'''The Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity''', publisher of the site "Watchdog.org," is a national 501(c)(3) journalism organization based in Alexandria, Virginia, established in 2009.<ref>Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, [http://franklincenterhq.org/about/ About], organizational website, accessed August 19, 2011.</ref> Franklin claims its mission is to be "dedicated to the principles of transparency, accountability, and fiscal responsibility, and highlight their absence in state and local governments," and to "shine the bright light of transparency into government's darkest corners, and expose the facts about government mismanagement and overreach."<ref>Franklin Center For Government & Public Integrity, [http://franklincenterhq.org/about/ About], organizational website, accessed June 23, 2017.</ref> The Franklin Center funded state reporters in more than 40 states in August 2011,<ref>Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, [http://www.franklincenterhq.org/2376/think-tank-journalism-the-future-of-investigative-reporting/ Think tank Journalism: The Future of Investigative Journalism], organizational website, accessed August 19, 2011, since modified by the organization.</ref> and in 34 states in May 2013.<ref name="2013_list">Franklin Center, [https://www.sourcewatch.org/images/e/e5/Franklin_Center_May_2013.pdf Watchdog.org], organizational document, May 2013, obtained by the Center for Media and Democracy June 2013.</ref> As of June 2017May 2019, Watchdog.org has state bureaus in seven thirteen states, according to its staff listwebsite. Despite their non-partisan description, many of these websites have received criticism for their conservative bias.<ref>Rebekah Metzler, [http://www.pressherald.com/news/watchdog-website-puts-a-new-spin-on-politics_2010-10-02.html 'Watchdog' website puts a new spin on politics'], ''The Portland Press Herald'', accessed August 19, 2011.</ref><ref>Allison Kilkenny, [http://www.truth-out.org/koch-spider-web/1312231636 The Koch Spider Web], ''Truthout'', August 4, 2011.</ref>
At a time when there are fewer and fewer statehouse reporters -- as of the ''American Journalism Review'''s most recent count in 2009, there were 355 in the entire country, down from 524 in 2003,<ref>[http://ajr.org/article.asp?id=4722 AJR's 2009 Count of Statehouse Reporters], ''American Journalism Review'', April/May 2009, accessed November 2013.</ref> bluntly called a "statehouse exodus" by the same journal<ref>Jennifer Dorroh, [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4721 Statehouse Exodus], ''American Journalism Review'', April/May 2009, accessed November 2013.</ref> -- former ''Reuters'' chief White House correspondent Gene Gibbons described the rush of groups like the Franklin Center to fill the gap as follows: "an army of Internet start-ups, some practicing traditional journalism in a new medium, others delivering political propaganda dressed up as journalism -- are crawling all over the picnic. . . . At the forefront is the one‐year-old Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity . . ."<ref name="GibbonsKennedy">Gene Gibbons, [http://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/d59_gibbons.pdf Ants at the Picnic: A Status Report on News Coverage of State Government], Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy Discussion Paper Series, #D‐59, June 2010.</ref>