The NY Ledger – Bias and Credibility

The NY Ledger is rated Right-Center with Mixed factual reporting by Media Bias Fact Check.

The NY Ledger - Right Center Bias - Questionable - Fake News - Conservative - Republican - Not Credible - ImposterFactual Reporting: Mixed - Not always Credible or Reliable


QUESTIONABLE SOURCE

A questionable source exhibits one or more of the following: extreme bias, consistent promotion of propaganda/conspiracies, poor or no sourcing to credible information, a complete lack of transparency, and/or is fake news. Fake News is the deliberate attempt to publish hoaxes and/or disinformation for profit or influence (Learn More). Sources listed in the Questionable Category may be very untrustworthy and should be fact-checked on a per-article basis. Please note sources on this list are not considered fake news unless specifically written in the reasoning section for that source. See all Questionable sources.

  • In conclusion, The NY Ledger lacks transparency, operates within a coordinated network of similar sites, and publishes content that reflects a right-center bias with mixed factual reliability. As a result, we rate it as right-center biased and questionable.

Detailed Report

Questionable Reasoning: Imposter Site, Lack of Transparency, Poor Sourcing
Bias Rating: RIGHT-CENTER (4.3)
Factual Reporting: MIXED (6.1)
Country: Turkey
MBFC’s Country Freedom Rating: LIMITED FREEDOM
Media Type: Website
Traffic/Popularity: Minimal Traffic
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY

History

The NY Ledger (thenyledger.com) is part of a network of similarly structured websites that publish general news and feature content across politics, business, technology, and lifestyle topics. The site does not provide a meaningful About page describing its editorial standards, ownership, or mission beyond vague statements about restoring journalism.

Multiple websites in this network share similar layouts, publication timelines, and infrastructure, suggesting centralized control and coordinated content production. These sites often present themselves as legitimate news outlets without clearly disclosing their affiliations or operational structure.

Read our profile on the Turkish government and media.

Funded by / Ownership

The NY Ledger does not disclose ownership or funding sources on its website. Available information indicates that the site is part of a broader network of websites likely operated by a single digital marketing entity associated with Mohamed Sawah, a Turkey-based media entrepreneur linked to multiple similar domains. These websites appear to share advertising infrastructure, suggesting revenue is primarily generated through programmatic advertising.

The lack of transparency regarding ownership, editorial oversight, and funding raises significant concerns about credibility and accountability.

Analysis / Bias

The NY Ledger is part of a coordinated network of content-driven websites that publish a mix of aggregated and original material with minimal transparency. Content labeled as news often reflects a right-leaning perspective, particularly in political coverage, where headlines and framing favor conservative viewpoints.

These sites frequently lack clear sourcing, editorial standards, and byline transparency, which reduces trust in the reliability of their reporting. The combination of undisclosed ownership, network-style content production, and ideologically slanted coverage indicates a pattern consistent with low credibility in impostor sites.

Failed Fact Checks

  • None to Date. They are an imposter site.

In conclusion, The NY Ledger lacks transparency, operates within a coordinated network of similar sites, and publishes content that reflects a right-center bias with mixed factual reliability. As a result, we rate it as right-center biased and questionable. (D. Van Zandt 04/27/2026)

Source: https://thenyledger.com/

Last Updated on April 27, 2026 by Media Bias Fact Check


Do you appreciate our work? Please consider one of the following ways to sustain us.

MBFC Ad-Free 

or

MBFC Donation


Left vs. Right Bias: How we rate the bias of media sources