red herring

Related to red herring: Red herring prospectus, Red herring fallacy

red herring

Something irrelevant that diverts attention away from the main problem or issue. The candidate used the minor issue as a red herring to distract voters from the corruption accusations against him. The mystery writer is known for introducing red herrings to arouse the reader's suspicion of innocent characters.
See also: herring, red
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

red herring

a piece of information or suggestion introduced to draw attention away from the real facts of a situation. (A red herring is a type of strong-smelling smoked fish that was once drawn across the trail of a scent to mislead hunting dogs and put them off the scent.) The detectives were following a red herring, but they're on the right track now. The mystery novel has a couple of red herrings that keep readers off guard.
See also: herring, red
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

red herring

Something that draws attention away from the central issue, as in Talking about the new plant is a red herring to keep us from learning about downsizing plans . The herring in this expression is red and strong-smelling from being preserved by smoking. The idiom alludes to dragging a smoked herring across a trail to cover up the scent and throw off tracking dogs. [Late 1800s]
See also: herring, red
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a red herring

COMMON If something is a red herring, it takes people's attention away from the main subject, problem, or situation that they should be considering. All the fuss about high pay for public employees is a bit of a red herring. The really serious money is to be found in private companies. A sighting of the missing woman in London turned out to be a red herring. Note: A red herring is a herring that has been soaked in salt water for several days, and then dried by smoke. Red herrings were sometimes used when training dogs to follow a scent. They were also sometimes used to distract dogs from the scent they were following during a hunt.
See also: herring, red
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

a red herring

something, especially a clue, which is or is intended to be misleading or distracting.
This expression derives from the former practice of using the pungent scent of a dried smoked herring to teach hounds to follow a trail (smoked herrings were red in colour as a result of the curing process).
See also: herring, red
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

a red ˈherring

a fact, etc. which somebody introduces into a discussion because they want to take people’s attention away from the main point: Look, the situation in French agriculture is just a red herring. We’re here to discuss the situation in this country.This idiom comes from the custom of using the scent of a smoked, dried herring (which was red) to train dogs to hunt.
See also: herring, red
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

red herring

A diversionary tactic; a false or deliberately misleading trail. This expression comes from the use of strong-smelling smoked herrings as a lure to train hunting dogs to follow a scent. They also could be used to throw dogs off the scent, and it was this characteristic that was transferred to the metaphoric use of red herring. “Diverted from their own affairs by the red herring of foreign politics so adroitly drawn across the trail,” wrote W. F. Butler (Life of Napier, 1890).
See also: herring, red
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer

red herring

A misleading clue. Many people who know the phrase believe it came from the practice of game poachers laying scents of smoked herring (smoking accounted for the fish's reddish color) to throw gamekeepers and their dogs off the poachers' scent. However, etymologists discount that explanation, favoring instead that the phrase originated with an English writer who used the scent-laying image as a metaphor for a particular political plan. Mystery writers, readers, and critics use “red herring” to describe a piece of plotting intended to throw the reader off in deducing who-done-it. The financial world uses the phrase to mean a stock prospectus, not from any intent to deceive, but because the document has a red cover.
See also: herring, red
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price
See also:
  • a red herring
  • cross that bridge later
  • take issue
  • take issue with
  • take issue with (someone or something)
  • take issue with somebody
  • at issue
  • issue
  • cast an eye on (something)
  • cast an eye on something
References in periodicals archive
I'm sorry." REAL SUSPECT OR RED HERRING? Maybe Ian finally had enough.
Publisher and CEO of Red Herring, Alex Vieux, said the entrepreneurship in Asia has reached an inflexion point, and as a result Red Herring Asia 2013 has shifted into a new phase.
Red Herring print shirt (above), PS30 and (right), Red Line Red Herring jacket PS85, trousers PS35, shirt PS18 and tie PS9.50 with Rocha John Rocha shoes, PS80, all from Debenhams
Pring (e-Business Pvt Ltd) announced that it has been honoured as a winner of the 2012 Red Herring Top Asia 100.
The evaluation of these companies was done by Red Herring on quantitative and qualitative fronts that includes financial performance, technological innovation, management and their track record, relevant to their sector peers.
Red Herring Lace prom dress, EUR75; Red Herring Shoes, EUR57; Red Herring tights, EUR7.75; Red Herring Bag, EUR18.00; Gloves - stylists own
pounds 120, silver shoes by Red Herring, pounds 25, black clutch with rose by Debut, pounds 25.
Cerise pink dress with giant bow by Debut, pounds 80, shoes by Red Herring, pounds 35, fireball frill bag by Ben de Lisi, pounds 28, all from Debenhams.
Summary: Red Herring today announced that ReadiMinds was a winner* of the Red Herring 100 Award, a selection of the 100 most innovative private technology companies based in Asia.
Black coat by Jasper Conran, pounds 100; pink Jasper Conran hat, pounds 10; pink scarf by Debenhams Collection, pounds 12; patent gloves by Red Herring, pounds 15; croc tote by Jasper Conran, pounds 75
Nickel metal hydride (NiMH) battery system designer and manufacturer Cobasys, LLC recently announced it has been short-listed by media company Red Herring, Inc.
Red Herring reported last month that electronics manufacturer Toshiba Corporation has delayed its plans to introduce a methanol-powered fuel cell designed for laptop computers until 2007.
Alex Vieux, the technology investor who acquired the rights and brand name of Red Herring in April 2003 after the company shut down and ceased publication of the magazine, has relaunched the brand (Mountain View, CA) and will "investigate the business of technology" through Redherring.com, subscription newsletters, research and events.
When queried about what part robotics might play in their lives, 68 percent of the Red Herring survey's respondents indicated that they thought vacuum cleaning was a pretty good possibility within 10 years, while 63 percent believed robots might mow the law or play a game within 10 years.
Back in September, subscribers to Red Herring magazine's e-mail bulletin "The Red Eye" received a missive they probably weren't expecting.