Under his stewardship
The Western Star sympathetically covered the
Newfoundland loggers' strike of 1958-59. Finn later wrote of the period "It was such a heated and emotionally charged labour dispute that journalistic objectivity was simply not tolerated... you were either with the paper companies and the government, or you were with a gang of mainland union thugs, which was how the International Woodworkers' of America (IWA) leaders were unfairly depicted." Newfoundland Premier
Joey Smallwood responded to the labour dispute by introducing legislation to decertify the
International Woodworkers of America. Finn, as editor of the
Western Star, war ordered by the newspaper's publishers to report only the company's and government's side of the dispute. As a result, Finn and three other journalists quit the newspaper. He and two friends started their own newspaper,
The Newfoundland Examiner with Finn as publisher and editor and devoted the journal to uncovering government and business corruption. The newspaper was unable to attract advertising revenue and folded after a year. ==Political career==