On Wikipedia, articles on topics relating to persons, groups, and events that fall into political or ideological arenas may attract a great deal of editor attention, particularly if there are recent or ongoing debates or controversies surrounding that topic as presented in the mass media. Editors should use a great deal of care to handle these articles as to avoid getting caught up in the furor of typical news reporting on these topics. Such article must still be written following all content policies, and should only include information that has appropriate permanence that would still be relevant five, ten, or twenty years (or more) down the road.

Editors are reminded that:

Rational

There has been a long culture war brewing in Western societies since after 2000, leading to more distinct separation between the left and right on the political and ideological scales. Events such as Brexit and 2016 U.S. Presidential Election has brought out these differences in culture to the forefront.

This has led to a mass media that has become much more engaged within this cultural war, particularly as the media on average have traditionally leaned towards the left on political and ideological issues, and there is a resurgence of right-leaning themes (such as the alt right) that are gaining popularity with average people. There is a question of how "objective" media sources can be under these conditions, and how that impacts Wikipedia's content polities. Editors need to be more alert that in the political and ideological arenas, current reliable sources should be careful scrutinized and not assumed to be infallible.

Processes to consider

Wait a few days before adding the latest mudslinging

Editors should seek to write articles that will stand the test of time, rather than making sure it is necessarily up-to-the-minute. Not every single daily news story about a controversy needs to happen. Often, the latest "twist" will resolve in a few days, and may seem relevant or not to include, particularly if the news tidbit is highly controversial. At times, it might even be better to wait a few weeks so that editors can rely on media's hindsight to figure out how best to approach a topic.

Document the controversy fairly, but use appropriate weight for opinions on it

In a controversy there are two or more "sides". The stance of each of those sides should be given roughly equal weight and documented without any type of judgment in Wikipedia's voice. Only after that's done can external opinions about the matter be considered, at which point, editors should find a balance that is appropriately metered by WP:WEIGHT. Editors may be tempted to use WP:FRINGE to dismiss minor viewpoints in these cases, but as such controversies are recent or ongoing, this presumes one side is "right", which is not appropriate if we are trying to document without judgment.

Be aware of opinions stemming from authoritative but non-reliable sources

In particular with matters dealing with the right, opinions supportive of the right-leaning position are very unlikely to be found in the left-averaging sources. Editors should be aware that we do not limit attributed opinion to only reliable sources; as long as editors have deemed a source an authority in the topic area, attributed opinions may also come from such non-reliable sources. This is particularly true in the WP:WEIGHT evaluation aspects. In particular when dealing with living individuals, editors should look to any self-sourced claims made by the individual that counter points made from other reliable sources, even if this does not come from a reliable source.

Rational/workpage concepts leading to this

This is only a workpage for tracking ideas for a potential proposal for WP:RS or a subsequent guideline.

Issues

Requirements of any modification

Implementation Most likely this will come out to be a guideline that covers additional context to the following policy/guidelines, limiting it to specifically political or ideological differences of opinion about intentions or motiviations where there has not been sufficient time for the required hindsight (which can range from months to years), and specifically excluding things like pseudoscience or conspiracy theories where there is some objective means to evaluate a portion of the claims.

It should focus on how to write about controversies, that presenting both/all sides of a controversy that is still recent/ongoing without editors trying to judge, and then after that considered broader opinions.

In phrasing it like this, this will probably more something akin to WP:Writing about fiction, though this should have at least guideline strength behind it.

Other issues A key presumption of this policy is that there is problem in the media today about lack of objectivity. To many, this lack of objectivity is clear over the last year and half from the election cycle (and moreso if one leans right), but in discussions leading up to this, there are editors that go "well if the media's not objective, provide sources to show that". The media does not report on the media, broadly, though obviously will cover specific cases (eg the Rolling Stone false rape accusation story, the Gawker/Hulk Hogan lawsuit).

The problem is that our policies/guidelines are all based on the presumption sources are objective (a factor that does not enter into RS determination, nor necessarily should it). NPOV in particular works out great if all sources are objective to the highest degree as it eliminates guess work in the areas of UNDUE and WEIGHT. In other words, if you are presuming that media are objective (and thus reject the possible non-objectivity), then it is very easy to defend any attempt to alter or weaken other policies and guidelines using non-RSes because the policy looks fine otherwise. But this creates a catch 22 situation to try to challenge this area.

While we do ask for sourcing in mainspace, there must be recognition that behind the scenes, we as editors do engage in productive original research as to establish how to write in mainspace. For example, most of what we have determined to be reliable sources are based on "original research" assessment for editorial quality. As such , this same type of original research needs to be allowed to consider the state of the media with an apparent "absence" of sources, however, one can point to works like Pew Research and CJR that actually cover the media to see there is a concern about objectivity. Once there's reasonable consensus that we can have cases in the media where objectivity has not be upheld, then there's means to discuss how that factor affects policy and guidelines. A key point must remain that non-objective sources don't become unreliable, they just become non-objective (and technically, non-objective as evaluated on a published article-by-article basis), and potentially no longer independent coverage. This principally affects NPOV writing.