entertaining or humorous
manner.”
Okoro, N &Agbo, B (2003) looked at editorial as “a critical evaluation,
interpretation and presentation of significant, contemporary events in such a
way as to inform, educate, entertain and influence the reader.” According to
them, an editorial affords a publication the opportunity to be more than just a
“work factory”, something more than a common information carrier. This
opportunity enables the publication to exercise a positive force in its area of
circulation.
Simply put, editorial is a corporate opinion, voice or expression of media
organizations on topical issues of public significance. It is a robust article by a
news organization, which expresses an opinion rather than attempting to simply
report news. Because of this, an editorial is supposed to be devoid of biases.
A lot of factors determine the taste and direction of an editorial in a
newspaper set-up. Interpretation of opinion in newspaper industry is
fundamentally guided by the policy and philosophy of the newspaper.
Ownership influence is also a cardinal factor that determines the direction which
an editorial canoe could be paddled to.
It is important for us to take a look at two editorials, for a deeper
appreciation of the subject matter.
Sample 1: Unlimited Campaign Expenses
No association, other than a political party, shall canvass for votes for any
candidate at any election or contribute to the funds of any political party or to
the election expenses of any candidate at an election – section 221 of the 1999
Constitution.
The implications of the law quoted above are obvious. The spirit of the
law must have been to make the electioneering terrain more even for all and not
allow money to dominate politic which should essentially be a battle of ideas.
How were these laws observed in these elections? They were serially
breached as was the case in the elections since1999. The Independent National
Electoral Commission, INEC, which is meant to effect compliance, seems
unaware of the law. Obviously, many of the presidential candidates, many who
sought office of governor, and legislators smashed the limits.
Noting will happen to the offenders because INEC has not been prompted
about the importance of this law. or is INEC concerned the law would affect
some of the favoured candidates? INEC’s lack of interest in this law, is contrary
to its tenacious contention of some constitutional provisions, of a draining
engagement that contributed immensely to fracturing the elections?
INEC again turned a blind eye to the violations of these provisions. The
result was that there were various groups raising funds for the benefit of some
candidates, in the same way that Corporate Nigeria did for President Olusegun
Obasanjo in 2003.
It is not just against the law for candidates to unleashed humongous
amounts of money on campaign; it also foretells the tendency of such candidate
if they get into office. How else will they recover their investment or reward
those who contributed to their war chest?
Another salient issue would be the source of the money. How would we
be sure that money from dubious sources was not mobilized for the elections?
Sections 225 and 226 of the constitution mandates INEC to audit the accounts
of political parties annually and gives INEC powers to seize funding from
abroad. Has INEC done these? Why is it uninterested on how parties and
candidates are funded?
INEC’s self-appraisal that has awarded it high marks, for conducting
elections that it would appear INEC was reluctant to execute, is an indication of
the laxity with which INEC approached an important assignment.
If INEC knew the Constitution’s expectations from it, it would bury its
head in shame over its conduct of these elections that have marked Nigeria out
again as an undeveloping nation. The most nauseating part of it is that INEC is
really celebrating this success.
Source: Vanguard, Wednesday April 25, 2007
Sample 2: Etteh and the multi-million Naira renovation scandal
Less than three months after assuming office, the speaker of the House of
Representatives, Mrs. Patricia Olubunmi Etteh, is already in the midst of a
sickening scandal. She is alleged to have spent a whopping N628 million to
renovate her official residence, as well as that of her deputy, Babangida
Ngurojeh. Amidst the crossfire, the Chairman, House Committee on
Information and National Orientation, Dino Melaye,said that an approval of
N232 (not N238 million or N628 million) was sought and got for the renovation
of the speaker’s official residence alone. This claim has been debunked.
Even then, what is the difference if the issue is that the amount
(whichever of the two) was spent on renovation? That contract for the jobs were
allegedly advertised only on the notice board of the National Assembly
compounds the situation.
But a scandal of such magnitude should have no place in this era of
transparency. It therefore should not be a surprise that some other members of
the House of Representatives are angry over the matter, with some threatening
an earthquake (in a country which has never experienced this kind of natural
disaster) when the matter is brought before the House for discussion after its
recess on September 4.
Even if the official quarters renovated were of Arabian-night standard in
terms of opulence and size, they should not have gulped the amount of money
expended on them. Would it not have cost the nation far less to build, outright,
new apartments for the two principal officers?
Even if Melaye’s claim of an approval of N232m were true, there is still
something fundamentally wrong with the way public funds are wasted or stolen,
especially through inflated contracts.
This renovation imbroglio stinks to high heavens, and only a diligent
probe can remove the odour. Right now, the buck has been passed to Mr.
President to clear the filthy air, that is to say how much he knows about this
buzzing, booming confusion and tell us whether he approved of this colossal
expenditure for the renovation as claimed by some of Etteh’s supporters. It is
not the problem of the House alone as the president claimed.
The real problem in this ugly episode is people’s over-reliance on
government largesse. Chief Obafemi Awolowo has said it all when he advised
people never to enjoy in government what they cannot enjoy in their private
lives. It is very unlikely that any national person would want to spend as much
as that to renovate an official residence if such money were to come from a
private purse. All public officials must imbibe Awo’s stated ideal as the
beginning of wisdom as far as spending of public money is concerned.
This scandal is a litmus test for the House of Representatives resumes
today from recess. This is not a ‘family affair.’
Source: The nation, Tuesday, September 4, 2007
EDITORIAL WRITERS
Editorial writing is not a one-man show. It is a product of collective
deliberations arrived at through the consensus of editorial board member.
In some newspaper establishments, editorial writing is mainly the task of
Editorial Page Editor who is assisted by other editorial writers within an
organization. This therefore means that if a writer is assigned to write an
editorial, he/she must submit the piece to the editorial page editor who in turn
edits it before it gets published. The Editorial Page Editor is usually an
experienced and knowledgeable fellow, a tested and acknowledge person in the
art and science of editorial writing.
In some newspaper organizations, editorial writers are usually drawn
from different professional and intellectual backgrounds. They are pooled
together under the auspices of editorial board members. Such men of high
intellectual prowess are appointed by media establishments based on their
reputation and analytical powers of complex and topical issues.
Under such arrangement, the editorial board chairman, usually appointed
on merit often preside over the editorial board meetings. The editorial board
chairman assign topics to other editorialists and also edits their works. As a rule
of the thumb, the editorial board members must submit their write-ups to the
editorial board for microscopic scrutiny before publication.
Whether editorials are written internally by in-house board members of a
newspaper outfit or written by external board members, one thing is certain: the
topics mu8st be topical. The topics are usually selected and discussed at
brainstorming sessions after which they are endorsed for publication by editorial
board members.
Editorial board members, especially the external ones, are entitled to
certain allowances or honorariums depending on the financial strength of the
media organization.
Generally speaking, a good editorial writer must posses the following
qualities:
i. Intellectual curiosity:- This refers to the ability to probe issues from
academic and critical point of view.
Samples 1: The ASUU strike: A post-mortem
Following the personal intervention of President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua,
the prolonged and debilitating strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff
Union of Universities (ASUU) to press home its demands for improved working
conditions was suspended during the weekend. In the words of the ASUU
President, specially, the last strike declared on March 26, 2007 “is the direct
outcome of consistent Nigerian Governments’ neglect and refusal to pay the
necessary attention to education particularly the University system”, now on the
verge of collapse.
Across the country, undergraduates and parents heaved a sigh of relief.
Parents who had been distraught over their wards’ prolonged stay at home were
indeed relieved that the Ya’Adua administration with support from other well-
meaning Nigerians, had managed to persuade without concretely addressing the
issues in contention. It is possible a deal was reached between the President and
the Union.
Source: Extract from the Guardian’s editorial, Tuesday, July 5, 2007.
ii. Analytical mind: The editorial writer must be able to look deep at the
pros and cons of an issue and harmonies both the opposing and supportive
variables in an editorial superstructure.
Sample 2: Naira and Soludonomics
Three years after Professor Chukwuma Soludo, Governor of the Central
Bank of Nigeria, CBN, announced a bang that compressed the number of
Nigerian banks from 89 to 25, he has come with another shocker, probably more
resounding and shocking than the first.
While consolidation, as the firming up of the capital base of banks to 25
billion naira was known, was a policy in the files of CBN before Soludo’s
arrival, its quick implementation against vociferous oppositions, from those
who reminded him that he was not a banker bore the marks of Soludo. Nigerians
were introduced to Soludonomics, a brand of economics with soludo’s
signature.
Source: Extracts from Vanguard’s editorial, August 20, 2007
iii. Mastery of language:- An editorialist must have a good command of the
language in which the editorial is to be written: For English speaking
audience for instance, a good command of English language is a non-
negotiable factor. It is, indeed, a child of necessity.
Sample 3: Between Honour and Sychophancy
In recent times, President Ibrahim Babagida has been a recipient of
several awards, commemorations and proposed honorary degrees. In many
states of the federation, many major streets and public buildings have been
named after him. Monuments of historical significance have also had their
original names replaced with President Babagida’s name. When a leader is so
recognized, he and his programmers are assumed to be popular .Every leader
craves for such recognition.
Source: Extracts from The Guardian’s editorial, June 9, 1991
iv. Care for details:- In editorial writing, issues are supposed to be
logically and meticulously trashed. It is only people who care for details
that can unveil tiny but significant molecules underlying any conceptual
phenomenon under probe.
Sample 4: Happiest people on Earth
The recently published study, by the British New Scientist magazine,
which rates Nigerians as the happiest people on earth, appeared at first glance to
be funny. On closer reflection, it is curious, thought-provoking, confounding
and at the same time controversial. How on earth can you anyone conduct a
study and come up with a determination that the happiest people in world live in
Nigeria? This is a country that is fast attainting the status of a failed or failing
state. This is a country where nothing seems to work. This is a country where a
lot natural resources and huge human potential which is for 43 years have been
so mismanaged as to render majority of citizens among the poorest in the world.
No other country perhaps surpasses Nigeria in the record of confounding and
bizarre events. These range from murder of a federal attorney-general, to the
unconstitutional abduction and attempt to remove an elected governor. This is
also the trivializing of serious national issues as “family affair”, bribery and
corruption in high places and of course, protracted inter-ethnic wars as wells as
frequent anti –people policies that tend to deepened the abject poverty in land.
Nigerians are presently embattled with high prices of fuel, which nonetheless is
unavailable. Yet in the midst of penury, a handful of elite live a glamorous and
extravagant lifestyle comparable with the richest and the best in the world. The
list of ludicrous episodes in the country is endless. Such incidents occur with
striking regularity and frequency that is rare.
Source: Extracts from the Guardian’s editorial, October 12, 2003.
v. Good knowledge and professional skills of writing for the mass media:
The fact that somebody is a professor or a doctorate degree holder in an area does
not automatically make him/her a good editorial writer. In-fact, there are some
academics who can make a monumental mockery of editorial writing if they are not
drilled in the art of writing for the mass media. An editorial writer ought to
understand the workings of mass media outfits including the house style of the
establishment he/she is writing for. The knowledge of writing for the mass media is
very crucial for any editorial writer.
Sample 5: The President, Media and Nation Building
If reports in the media of a recent meeting between President Olusegun
Obasanjo and the Nigerian Guild of editors are anything to go by, the meeting
obviously was one-sided. The president reportedly told the visiting editors that
their media organizations are still involved in “militant journalism” the era of
which according to the number one citizen is gone. The president used the
occasion to advise journalists against practices that are not in the interest of
Nigeria. He specifically canvass for development journalism, stressing that as
an instrument of nation building, the media should form a partnership with the
government in fostering peace, unity and development in the country.
..It would seem that the publication of these public reactions along with
analyses and interpretation by the media is what government considers “militant
journalism.” The government ought to realize however that the media work is
incomplete if it only reports government to the public without reporting the
public to government.
From Mr. President’s tone, government would rather that the media did
not report public reactions. This is not feasible.
Source: Extracts from the Guardian’s editorial, November 7, 2003
vi. Rational Reasoning: Editorial writing is a serious-minded business for
serious-minded people. It is a house that cannot be built on bricks of
emotionalism which cannot stand erect in the sea of reasoning. Strong and
profound editorials can only be built on rational and logical raw materials mixed
with concrete facts.
Sample 6: JAMB and remedial programmes
The announcement by the Registrar of Joint Admissions and
Matriculation Board (JAMB), Professor Adedibu Ojerinde that remedial
programmes in Polytechnic, monotechnics and Universities will no longer be
accepted for admission of students into higher education for many young
persons.
Professor Ojerinde says this has become necessary in order to protect the
integrity of the admission process. While the point about integrity is
inconvertible, the country should be more interested in broadening access to
education. Constricting the already limited space should be an option as we
strive to develop the education sector.
..The matter is not as simple as the JAMB registrar has made it to appear.
JAMB should be more interested in raising the integrity its examinations and
confidence in its ability to conduct reliable tests. Too many of our qualified
young men and women have been frustrated by procedural difficulties that they
encounter in sitting for JAMB examinations. The NUC, JAMB and the higher
institutions should work towards expanding the space for thousands who want
to enjoy the benefit of a university education, without compromising standards.
Source: Extracts from the Guardian’s editorial, August 23, 2007
CHAPTER 2
TYPES OF EDITORIALS
Generally, editorials fall into four broad area namely: news, policy, social
and special. However, just as a typical editorial parade three major parts the
introduction, the body and the conclusion. Three types of editorials can be
identified. These are:
1. Interpretative Editorials
2. Controversial Editors
3. Explanatory Editorials
1. INTERPRETATIVE EDITORIALS: These kinds of editorials are
written primarily to explain issue at stake by placing facts and figures at the
door post of readers for proper illumination of the day’s intelligence. Here, the
editorial could be positive, negative or even neutral in posture or approach.
Sample of Interpretative Editorial: Nigeria’s future
A report by a US intelligence agency on the future of Nigeria by 2020
has generated concerns. The global report of the US National intelligence
Council examined the social, political and economic future of countries and
continents, identified areas of strengths and weakness worth consolidating or
redressing, and made some projections.
Specifically, the report predicted that Nigeria might break up within 15
years disregard people’s wish and insist on an unworkable union. According
to the report, the country’s “leaders are locked up in a bad marriage that all
dislike but dare not leave.” The document expresses the possibility of “a
junior officer coup that destabilize the country to the extent that open warfare
breaks out in many parts in a sustained manner;” adding rightly that a failed
Nigeria will be difficult to reconstitute.
The report also notes that Africa’s hope of benefitting from
globalization will depend on the extent to which each country improves
governance, reins in corruption, resolve conflicts and firms up the rule of law.
Leadership, the report says, will be the key to progress for sub-Saharan
countries that are lucky to evolve it. The report does not spare the US, which
it says might lose its global economic dominance to upcoming China and
India.+
While dismissing the report as a ‘’glib talk” by detractors, president
Olusegun has confessed that the gloomy forecast poses a serious challenge
to him and all Nigerians. He has, therefore, passes the report to the national
Assembly for action.
There is no doubt that almost everyone wants a united Nigeria. But
the injustices that precipitated the 30-month civil war in 1967 appear to have
grown deeper and more widespread. Over the years, successive governments
have failed to forge a national identity. So, the citizens still feel more
comfortable sticking to their ethnic identities. Since democracy reemerged in
1999, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed in ethno-religious
crises that sprouted from the unsettled national question over indigene/settler
dichotomy. There are standing ethnic militias in the north, south, east and
west. Just recently, President Obasanjo reportedly gave out several millions
of naira as ransom to stave off the threat to blow up oil installation by a Niger
Delta militia group.
Expect the deceitful ones, therefore, only a few would require a US
intelligence to predict that Nigeria’s fragile unity may snap if urgent steps are
not taken to redress a flawed and unjust structure that has only fueled mass
poverty and frustration. For now, the ruling class may continue to delude
itself that there are no dangers ahead. Blinded by the filthy reward they get
from a corrupt and dysfunctional system, the nation’s unruly politicians often
wrongly assume that the citizens will forever tolerate injustice via rigged
elections; executive rascality in flagrantly disobeying Supreme Court verdicts;
and abuse of incumbency powers to brutalize or kill political opponents.
Obasanjo ‘s anger that government’s ongoing promising reforms were not
reckoned with in foreseeing a brighter future for Nigeria is instructive. But
the truth is the reforms are half-hearted and so yield slow, insignificant and
unnoticeable returns. Six years of reforms, for instance, has produced a more
epileptic regime of power supply, posing a serious threat to industrialization
and job creation. That is just one indication that the nation‘s economy is far
from being export-oriented and, therefore, vulnerable to the adverse impacts
of globalization.
To prevent the doomsday forecast from being fulfilled, the nation’s
leaders must be bold enough to dismantle an unjust fiscal structure that has
alienated the constituent parts. The nation’s unity depends on how quickly the
centre is whittled down for a truly federal Nigerian state to emerge.
Source: The punch, June 2, 2005.
2. Controversial Editorials: Controversial editorials are written with the
particular mission or mandate to propagate a particular or specific point
of view. Such editorials attempt to convince the reader on the desirability
or inevitability of a particular issue while painting the opposing side in
bad light. These kinds of editorials are either positive or negative. There
is no room for neutrality in such editorials because they can out rightly or
support or oppose an issue with all vehemence. Sample of Controversial
Editorial - Kalu’s Comedy of Errors
The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) is undoubtedly a big party. Its
bigness derives from a lot of variables. These variables include, size,
geographical spread, membership and even quality of individual members. For a
country whose previous democratic collapse could be party traced to the failure
of electoral politics, the PDP held hope for the sustenance of democracy in
Nigeria.