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Opinion Journalism: The Underrated Pillar Of A Free Press -By Isaac Asabor

Journalism is a house supported by many pillars: reporting informs, investigation exposes, features humanize, and interpretation explains. But opinion journalism provides something unique; it provokes thought, amplifies voices, demands accountability, and keeps democracy alive. To continue underrating it is to weaken journalism itself and, by extension, our societies.

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OPINION WRITING

Journalism is often described as the watchdog of society, but it is important to recognize that it is not a single practice or uniform approach. It is a broad profession made up of distinct genres, each carrying out specific functions. News reporting delivers facts as they unfold. Investigative journalism digs beneath the surface to expose hidden wrongs. Feature writing humanizes issues by putting real people into the story. Interpretative journalism explains complex matters, while development journalism focuses on social and economic progress. Advocacy journalism pushes for reform and amplifies causes. Then there is opinion journalism, an equally vital genre that, sadly, is chronically underrated in this part of the world.

When many people think of journalism, what comes to mind is a reporter covering a breaking event, a news anchor narrating political developments, or a correspondent providing updates from the field. Rarely do they think about the columnist who spends hours analyzing policies, connecting facts, and challenging the narratives pushed by those in power. Yet, opinion journalism is one of the oldest and most influential forms of journalism. Its neglect, whether by media houses, policymakers, or even the public, is both troubling and dangerous.

At this juncture, it is germane to ask about what opinion journalism really does. Opinion journalism is not about idle chatter or unstructured ranting. Done well, it is built on research, perspective, and critical thinking. While news reports answer the “what, where, when, and who,” opinion journalism goes further by tackling the “why” and “what next.” It probes meaning, questions motives, and examines consequences. In societies where truth is often contested and narratives are manipulated, the ability of opinion journalism to interpret and provoke thought is indispensable.

Without a doubt, the functions of opinion journalism cannot be pooh-poohed by mere wave of the hands as it is reputed to stimulate critical thinking. A news story may report that inflation has jumped, but it is the opinion writer who explains why that happened, how government policies contributed to it, and what this means for ordinary citizens. It moves audiences from passive consumers of facts to active thinkers who can challenge authority and question systems.

Second, it gives voice to the voiceless. A column about unemployed graduates or underpaid teachers is not simply an expression of one writer’s view; it reflects the struggles of entire communities. Opinion journalism has the unique ability to project grassroots realities into national debate, ensuring they are not lost in the noise of politics.

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Third, it sharpens accountability. Straight news may reveal that a government spent billions on a new project. Opinion journalism interrogates the wisdom of such spending: Was it necessary? Who benefits? What alternative uses could the funds have served? By connecting dots and raising uncomfortable questions, opinion writers act as watchdogs where plain reporting stops short.

Fourth, opinion journalism strengthens democracy. Democracy thrives on ideas, debates, and informed disagreement. Elections alone do not make a democracy; it is the constant circulation of arguments, counterarguments, and visions of society that keep it alive. Opinion journalism sustains this dialogue, giving citizens the tools to form informed judgments.

At this juncture, it is germane to explore why opinion journalism is underrated in this part of the world. This is as it has remained misunderstood.

Culturally, many societies in Africa, including Nigeria, discourage open criticism of authority. To question leaders or institutions publicly is often seen as disrespectful or subversive. As a result, opinion writers who boldly critique policies are branded as “opposition agents” or “troublemakers,” and their arguments are dismissed without consideration.

Institutionally, many media organizations treat opinion writing as a secondary or “soft” section. Instead of giving it prominence, they bury it in back pages or underfund it. Some media houses even censor their columnists to protect the interests of advertisers, sponsors, or political patrons. This weakens the independence and vibrancy of the press.

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The explosion of social media has also contributed to the problem. While platforms like Twitter and Facebook have democratized opinion-sharing, they have blurred the line between informed analysis and casual speculation. In such a noisy environment, carefully reasoned opinion writing is often drowned out by sensational hot takes, cheap insults, and shallow commentary.

On why society must recognize its value, it is expedient to opine that for society to progress; opinion journalism must be elevated and properly valued. Editors should stop treating it as filler content. Instead, they should cultivate strong opinion writers whose voices can shape public discourse. Journalism schools should emphasize that opinion writing is not inferior to hard news but a rigorous genre requiring its own skills of reasoning, persuasion, and clarity. Civil society must protect opinion writers from harassment, intimidation, and censorship.

Above all, audiences need to play their part. Readers must approach opinion journalism not as absolute truth but as a space for ideas. They should engage with arguments critically, agreeing where necessary and disagreeing where appropriate, but always recognizing the importance of dialogue. Societies thrive when ideas are tested in the open rather than suppressed in silence.

Journalism is a house supported by many pillars: reporting informs, investigation exposes, features humanize, and interpretation explains. But opinion journalism provides something unique; it provokes thought, amplifies voices, demands accountability, and keeps democracy alive. To continue underrating it is to weaken journalism itself and, by extension, our societies.

Opinion journalism is not a luxury or a side dish; it is an essential part of a free press. It is the underrated pillar of journalism, and until we give it the recognition it deserves, our democracy and media landscape will remain incomplete.

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