Now that Joe Biden Stepped Down for the Good of the Country, Joe Kahn Must Join Him

In their latest installment of an editorial making demands of Joe Biden, other Democrats, and voters, but never Donald Trump, the NYT on Monday joined the horde of outlets begging for an open primary.

They were, of course, too slow to keep up with the Old Geezer they’ve spent the last month calling slow, to say nothing of his Vice President who, in just 36-hours, sealed up the nomination and raised $100 million. It was over.

Try to keep up, NYT?

Even with that embarrassment, NYT decided to keep running the endless stream of print, with Ezra Klein whining like he has done and Patrick Healy leading a panel discussion, as well as his own unsubstantiated claims about competition — especially around convention time — helping a candidacy. Bret Stephens had the audacity to claim that by winning the support of democratically elected delegates, Kamala had been coronated.

Try to keep up, NYT.

So back to the editorial NYT posted after it was over, demanding — begging — that it not be over.

Along with its tribute to Biden and a pitch to use this “fresh chance to address voters’ concerns with better policies” (followed by misrepresentations of the current state of both Biden’s immigration and housing policies — try to keep up, NYT!), the editorial nodded to the import of “describ[ing] all the harm Mr. Trump would do to this country.”

Mr. Trump is a felon who flouts the law and the Constitution, an inveterate liar beholden to no higher cause than his self-interest and a reckless policymaker indifferent to the well-being of the American people. His term in office did lasting damage to the people and the project of America and to its reputation around the world. In a second term he would operate with fewer restraints and more willing enablers, and he and his emboldened advisers have made clear they intend to exercise power ruthlessly.

Yet it’s not enough to describe all the harm Mr. Trump would do to this country: The Democratic Party needs to offer the American people a road map to a better future.

This is the second time that this bossy stream of editorials has emphasized the import of describing the danger of Trump: In the first, NYT faulted Biden for failing to “hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies” during the debate.

But this second editorial expands its descriptive scope: Trump’s lies must be debunked and the harm Trump did to this country must be described.

By others. By Democrats.

Yet, even as NYT was obsessing with Biden’s age, it failed in those duties, debunking Trump’s lies and describing the damage he has done.

For example, NYT fell for a PR effort by the Trump campaign to pitch a platform that embraced fetal personhood as a moderation on choice. After spending months leading others on efforts to describe Trump’s amped up authoritarianism in a second term, NYT both-sidesed Trump’s efforts to disavow Project 2025. Even as NYT front-paged Peter Baker’s pursuit of conspiracy theories about the official medical records Biden did release, NYT never described asking for official medical records on Trump’s shooting injury, even while it joined Maria Bartiromo and Benny Johnson to platform Ronny Jackson’s claims instead. NYT finally got around to fact-checking Trump’s RNC speech; they posted it just after midnight overnight, today. CNN, by comparison, had their fact-check up while people were still talking about the speech.

Neither is NYT fulfilling the job of describing the harm Trump would and did do to this country. The other day, NYT let its pharmaceutical reporter falsely claim that Mueller found “no evidence that Mr. Trump or his aides had coordinated with [Russia’s 2016] interference effort,” something that not even the linked story from March 2019 supported, and something that has been further debunked by subsequent reports that Konstantin Kilimnik was a Russian agent and that he passed on the strategy Paul Manafort gave him to other Russian spies (which NYT has reported but presented as limited to polling data) or the footnote unveiled just before the 2020 election that showed the investigation into whether Roger Stone conspired in a hack-and-leak with GRU was ongoing when Mueller finished (something NYT has never reported).

In March, NYT had a good story on Manafort’s reappearance in Trump’s orbit. It did an op-ed on Manafort’s likely role in a second Trump term. While both noted that Trump pardoned Manafort, neither laid out that Amy Berman Jackson judged Manafort to have lied about sharing that campaign strategy with Kilimnik and the deal to carve up Ukraine discussed at the same time. NYT appears to have ignored Manafort’s appearance at the convention.

Nor has NYT shown the least curiosity regarding the role of Donald Trump or his Attorney General in framing his opponent back in 2020. While, in real time, NYT did an exceptionally good story about the Brady side channel Bill Barr set up to ingest dirt Rudy Giuliani had obtained, in part from a known Russian spy, when they attempted to write this after the Alexander Smirnov indictment, NYT covered up Rudy’s central role in related matters. How did the entire Biden – Trump rematch pass without a single story on Trump’s role in framing his opponent?

NYT has covered Trump’s recent coziness with Viktor Orbán, though it was late to the story of Orbán’s post NATO visit and didn’t mention Orbán efforts to end the Ukraine war with Trump. A far better follow-up described that Orbán had relayed Trump’s plans for “a swift push for a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine.” That was buried, just like NYT’s report on Trump’s growing financial entanglement with the Saudi state, this time on page A8. In NYT’s simpering coverage of Trump’s RNC platform, it mentioned neither the reversals on Ukraine or Taiwan from 2016. And while NYT claims to value descriptions of the damage Trump did to “the project of America and to its reputation around the world,” it recently blamed NATO allies’ concerns about the election exclusively to Biden’s age, rather than the threat that Trump himself poses — and even that was buried in a story buried below other Biden stories.

Joe Kahn’s NYT insists that these topics should be covered.

Yet Joe Kahn’s NYT isn’t doing that job, its day job. It is instead pawning that job off onto Democrats, all the while complaining about the way Democrats are fulfilling the duties of their day job.

And when you raise NYT’s own failures, NYT exhibits the same arrogance, defensiveness, and blindness for which it faulted Joe Biden.

For the good of the country, NYT imperiously demanded, Joe Biden had to step down.

Fine, he did that.

Now either meet the standards your own editorial page lays out or, for the good of the country, find a leader who will.

Update: Pointing to a dumb Nate Cohn report unrelated to NYT’s negligence on Trump coverage (and so not covered here, though I thought about including it), Dan Drezner calls on NYT to get its shit together.

Cohn’s analysis would ordinarily be the kind of piece that I would be defending on social media against those who say, “I cancelled my Times subscription months ago!” But then I got to the last paragraph, which included a particularly jaw-dropping sentence:

In fairness to Ms. Harris, it would be challenging for any Democrat today to advance a clear agenda for the future. Mr. Biden struggled to do so in his re-election campaign. The party has held power for almost 12 of the last 16 years, and it has exhausted much of its agenda; there aren’t many popular, liberal policies left in the cupboard. As long as voters remain dissatisfied with the status quo and the Democratic nominee, a campaign to defend the system might not be the slam dunk Democrats once thought it was (emphasis added).

I am not a Democrat. There are parts of their agenda in their cupboard that I do not want to see implemented. But I have to ask: how in the name of all that is holy did that tendentious sentence get put into Cohn’s piece?! Are you trying to troll the libs?

Just to quickly list what is wrong with this claim:

  1. Controlling the White House is not the same thing as holding unconstrained power. Obama and Biden commanded party majorities in Congress for exactly four of those twelve years. Unsurprisingly, a lot of what they wanted to do did not get through Congress.
  2. Polling shows that Democrats have some agenda items in the cupboard that are pretty popular: expanding access to women’s reproductive healthgun controlbolstering U.S. alliancesreforming the judicial branchproviding a pathway to citizenship for DREAMers; heck, even DEI polls well. In contrast, the Trump-affiliated Project 2025 agenda is ridiculously unpopular.
  3. As Cohn would hopefully acknowledge past Democratic policy initiatives, like the Affordable Care Act, used to be unpopular but have become quite popular over time. When Harris said at her Wisconsin rally that, “we are not going back,” the point is that she can justifiably claim to be defending popular Democratic policies.

My point is that it’s a horrible, unnecessary, inaccurate sentence does not even fit with the rest of Cohn’s essay. So what were you thinking when you dropped it in there? Was it the same person who thought publishing predictable op-eds about the current state of politics from Bill Maher or Aaron f**king Sorkin was a nifty idea?!1

I had a discussion with someone who writes for your paper after Cohn’s piece dropped who mentioned the “same five dinner parties problem” of your editorial staff. You keep talking amongst yourselves so much that the result is an insular conversation in which your perception about what the American people think and want is badly distorted. And then you react to the criticism with vindication — that if you’re getting heat from “both sides” then you must be doing something right.

With Biden’s departure you have an opportunity to do a reset of how you cover and interpret the 2024 election. Please, for the love of God, take it. Get better op-ed submissions. Be better at your jobs!

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96 replies
  1. John H Wolfe says:

    I know this one article will not make up for all the sins of the NYT, but, it’s something:
    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/24/opinion/trump-lies-charts-data.html

    Clearly worth a read.

    The constant lying is not aimed at making the people believe a lie, but at ensuring that no one believes anything anymore.
    People that can no longer distinguish between truth and lies cannot distinguish between right and wrong.
    And such a people, deprived of the power to think and judge, is, without knowing and willing it, completely subjected to the rule
    of lies. With such a people, you can do whatever you want.
    – Hannah Arendt

    • emptywheel says:

      It’s good. I kept glancing through it as I was writing this.

      It is presented as opinion, yet it presents facts.

      Why aren’t NYT’s own journalists doing that?

      • Rayne says:

        The competition could do it on the fly though they’ve not made use of immense resource they have in CNN’s Daniel Dale, who can point out Trump’s lies in real time and recite them verse and chapter afterward.

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4sS7ZuwD8Mk

        Given how much time and effort NYT’s journos have put into covering Trump, it makes no sense that they can’t do the same as Dale.

        (Side note: Tapper makes what could be a throwaway comment at 3:57 in that video with Dale — he was talking about organization of the RNC convention and how the Trump campaign managed it. IOW, Tapper said consciously/unconsciously that Trump *owns* the RNC.)

  2. Ruthie2the says:

    Shouldn’t the second “Manafort “ in this quote read “Kilimnik”?

    “Amy Berman Jackson judged Manafort to have lied about sharing that campaign strategy with Manafort..”

    As for the NYT, I think it’s possible they actually want Trump to win, perhaps with some level of plausible deniability. They can’t be as naive as their coverage suggests, can they?

    • Theodora30 says:

      For years I have thought the big dogs in the mainstream “liberal” media are so arrogant that they really think they know better than anyone else — at least when it involves Democrats. They are too afraid to treat Republicans with the same arrogance and disdain.
      If voters choose a candidate they don’t think is cool enough or macho enough reporters and pundits have no compulsions about trying to take that candidate down no matter what voters want. That’s how they treated Al Gore, John Kerry and Hillary. When Gore ran it was blatantly obvious from their fawning praise that the media preferred Bill Bradley to be the Dems’ candidate. After all Bradley had been an NBA star which was way cooler than anything Gore had ever done — and he wasn’t a southerner like Jimmy “the Peanut Farmer” Carter.
      I will never forget reading about how mainstream journalists openly booed Gore from their soundproofed viewing room when he debated Bradley in NH. I also remember being surprised after reading all their praise of Bradley at just how unimpressive he was in debates and interviews.
      After Gore won the nomination the media’s treatment of him dripped with disdain as this post election examination of their coverage clearly shows.

      https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2007/10/gore200710

      It’s hard to get more nasty or idiotic than Maureen Dowd saying Gore’s concern for things like the environment made him seem so “feminized” that he was “practically lactating”. That the Times’s editors allowed such a deeply misogynistic statement to be published in their pages speaks volumes about the values of the Times. The revered WaPo’s “Dean of Washington Journalists” David Broder wrote that Al Gore had talked so much in his acceptance speech about what he would do if elected — imagine!! — that Broder almost fell asleep. That was so shallow and stupid that it still boggles my mind.

      Compare that coverage of Gore to the Times’s Frank Bruni’s obsequious, vomit-inducing coverage of Dubya, described here:

      https://www.americanprogress.org/article/think-again-the-times-frank-bruni-or-how-to-succeed-in-journalism-without-really-caring-about-issues/

      I may be paranoid but as I have watched more and more of this kind of biased media coverage I can’t help thinking that our top political journalists really believe Democratic voters should be picking the candidates the media prefers. If they don’t the media has the right to punish the candidate — and voters —for defying them. I am concerned that their success at helping push out Biden will only embolden them in years to come.

  3. phred says:

    Thanks so much for this epic take down EW.

    What enrages me so much about the NYT is it, like John Roberts, pretends to be just calling balls and strikes, when in actuality they put a very heavy hand on the scale. Because the perception of their balance persists in the public eye, they easily lead others to follow where they want them to go.

    One need look no further than Biden’s masterful handling of what might have been a catastrophic decision to step aside to see the man remains at the top of his game. But none of that mattered. The NYT, CNN, NBC, (for the love of God) MSNBC, et al. wanted him out, with insider Democrats lending a helping hand to see if they might replace him with their own personally preferred candidate who didn’t have the courage or backing to challenge him in the primary.

    Biden made sure to set up Harris to carry on in his stead. I suspect the massive support she has received since is as much about supporting the Biden administration as it is a response from Harris enthusiasts. Those combined motivations will not be overcome by mewling insiders or media who tried to sow chaos and instead created a massive force to be reckoned with.

    It is important to hold the NYT and their fellow travelers to account for what they have done, even while we celebrate Harris and the juggernaut her candidacy has already become. Instead of chaos and division, the NYT has summoned a beast fueled by wrath and joy and hope.

    My one wish is that as Harris’ & Team Democrats’ power rises, that of the NYT and right leaning media falls.

    • Badger Robert says:

      It may be hidden from the NYT, but every caring father, every thoughtful grandfather, and every cogent CEO knows what President Biden has constructed. Only journalists, who have become Orwell’s crows, don’t see it. As Ms. Wheeler wrote, is says more about the selfish arrogance of journalists than about Trump.

      • RipNoLonger says:

        Perfectly stated, BR. I’m guessing most of the “journalists” in these major outlets have never had to fight to survive, worked their way up from beat reporters and obit scanners. The smell of entitlement permeates the reporting.

    • punaise says:

      Hear, hear! Two things can be true at once:

      1. The press, led by the NYT’s incessant drum-banging, got what they wanted: Biden’s “scalp”.
      2. Given the sea change dynamic of the past few days, at this juncture it’s looking like the perfect and necessary outcome.

      I think few Dems would argue that the outlook hasn’t improved significantly and that we’d be better off with Biden on the ticket. The NYT folks are probably congratulating themselves for orchestrating this, but they’ll never understand accountability.

  4. OldTulsaDude says:

    The NYT should be sold at checkout stands so Men in Black can get their interstellar news.

    • Error Prone says:

      Along with that it could use a lessened ego trip, operation-wide. Not as great as they sell themselves, and not seeing it. Or worse, seeing it but not admitting the truth. They may outsell competitors, but is money through the door a measure of good journalism? Big is best died with U.S. Steel.

  5. massappeal says:

    Well done and thank-you.

    Obviously the NYT gets the most attention because it has by far the greatest reach, still setting much of the editorial and journalistic agenda, both for other newspapers (many of whom subscribe to the Times’ news and op-ed services) around the country, and for other media (radio, TV, online).

    But NYT is not alone. See, for example, the Boston Globe’s editorial in yesterday’s print edition (via my own attempted takedown of it): https://masscommons.wordpress.com/2024/07/23/this-is-why-we-cant-have-nice-things-boston-globe-editorial-board-edition/

    Again, thanks for your persistence and inspiration.

  6. Sussex Trafalgar says:

    You nailed it! Well said and well done!

    The NY Times has devolved into the National Enquirer, i.e., a rag grocery store type publication placed next to the check stand baited with David Pecker inspired “catch and kill stories” and hoping impulse buyers will bite the bait.

    David Pecker’s testimony explained how the scheme worked; but instead of exposing the scheme to the public at large, the likes of NY Times and WAPO use the scheme to attract attention.

  7. Trevanion says:

    Excellent dissection.

    It is outright bizarre — and undoubtedly indicative of what must be some pretty weird internal disarray under Mr Kahn — that in the year 2024 there would be a five day gap between the Trump speech and the appearance of a NYT ‘fact check’.

  8. Clare Kelly says:

    Thanks.

    All the more reason to support independent journalism.
    https://www.emptywheel.net/support/

    Meanwhile, Jim Jordan’s Judiciary Committee continues to chill misinformation research:

    “Trump allies crush misinformation research despite Supreme Court loss
    High court ruling green-lighting contact between government and tech companies to stymie falsehoods online hasn’t deterred a GOP campaign against academics, nonprofits and tech industry initiatives aimed at addressing their spread”

    [snip]

    Wardle realized the backlash was reverberating offline a year ago when members of the Rhode Island state legislature received an article that called her lab at Brown University the “number one leader nationally” in the “Censorship-Industrial Complex.”

    She won’t be tracking election misinformation during the 2024 presidential elections.
    “Who is doing that in November?” she said. “There’s a massive hole.”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/07/14/trump-allies-disarm-misinformation-researchers-ahead-election/

    • Ginevra diBenci says:

      TY, Clare. I didn’t know about this. Academic researchers are dependent on funding streams to sustain their projects–an obvious statement to those here, I know, but one that becomes vexed when the political aims of those who control budgets conflict with information gathering and free speech (to say nothing of “academic freedom”).

      I wish I could say I was shocked to hear of this happening in next-door Rhode Island. But the rhetoric of “censorship” (which Wardle’s research is not) has led many a blue-state legislature into devil’s bargains of this ilk. Needless to say, the real censorship lies in defunding her work, and in never funding federal studies of various gun issues, etc.

      If it’s “too controversial,” it needs doing. And it needs the money to get done.

  9. Savage Librarian says:

    Who needs another Kahn job?! Harris is so inspirational to young people that there has been a record breaking level of voter registration.

    NYT needs to rethink their business plan going forward. If not, too bad for them if they willfully decide to go the way of the dinosaurs.

    Another clodpoll clamoring for self-importance: John Morgan whining to Neil Cavuto(Yuck!) John, a personal injury attorney from Florida makes plenty of claims to try to make people believe he is unbiased. But I’d like to remind folks, he’s a friend of Roger friggin Stone!!

  10. sfvalues says:

    The NYT and media in general have gotten used to the Right Wing Noise Machine setting the narrative and feeding them the story. They like that, because they don’t have to work as hard. While the left certainly has its own media, it cannot compete with the right’s coordinated and well-funded ecosystem of propaganda groups.

    I think Democrats need to stop complaining about how they wish the media worked, and recognize that they need to change their strategy to match how it actually works. If the NYT wants Democrats to do its job for it, and that’s what it takes to get the reporting America needs, then that’s what we need to do.

      • Rayne says:

        The left does have billionaires but they fund stuff taxes should fund, like the arts and education and feeding poor people, ex. MacKenzie Scott.

        Maybe if they weren’t filling the urgent need resulting from gaps the GOP causes in policy and taxes they could fund more left-leaning media.

        Or maybe they could fund candidates and legislators who would regulate media like other commerce and insist on deconsolidation of media regardless of platform.

        • harpie says:

          Or maybe they could fund candidates and legislators who would regulate media like other commerce and insist on deconsolidation of media regardless of platform.

          YES!

    • Rayne says:

      So you’re saying a site like this one shouldn’t hold a First Amendment-protected industry accountable for its attack on the country which supports and defends it?

      You could stop reading media criticism if you don’t like it. Your choice of reading is defended by that same First Amendment — exercise it.

      • sfvalues says:

        No, the media criticism is absolutely necessary and part of the reason I follow emptywheel. I’m sorry if I implied it wasn’t. I’m just saying that it’s not enough to diagnose the problem. We can and should demand accountability, and hope for change, but hope is not a strategy.

        Apart from the above billionaire idea, how do we connect the media criticism to action?

        • jdmckay8 says:

          We can and should demand accountability, and hope for change,

          I think if you review what you have written, those questions answer themselves, especially in the context of what’s happened since Sunday.

          “demand accountability” and “hope for change” sound good, but they’ve become cliche. I’ve seen a lot of people who’ have put a foot forward into action on really critical issues end up having rocks thrown at them by people with a lot of cliches, and that’s the extent of their actions. Having purpose is indispensable, the more clarity the better.

          Everybody’s known the threat Trump is, for a long time now. But until Sunday, there was not much evidence of effective action to counter him. With all that’s happened in last few days, all that was missing in the action department has converged with one hell of an opportunity to actually make a difference in this thing now. I (and obviously 10’s of thousands of others) are showing up in big numbers… really big numbers, to get Kamala elected. And a whole lot of these folks are very, very capable people. And they are committing TIME and MONEY. Both feet in. Fight to win!!!

          Hope hanging out behind the starting line dies a quick death. If this episode is not a flash in the pan (and I see really good evidence it will not be), this has potential to be a real turning point into focused action replacing a lot of stagnancy. Action that will bring results most of us want, and wanted for a long time.

      • Rayne says:

        While news media has failed to grasp why Biden handled his message as he did, Stelter in particular can kiss my ass.

        I will never forget or forgive him for this bullshit; it exemplifies news media’s problem neatly, though. They’re still white cis-het male centric and utterly lacking both imagination and understanding for anything not fitting in their narrow world view.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          Stelter hasn’t been keeping up. He ignores the laws twenty or more Republican legislatures have rushed to put on their books since Dobbs, and thinks Project 2025 is about making next year’s swimsuit issue.

          It’s not ignorance, it’s intention. He gets paid not to notice such things, and to tell others who do that they’re crazy. He must have so much gaslight at his house, he keeps the neighbors awake all night.

  11. bawiggans says:

    Taking down Biden was not democracy in action. It was done via extra-democratic means to accomplish an end not provided for in the rules of the party. It worked, he is gone and the vacuum thus created has been filled through a non-democratic process that, nonetheless, pretty closely resembles consensus. Those now demanding an open primary because that is the only course they will certify “democratic” enough and acceptable to their sensibilities have just been treated to an instance of the breakers not being able to control going forward a process they have broken. The pent-up forces unleashed by Biden stepping aside found their own, incredibly powerful expression in the tsunami of endorsements, money and delegate pledges to Harris. This was not a mob action nor a scheme engineered by an elite. It was what has so fortuitously emerged from potential chaos. We dodged a bullet here. We should ignore the NYT’s dubious agenda, whatever is motivating it, and graciously accept and apply our good fortune to renewing democracy in America.

    • Shadowalker says:

      States administer elections for public office, including primaries. Those primaries are over. The voters had their votes certified by the states. This is the next step in the election process of that office based off of the electoral college, where the political party (both national and state) resolve any problems that may arise, by means of the delegates. They’re trying to force the party into a brokered convention (sells more papers), and we’re not going there.

    • Scott_in_MI says:

      Anything purporting to be an “open primary” that could be planned and executed in the [checks calendar] four weeks between now and the Democratic convention, during a time when elections officials across the nation are in the thick of preparing for the November ballot (and a number of them have August local elections to pull off as well), could not possibly satisfy the people loudly clamoring for one. The eventual nominee will get a majority of votes at the convention, and we’re going to have to be satisfied with that and get on to the business of the general election.

    • Fancy Chicken says:

      On a similar note-

      I don’t think the NYT has the power this time to do to Harris what it did to Hilary try as they might.

      Watching the excitement that has followed Harris stepping into the race I feel an undercurrent of realization that hesitation on Hilary or nitpicking her gave us Trump 1.0 and no one wants Trump 2.0 so the same mistakes will not be made again.

      The sooner the NYT figures this out the sooner they can get on to doing their jobs of reporting the clear and present danger that is Trump.

      If the momentum behind Harris continues and if people feel like the NYT’s doing another hit job on her like they did Hilary I think it will become a liability for them and affect their bottom line.

      I mean, if writing about Trump sells subscriptions then start writing about him already and not puff pieces on palace intrigue. Although they could do a palace intrigue piece on how Trump Jr. pressing daddy to pick JD Vance was such a stupid decision.

      • Alan King says:

        Agreed. The NYT is much diminished, partly by its editorial “policies”, partly due to the availability of outlets with much better fact-checking and balance. FWIW, this year’s reporting was the final straw. I should have canceled when I read my first Judith Miller article, two decades ago.

      • TREPping says:

        Fancy Chicken, I hope you are right. I would add that Hillary Clinton had 25 years of attacks on her before she ran for President. She is, by a wide margin, the most vilified person in American politics in my lifetime. There was ample material for the NYT to use.
        Harris does not have the same record of getting trashed, although we have already witnessed the nonsense that MAGA types are throwing out. For me, it is hard to tell how much of that stems from attacks when she started to make a name for herself in CA politics and how much is typical racist & misogynist crap that comes from the Right.

      • Error Prone says:

        The NYT can do whatever it wants. That’s freedom of the press. It has its editorial hierarchy, and aim. Do what we want as long as any change brings in more money than what was previously done. There is one driving force. Paying the bills with more left over.

  12. SteveBev says:

    Excellent dissection.

    It occurs to me that the paragraph quoted above beginning

    “Mr. Trump is a felon who flouts…”

    serves exactly the same purpose to NYT, as the occasional use of the word “peacefully” did for Trump in his incendiary Ellipse speech — provide implausible deniability, providing a penumbra of noise alongside the signal, the better to troll the libs.

  13. Ebenezer Scrooge says:

    I spent 30 years of my life working in the finance sector, mostly with Times readers. They were all well-educated and all very respectable, and mostly conservative by disposition. Few called themselves “Republicans,” because the Republicans’ base is just a bit too–uh–sweaty. Uncultured. But still, our Times readers were very “pro-market.” This means a moderate form of anti-regulation bias. They didn’t want to smash the regulatory state, which would be uncultured. “Reasonable” regulation is far better for my Times reader friends, since the regulator can always be blamed when the headlines go south.

    They’re not opposed to “diversity”, as long as kept cool and quiet, and doesn’t hurt their prospects or their children’s. Nor were they opposed to the abstract idea of unions, at least until they got to the “who pays” aspect. They considered themselves sensible liberals.

    The Times exists for these people.

    The hippies (there were a few of us) avoided the Times, and got our Krugman/Bouie fixes on the down-low. We would read the FT or WSJ instead, the latter for its excellent business news. The Times was always worthless on that particular beat.

  14. Bears7485 says:

    A Google search tells me that for much of its history, the NYT hasn’t employed an Ombudsman. Why the fuck not?

    • Madame Hardy says:

      The Public Editors had a habit of telling the Times when they’d screwed up. To which the editor of the story in question would explain why the Public Editor was wrong. Then they fired the Public Editor because feedback on social media would do the same job. Then they began whining about feedback on social media.

      Conclusion: Thou must not ever, ever tell the NYT that it is wrong.

      • BobBobCon says:

        Margaret Sullivan clashed with political editor Carolyn Ryan over stunts like Ryan running a false claim that Hillary Clinton was going to be indicted, failing to give Clinton’s team a proper chance to rebut it, and then backhandedly trying to edit it out of the online version without issuing a correction.

        Sullivan was forced out and replaced with Liz Spayd, who garnered so much criticism for being an apologist for management that the execs abruptly eliminated the position.

        Ryan got promoted to the #2 editor, by the way, where she has since led efforts to smother internal criticism by Times staff. Her list of hires going back to her days running the politics desk is just jaw droppingly bad.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          To borrow from Dick Cheney, personnel is policy. They are chosen for doing what owners and top managers want done, they way they want it done. They adopt their priorities, they don’t question them or allow others to.

  15. Njrun092 says:

    As a long-time former journalist, I am astounded that the Times allows Maggie Haberman to cover Trump after the emails were uncovered showing that Trump’s people routinely planted stories with her. Have they ever addressed that? She uncritually posts point of view stories that are clearly false political spin, so much so that they consider her part of their team. So unethical, she should be nowhere near that beat since she is compromised.

    I once (almost 40 years ago) got removed from a municipal beat for chirping back at a local politico who was part of a concerted effort to intimidate our reporters.

    • emptywheel says:

      No, and there are actually three rounds of such emails, one from the Mueller investigation, one from the Jan6 investigation, and then finally for the Cohen SDNY investigation. Each time, the Trump team is sure Maggie will given favorable coverage.

      • BobBobCon says:

        Her absolutely worst sin was keeping quiet on Trump’s disastrous denial and dysfunction during the early part of 2020 as Covid was looming.

        Haberman knew, like every reporter, that Covid was going to be bad. She knew that the country desperately needed to mobilize, and that getting a jump on preparations would save thousands of lives. And she knew that Trump was not only directly fighting mobilization, he was bringing in the worst conspiracy theorists and kooks to set his policy.

        Breaking this news in late January or the beginning of February would have gotten the Times enormous praise and would have yield huge audience numbers. But that also would have meant getting shut out of gossip from people like Hope Hicks about whether Trump talked to Hannity two or three times a day.

        It wasn’t until far into March when shutdowns loomed and publishing became unavoidable that Haberman finally filed a story on the dysfunction. If she and her editor, Patrick Healy, cared at all about the lives that would be lost due to the silence, they would have published much sooner. They just didn’t care.

  16. klynn says:

    “Now either meet the standards your own editorial page lays out or, for the good of the country, find a leader who will.”

    If I were Harris’ communications director, I would have a daily, “Since they can’t journalism, we will,” blog that, without any adjectives or adverbs, addresses any propaganda the media spews.

    Thank you for this post EW! Just the facts!

    • Error Prone says:

      Do you think if Harris were to play NYT against WaPo for exclusive access that there would be a melting of ice? Not just Harris. The party also doing the same access play? Catching the story first or best is coin of the realm for building or maintaining a reputation of always the best read. Doing fair press releases is virtue, but does it gain much?

  17. synergies says:

    I’m boycotting the NY Times. The power of boycott we learned from Cesar Chavez in boycotting Tropicana Orange Juice i.e. Anita Bryant / John Briggs in the 1978 Ca. Prop. 6, the anti Gay Teachers i.e. GAY, ballot initiative.
    I’m a dinosaur. I really don’t know much. Just my opinion, I don’t think Maureen Dowd is very intelligent. Simplified she’s taken over the NYT. How boring.

    • synergies says:

      Postscript:
      IMO there isn’t anything Maureen has written, that wasn’t written on a page of paper with, in invisible ink in huge capital letters; SELF SERVING was written.
      No newspapers NOW are referencing Rudy Giuliani’s being trumpsters right hand man. The absurdity!
      When Rudy was first elected, I couldn’t believe it. That the NYT had nothing to do with, yeah right.
      That the NYT needs a major overhaul is undeniable.

  18. SelaSela says:

    I wonder WHY the NYT are behaving that way. I’m sure they are not stupid people. There are many smart people working for the NYT. So how do you explain a stupidity such as this editorial? And unlike criticism about things they don’t report, we can’t even ascribe this to laziness in the case of the editorial and the nonsense “mini-primary” campaign.

    So what’s going on there?

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      Dash Sulzberger and Kahn have very strong political priorities, which bend them well over toward the GOP.

      • SelaSela says:

        I tried to search the web to look for any info about Kahn’s and Sulzberger’s political leaning. I couldn’t find much. I did find one report where allegedly Sulzberger told journalists they need to court more conservative readers.

        But if that’s the case, they are doing very bad job at it. They continue to talk the talk, and present themselves as “very liberal”, but without walking the walk. Their reporting is still designed to attract mainly liberal readers, but often (either advertently or inadvertently) serve the conservatives.

        I have another hypothesis: Trump is good for their business. His antics keep readers engaged, and make more people read the news. Every time Trump says “The failing NY Times”, they get more subscriptions. NYT helped Trump get elected in 2016, because Trump created “entertainment”. Trump looming over the next election generated more business for them. If Trump looses again, he would become irrelevant. There would be no more Trump. And this would hurt the business.

        Whatever their personal political leanings, it seem to me they care more about their business that public interest or what’s good for the country.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          A lot of billionaires have staff or services that wash the Internet of revealing or critical content, wherever possible. There are companies that sell similar services to the general public.

          I think it’s both: Trump is good for clicks. They want the sort of government his administration would create. They think it would enhance their wealth. If it were only the former, they would find a middle ground. They haven’t.

      • BobBobCon says:

        Sulzberger is also a weird guy and pretty thick in the head.

        Just six years before he was anointed publisher, he was bureau chief in Kansas City and wrote a stunningly weird and uninformed article headlined “Meatless in the Midwest: A Tale of Survival”

        For a paper under his watch that has stridently attacked liberals for being out of touch with real America, he claimed as a vegetarian he was “starving” because he could not find anything to eat.

        As Peterr can no doubt testify, as can any of the legion of vegetarians in Kansas City and other big cities in the Midwest, this simply isn’t true. Sulzberger went so far as to claim “Even though the region boasts some of the finest farmland in the world, there is a startling lack of fresh produce here. This is a part of the country — and there’s no polite way to put this — where the most common vegetable you’ll see on dinner plates is iceberg lettuce.”

        There is simply no way a person encountering the real world could believe this. There is no way a qualified editor of a bureau could accept such nonsense. But Sulzberger wrote an obnoxiously, clueless dismissal of the Midwest compared to his former (and future) home of NYC.

        I think the article is really a Rosetta Stone to the guy’s mentality. It’s a combination of snobbishness, density, and the kind of self confidence that can only come from self delusion.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          Sulzberger there sounds a lot like David Brooks. Rather than inventing small town Pennsylvania diners, so he can tell them what opinions they hold, Dash invents a scarcity of fruits and veggies, so he can complain about living in the boonies. He also avoids admitting that, with his pocketbook, he could have flown in whatever he wanted to eat from wherever it was made or grown.

          All in, I’d say that putting Dash in the Midwest to season and train him was a complete failure.

        • Just Some Guy says:

          Huh, that is telling. Kind of reminds me of an acquaintance living in NYC who was flummoxed to find out from me that decent avocados can be found in the middle of America. I was like, “duh, how do you think they get to NYC from Mexico and California? BY RAIL THROUGH THE MIDWEST!”

          It’s funny when people inadvertently expose their preconceived notions to otherwise-obvious reality. It’s just taking an extra-long time for some NYT people, I s’pose.

        • Peterr says:

          What BobBobCon said.

          If Sulz would go to a mainstream grocery store around KC, he’d probably see more romaine than iceberg. And no, it wouldn’t be there just to fool the snobs from NYC.

          Even the *carnivores* in KC love their veggies side dishes. As much as folks argue about who has the best BBQ ribs or burnt ends, they’ll also argue about the beans, the slaw, and who has the most creative approach to the rest of the meal. Ever try putting a 5″ portabella mushroom on the grill, stuffed with all the right cheeses? It’s delicious, and folks around here know it.

          Sulz was a trainwreck for the KC media world, and the Earl’s comparison of him to David Brooks is spot on. See also Thomas Friedman and his cab drivers.

    • Clare Kelly says:

      “It’s super simple. These are very rich men, who have decided to back the Republican Party, that tends to do good things for very rich men.”

      That’s it. That’s the take.

      [Buttigieg interview with Maher, topic JD Vance, July 19, 2024]

      • Magbeth4 says:

        Hear Here! You hit the nail on the head, via Buttigieg, whose erudition and ability to think on his feet, politically, when dealing with Media, is simply superb.

        And, I might add, there are Democrats who will do the same thing, as witnessed by a now former friend who used the comments section of the Times to justify his opinion that Biden had to go. That this person is very rich, and that, immediately after Biden’s announcement, $100 million was raised for Harris, told me every thing I needed to know where the power lies.

        A young Black man told me yesterday, that it seemed that we (the people) didn’t seem to have control over anything any more. He said, it seems as if somebody else is always making the decisions.

        Billionaires and enablers like the Times are our modern example of Noblesse Oblige. We poor peasants just vote as we are told.

      • mospeck says:

        not proud of it, but admit to reading NYT every morning, as they do have vg reporters. Yea, bad editors, like who could ever forget Dean Baquet? But now we got ghenghis Kahn and his brother Don. And they are in a war for the newspaper supremacy of the future. Like it or not, guess we are all in that war. It’s like what, only 105 days until the asteroid hits?
        “in my mind I can’t study war no more”
        Laura Nyro wrote it and then early on she caught some real bad luck
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTuwAo5sUik

        [Welcome back to emptywheel. SECOND REQUEST: Please choose and use a unique username with a minimum of 8 letters. We have adopted this minimum standard to support community security. I know it’s been a while since you were first asked — more than 18 months ago — but this isn’t negotiable. We’ve had attempts at spoofing long-established community members’ identities recently which this measure aims to address. /~Rayne]

        • fatvegan000 says:

          I hear ya, punaise.

          For me, Strands is right up there too (although it’s too easy more often than I’d like it to be).

  19. Magbeth4 says:

    ” 64% of whom were making their first donations of the 2024 election cycle”
    But, that does not contradict the involvement of Billionaires and Millionaires who were “making their first donations…” after having withheld contributions as long as Biden was on the ticket. We can hope it means first time, ever, but I don’t think that is entirely the case.

    My former Millionaire friend certainly withheld his contribution until the Harris announcement.

    I’d like to see a breakdown of the income level of those contributors before I celebrate.

    • Shadowalker says:

      Mega donors use superpacs, they also opened the spigots by putting in $150 million, this is not reported by the campaign to keep from violating campaign finance laws.

    • SelaSela says:

      The FEC regulates campaign donation for Federal Election candidates. A single individual is not allows to donate more that 3300 dollars to a campaign. Even billionaires.

      SuperPACs, which where created by our beloved supreme court in their infinite wisdom (the Citizens United decision) are not subject to such regulations and don’t have any limits on the amount donated. So mega donors use those superPACs instead of donating directly to the election campaign.

  20. Savage Librarian says:

    I remember exactly where I was and what I was eating when my multi-millionaire friends took me to dinner on 1/11/17 and asked me who I thought should be our next President. I immediately said, Kamala Harris. They said, “Who?”

    As I began to explain, they instantly remembered who she was and became quite interested. We never spoke about it again. But I’m pretty sure they played a significant role among those suggesting Joe Biden select her for his VP.

    The reason I thought of her was because of how she interacted with Bill Barr. It was so impressive. I love Joe Biden and I feel so lucky to have him for President. But I also feel very lucky he chose Kamala. I feel hopeful again.

    I think some (or many) millionaires and billionaires keep their options open by covering several bases. I think they play the long game more than most of us. I have no idea what my friends did about Joe Biden’s current situation. But I know they have integrity.

    • Savage Librarian says:

      Correction:

      I think the Bill Barr interactions came later. So, I can’t remember specifically what first impressed me about Kamala Harris. But I know I was thoroughly impressed by early January 2017.

  21. ShallMustMay08 says:

    Cheeky move here “…the more willing enablers”.

    I listened last night to an interview of Joe Conason with Bob Cesca (recorded at the tail end the Biden blitz) to discuss his new book: The Longest Con: How Swindlers, Grifters, and Frauds Hijacked American Conservatism. I was aware of the book but I came across Bob on Bsky making the comment that in his 35 years in media he had never witnessed such behavior of the last 3 weeks. Joe has another interview tonight with George Conway at Politics and Prose. Looking forward to hearing more as he spoke of his thinking for his next book title as “How the NYT’s Lost Democracy.” He made some great points covering Clinton as well. I hope he is aware of this place to catch what he may miss as there is no better place for the missing details of the reporting itself.

    It will keep coming fast and furious but yesterday’s classic headline “Trump’s New Rival May Bring Out His Harshest Instincts”. As JoAnn Freeman correctly observes, they went there. Ratcheting up today as everyone else’s fault for their own neglect and abject failure. Amazing. Classic tactic of verbal abuse of upper socioeconomic scale -more reason to distract and distort to cast blame. But sure, Grey Lady, do go there – shame others along with your own readers – as the enablers. Classy.

    The PAC (psychopac.org) started by George last week may reign in some of the romantic coddling of Trump. I hope it works. Share widely as it is of course a PSA on Trump but good for society as whole.

    Link to podcast –
    https://bsky.app/profile/bobcesca.bsky.social/post/3kxj2jy3wur2z
    Link to event stating soon at Politics and Prose at 7p E
    https://www.politics-prose.com/joe-conason

  22. Clare Kelly says:

    Replying to punaise
    July 24, 2024 at 7:31 pm
    “They’ll have to pry Wordle out of my cold dead hands.”

    :D

    I’m here to testify that there is life after Wordle.

    I hear you, though.

    Ty for chuckle.

  23. rosalind says:

    my daily frustration is the bad NYTimes articles that get picked up by the regional papers across the nation. i watch people pass by the Seattle Times in my local grocery store and glance down at the above-the-fold headline that very often is some fucked up b.s. then keep walking. the bad NYTimes reach is vast, and dangerous.

  24. Clare Kelly says:

    Replying to the honorables punaise and Savage Librarian:

    Fair enough.

    My methadone is Apple News mini crosswords, but yah, not quite the thrill of Wordle.

    One day at a time, as it were.

    Ty 4 chuckles.

    • punaise says:

      NYT’s Mini-Crossword and Connections are part of my overly-long daily ritual (actually more of an excuse to delay work), including:

      NYT Spelling Bee
      Wordle in French (2 versions)
      Wordle in Italian / Spanish (less rigorously)
      Worldle

      Hmmm, no wonder I get those depressing screen time summaries every week.

  25. greengiant says:

    “Hope for change” would be assuming good faith.
    A corporate socialistic autocracy is executing Bannon’s 2016 plan to destroy both political
    parties and the media.
    A researcher could check out the employees’ recent social media for their lame denials of NYTimes bias.
    Strikes me as if their individual goals for bonuses have a check box.

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