Analysis

When the Guardian was a Zionist newspaper

Charles Prestwich Scott, one the paper’s most revered editors, stood down 90 years ago this month. Ironically, he was an ardent Zionist

July 24, 2019 18:14
How the Guardian covered the 2014 Gaza war
6 min read

When Shuli Davidovich departed from her job as press secretary to the Israeli Embassy in London in 2006, she fired a parting shot at one of her old sparring partners. 

“For some people, especially on papers such as the Guardian … the human face of the Israeli doesn’t exist,” she said in an interview. “It’s always the helmet, the rifle, the aggressor, the occupier.”

Its coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Guardian itself admits, is perhaps the most controversial aspect of the paper’s editorial output. “It comes under closer scrutiny than any other topic,” a leader column suggested, “with every word we publish being studied by self-appointed monitors on both sides”. 

In truth, it is the accusation that the paper is inherently biased in its coverage of Israel, adopting at times an anti-Zionist agenda, which rests at the heart of this controversy.

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