AllSides Media Bias Rating™: Center
29835/31668
-0.20
Center What does this mean?
How we determined this rating:
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Independent Review
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Editorial Review: Sep 2023
See AlsoWall Street Journal - Bias and CredibilityThese are the most and least biased news outlets in the US, according to AmericansThis chart will tell you how biased your favorite news source isResearch Guides: "Fake News," Lies and Propaganda: How to Sort Fact from Fiction: Where do news sources fall on the political bias spectrum? - Community Feedback: ratings
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Blind Survey: Aug 2023, Jul 2021, Jan 2013
- AllSides has high confidence in this bias rating.
Unless otherwise noted, this bias rating refers only to online news coverage, not TV, print, or radio content.
Learn about our bias rating methods
Bias Rating | Center |
Type | News Media |
Region | National |
Owner | Dow Jones & Company (a division of News Corp.) |
Website | wsj.com |
@WSJ | |
wsj | |
Wikipedia | Wall Street Journal (News) |
Ballotpedia | Wall Street Journal (News) |
What a Center Bias Rating Means
The source either does not show much media bias, displays a balance of articles with left and right biases, or equally balances left and right perspectives in its reporting.
Center doesn't mean better! A Center media bias rating does not necessarily mean a source is totally unbiased, neutral, perfectly reasonable, or credible, just as Left and Right don't necessarily mean extreme, wrong, unreasonable, or not credible. AllSides encourages people to read outlets across the political spectrum.
Learn more about Center ratings
Go to Wall Street Journal (News)
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Contents
- About Wall Street Journal (News)'s Bias Rating
- What a "Center" Rating Means
- Bias Reviews
- Community Feedback
- Confidence Level
- Additional Information
- Articles from Wall Street Journal (News)
About Wall Street Journal (News)'s Bias Rating
Wall Street Journal (News) is featured on the AllSides Media Bias Chart™.
Wall Street Journal (News) is a news media source with an AllSides Media Bias Rating™ of Center.
Note: AllSides rates the media bias of The Wall Street Journal's editorial/opinion pages separately. This page refers to the media bias of Wall Street Journal's news section only.
What a "Center" Rating Means
Sources with an AllSides Media Bias Rating of Center either do not show much predictable media bias, display a balance of articles with left and right biases, or equally balance left and right perspectives.
Center doesn't mean better! A Center media bias rating does not necessarily mean a source is totally unbiased, neutral, perfectly reasonable, or credible, just as Left and Right don't necessarily mean extreme, wrong, unreasonable, or not credible. AllSides encourages people to read outlets across the political spectrum.
Learn more about Center ratingsBias Reviews
We use multiple methods to analyze sources. Learn how we rate media bias.
- Wall Street Journal Rated Lean Left in Aug. 2023 Blind Bias Survey; AllSides Keeps Center Rating Following Sept. 2023Editorial Review
- Wall Street Journal Rated Center in June 2023 Independent Review
- Wall Street Journal Rated Center in July 2021 AllSides Blind Bias Survey
- Wall Street Journal Rated Center in 2013 AllSides Blind Bias Survey
Wall Street Journal Rated Lean Left in Aug. 2023 Blind Bias Survey; AllSides Keeps Center Rating Following Sept. 2023 Editorial Review
The Wall Street Journal was rated Lean Left (-2.76). A total of 792 people rated WSJ. AllSides conducted an Editorial Review and opted to keep WSJ's bias rating as Center (-0.2).
Respondents who rated their own bias as Left, Lean Left, Center, and Right rated WSJ as Lean Left; respondents with a Lean Right bias rated it Left. Republicans rated WSJ as Left; Democrats and Indpendents rated it Lean Left.
During the Editorial Review, a multipartisan AllSides panel of reviewers on the left, center, and right determined WSJ has a Center bias. While the team noted very slight instances of Lean Left bias, they were minor, and most pieces did not show bias. The panel theorized that the Blind Bias Survey results were due to the inclusion of content that did appear to Lean Left.Headlines from WSJ included in the blind survey included but were not limited to:Earth Just Had Its Hottest Month Ever. How Six Cities Are Coping,The Legal Assault on Corporate Diversity Efforts Has Begun,Senate Passes Defense Bill, Setting Up Fight Over Abortion, Transgender Care, andThe Most Notable Passages in the DOJ’s Indictment of Trump. Blind Bias Surveys show respondents a small snapshot of content from an outlet in time; AllSides often couplessurveys with Editorial Reviews, which allow a panel to see a wider swath of content and taken over a longer timeline.
The Editorial Review found very slight word choice bias but also much balance.Twopiecesabout immigration were seen as describing immigration fairly and in a balanced way, with both sides described or polarizing descriptors avoided; pieces about criminal cases against Donald Trump used the word "allegedly" generously or did not show bias. Examples of slight Lean Left bias included apiece about the German right-wingthat was seen as leaning slightly left for tying conservative views to extremism and QAnon (however, a Lean Right reviewer noted the photos were fair and not biased);a piece about a floating border wall only provided one quote from lawmakers in favor of it;a piece about abortion lawsused language calling limited abortion access a "threat," and thussetup a threat/protection dynamic that a Center reviewer stated "could easily be flipped to the other side, where the abortion is the threat and the ban is the protection."
Wall Street Journal Rated Center in June 2023 Independent Review
An independent review of Wall Street Journal's news articles by an AllSides bias reviewer in June 2023 affirmed AllSides' Center rating.
Headlines and story choices showed o clear trends in bias. WSJ attributed all claims to a source and did not use analysis presented as fact, subjective qualifying adjectives, or other types of bias.
A sample of headlines reviewed included:
- Trump Campaigns On Under Legal Shadow
- The Russian Soldier Who Surrendered to a Ukrainian Drone
- Bud Light Loses Title as Top-Selling U.S. Beer
- Can Corporate America and the GOP Patch Things Up?
- Trump Allies Take Out Anger on FBI Headquarters Project
Wall Street Journal Rated Center in July 2021 AllSides Blind Bias Survey
In the July 2021 AllSides Blind Bias Survey, in which people across the political spectrum rated content from WSJ's news section without knowing the source, theaverage ratingwas Center.
On average, 1,195 people rated WSJ as Center. A majority of people who self-identified as having a Left, Lean Left, Center, or Lean Right bias rated WSJ as Center; a plurality of people with a Right biased rated it Center, with the second most common response for WSJ being Lean Right.
Wall Street Journal Rated Center in 2013 AllSides Blind Bias Survey
A 2013 AllSides Blind Bias Surveyreturned a Center bias rating for the Wall Street Journal.See more explanation of the 2013 blind bias survey results here.
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Community Feedback
Feedback does not determine ratings, but may trigger deeper review.
As of September 2024, people have voted on the AllSides Media Bias Rating for Wall Street Journal (News). On average, those who disagree with our rating think this source has a Center bias.
In late 2013 (Dec. 12, 2013), the majority of the AllSides community voted in agreement with the Center rating. As of May 15, 2016, over 4,000 votes from AllSides Community members showed the majority disagreed with the rating, but was evenly split on whether The Wall Street Journal news was Left or Right. The average of those votes was Center, with a raw score of 48.5 (with 50 representing perfect Center).
Confidence Level
Confidence is determined by how many reviews have been applied and consistency of data.
As of September 2024, AllSides has high confidence in our Center rating for Wall Street Journal (News). Two or more bias reviews have affirmed this rating or the source is transparent about bias.
Additional Information
The Wall Street Journal is an international, business-focused, daily newspaper based in New York City and the second-largest newspaper in the US by circulation. A division of News Corp and published six days a week by Dow Jones & Company, the Journal is the most widely circulated newspaper in the United States. It has printed continuously since it was founded by Charles Dow, Edward Jones, and Charles Bergstresser on July 8, 1889. Daily editions of the newspaper are posted on its website, which also includes Home, World, U.S., Politics, Economy, Business, Tech, Market, Arts, Life, Real Estate and Opinion sections. The paper has won 39 Pulitzer Prizes.
Political Bias of WSJ Audience
A 2014 Pew Research Center survey, Where Audiences Fit on the Political Spectrum, found the Wall Street Journal's audience is "roughly evenly distributed across the ideological spectrum," with 21% of consumers being mostly liberal, 24% being of mixed political persuasion, and 22% being mostly conservative.
Third Party Studies and Commentson WSJBias
In a 2005 academic study, Tim Groseclose, a former professor of political science at UCLA, developed a measure, the Slant Quotient (S.Q.), a number that shows how often a news outlet cites one or more of some 200 think tanks. The bigger the S.Q., the more liberal the news outlet. He found the Wall Street Journal is left of center, with a 55.1 SQ. For comparison, he found the most liberal newspaper to be the Detroit Free Press (S.Q. = 81.5) and the New York Times to be very liberal (67.3). He found WSJ to be more liberal thanNPRorThe New York Times. In the full report published in the November 2005 issue of the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the author notes:
"Irvine and Kincaid [2001] note that “The Journal has had a long-standing separation between its conservative editorial pages and its liberal news pages.” Sperry [2002] notes that the news division of the Journal sometimes calls the editorial division “Nazis.” “Fact is,” Sperry writes, “the Journal’s news and editorial departments are as politically polarized as North and South Korea.”"
Some on the left, such as writers for Slate,have claimed the newspaper acquired a rightward slant after falling under the control of Rupert Murdoch and News Corp in 2007.Othersbelieve the news section to be balanced — according to CNN in 2007, theJournal's "newsroom staff has a reputation for non-partisan reporting."
A 2021 article in the Columbia Journalism Review said WSJ had "dug in its heels" during the Trump era by "adhering to old habits, and devising coverage that suits right-wing readers." According to the article, WSJ reporters "complain that editors modulate the tone of political stories and set limits on subject matter."
The CJR article quoted a WSJ staffer, who said, "We cover race insofar as it’s not a comparison and it won’t offend our white readers," adding"We’ll write a story that says Latinos are buying more homes. But we won’t write a story saying sellers are more willing to sell to white buyers." However, Matt Murray, the then-editor-in-chief of the Journal, denied any "aggressive monitoring of political coverage."
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Wall Street Journal (News) Ownership and Funding
Funding and ownership do not influence bias ratings. We rate the bias of content only.
Owner: Dow Jones & Company (a division of News Corp.)
In 2007, Rupert Murdoch's News Corpbought the Wall Street Journal with the $5 billion purchase of its parent company, Dow Jones & Company. News Corpis the owner of hundreds of national and international publishing outlets including theNew York PostandFox News, many of which have a reputation for leaning right.
Financing and ownership information last updated February 22, 2021. If you think this information is out of date or needs to be updated, please contact us.
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