i've had a bunch of very exalted people from many walks of life ask me this in recent days. like as a genuine question, and thinking i'll have the answer
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) August 21, 2024
Obviously, this is anecdotal, based largely on the sample of journalists and bloggers I follow online and whom they choose to quote and repost, but within that limited field of vision, a divide has opened substantially, particularly since Biden stepped out of the race.
People on both sides of the divide are at least nominally supporting the Democrats – – at this point it is difficult to find anyone in the establishment press arguing that another Trump presidency would be acceptable – – but while those on one side are greatly pleased by the way the handoff has gone, the other side is curiously upset by recent events and often seems, deliberately or not, to be clearly biased against the Harris campaign. As a result, differences in approaches are growing more stark and both sides are getting increasingly annoyed. Those who are happy with the new status quo are losing patience. Those on the other side are getting more and more defensive.
As Josh Marshall puts it.
I've explained this before. But in addition to a lot of frivolous and biased journalism the real root of a lot of what you see in the elite press isn't bias precisely. Certainly it's not that the reporters are right wingers or Trumpers. It's something different but insidious.
If anything, the faction that seems to be rooting against Kamala dominates the establishment press with the epicenter being, of course, the New York Times, but what's unusual this time is how many establishment figures are making their criticisms public.
Mark Jacob Ex-editor at Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times
If this country manages to fight off Republican authoritarianism, it will be in spite of the New York Times, not because of it.
— Mark Jacob (@MarkJacob16) August 18, 2024
There is zero [nada] in this column by @ezraklein arguing that the Dems have become a "pitiless machine." The closest he comes is saying they have become "ruthlessly pragmatic."
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) August 18, 2024
See for yourself: https://t.co/IHn5h0i6h0
Yet someone at NYT decided to frame it this way. We… pic.twitter.com/jSry4tiuHH
I am watching Harris talking to reporters in Pennsylvania. A question about policy, including the child tax credit and homeowner credit is answered masterfully, the contrast with Trump‘s babble could not be greater. Of course, half the questions were about the horse race.
— Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) August 18, 2024
Uh, no.
— Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) August 18, 2024
"Parties picking their nominee after some rough internal wrangling" is not a coup.
"An armed mob trying to stop the electoral process and install the losing candidate" is a coup. pic.twitter.com/LxlbUX4DqV
Kind of amazing how much of the commentariat went into a tizzy over Harris calling for price controls, when she did no such thing. And bear in mind that most states — including Texas! — already have laws against price gouging.
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) August 18, 2024
"A stack of turned phrases don’t add up to an argument or a point." Doesn't that describe every Dowd column?
It's time that friends and Times Op-Ed leaders take Ms. Dowd aside and address the reality that her ability to communicate clearly with others is no longer sufficiently reliable, and that she needs to step aside
— Keith Olbermann (@KeithOlbermann) August 18, 2024
This Wolfer's clip shows how fed up people like him are with the way these issues are being covered.
When @CNN asked me to score the big economic policy speeches this week by Trump and Harris, I decided not to grade against a curve, but rather to simply state what I saw. pic.twitter.com/eyiCwCFMAr
— Justin Wolfers (@JustinWolfers) August 18, 2024
The Times doesn't seem able to stop doing dumb things. Like they need an intervention.
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) August 21, 2024
Matthew Cooper Executive Editor—Digital, Washington @Monthly, Alum: @Time, @Newsweek, @CondeNast, @NewRepublic
The @nytimes headline about @GovWesMoore was alarming. The story didn't deliver, burying key elements. Something is very wrong on 8th Avenue. I'm sure the gray lady's high stock price and booming subscriptions aren't fueling introspection but it's really time. https://t.co/Rq6LkWsG15
— Matthew Cooper (@mattizcoop) August 30, 2024
Kai Ryssdal, host of Marketplace.
Remember the scandal about Tim Walz being named Nebraskan of the Year (or something similar) by the NE *Junior* C of C, not full Chamber of Commerce?
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) August 30, 2024
Hold onto your hats for this latest expose about Wes Moore in our leading paper! pic.twitter.com/P8qxAynx3y
Bingo!
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) August 30, 2024
Is it complex, tho? https://t.co/SIK5IkD4QG
— Kai Ryssdal (@kairyssdal) September 1, 2024
Honest to Pete I don’t have the energy to do this for another 4 years. https://t.co/NP8SIPwiPK
— Kai Ryssdal (@kairyssdal) August 17, 2024
And NPR. Have you heard them lately?
— Kai Ryssdal (@kairyssdal) August 18, 2024
It's safe to say this guy had to be pretty pissed to go after public radio.
Not so bold but in some ways more significant is the veiled criticism coming from actual NYT writers. This goes right up to the line of publicly criticizing the paper, and with the exception of Paul Krugman (who is very much a special case), that is the one rule you do not break.
It’s time to revive the conversation about whether a major-party candidate is too old to run for president and is losing his grasp of reality. pic.twitter.com/jITQ4ClVGb
— Nicholas Kristof (@NickKristof) August 12, 2024
From Paul Campos
I should have mentioned that Edsall includes this not too subtle dig against his own employer:
“Yet, Wilentz writes, “many of even the most influential news sources hold to the fiction Trump and his party are waging a presidential campaign instead of a continuing coup, a staggering failure to recognize Trump’s stated agenda.”
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