Newspaper Endorsements Die in Daylight
More than presidential politics or #AnticipatoryObedience, economics is to blame (or thank) for the long, slow death of a publishing anachronism.

It sure has been a banner week for the triple haters.
Just when you thought that Donald Trump had cornered the market on cringe by making groundwork-laying false claims about fraudulent Pennsylvania ballots, along comes a pro-Kamala Harris ad narrated by Julia Roberts telling fearful MAGA wives that they can sneakily vote Democrat, and then what's this? Joe Biden is still out there barking malarkey, this time about Trump's "garbage supporters"?
As if rising to the defense of its newly minted status as the most distrusted institution in America, the news media over the past few days has responded to the one-upsmanship of awful with a hearty "Hold my beer."
In an October surprise for the newspaper industry, first the L.A. Times, then USA Today, and most spectacularly The Washington Post all announced in these final days of the 2024 campaign that they were breaking with their tradition (very recent, in the case of USA Today) of endorsing a candidate for president. The fallout has been impressive: "At least 250,000" cancelled subscriptions at the Post (a 10 percent drop), a reported 18,000 more at the Times (5 percent range); staff resignations at both.
But what really ignited the triple haters—those with disdain for Democrats, Republicans, and the media—were the haughty, whither-democracy expressions of journalistic umbrage.
This "terrible mistake" is "an abandonment of the fundamental editorial convictions of the newspaper that we love," 21 Washington Post columnists wrote in a joint letter. "This is a moment for the institution to be making clear its commitment to democratic values, the rule of law and international alliances, and the threat that Donald Trump poses to them." Wrote L.A. Times Editorial Page Editor Mariel Garza in her resignation letter: "It makes us look craven and hypocritical, maybe even a bit sexist and racist….In these dangerous times, staying silent isn't just indifference, it is complicity." (The San Francisco Press Club on Tuesday bestowed to Garza its first-ever Integrity in Journalism Award.)
Similar noises could be heard everywhere from former Post editor Marty Baron ("this is cowardice, with democracy as its casualty"), to former Baltimore Sun reporter-turned-TV writer David Simon ("this kind of abuse of a public trust by a publisher is unacceptable"), to the new trending Twitter hashtag #AnticipatoryObedience. (Sample, from Protect Democracy founder Ian Bassin: "Trump hasn't even won and media outlets from @washingtonpost to @latimes to @CNN to more are already engaged in #AnticipatoryObedience. Terrifying trajectory for press freedom and independence if he actually returns to power.")
Terrifying, or unintentionally hilarious depending on your vantage point. "There is literally nothing funnier in the known universe," cracked Twitter wag Dave "Iowahawk" Burge, "than journalists' sense of self-importance."
As per usual in media controversies, reactions to the wave of non-endorsements have fallen largely along political lines. Conservatives, libertarians, and centrists nodded vigorously at Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos's explanation that "presidential endorsements…create a perception of bias," and that "most people believe the media is biased. Anyone who doesn't see this is paying scant attention to reality, and those who fight reality lose." Journalists and left-leaners, meanwhile, warned of "looming autocracy" and asserted connect-the-dot observations as explanatory fact.
"Trump waited to make sure that Bezos did what he said he was going to do, and then met with the Blue Origin people," longtime opinion page hand Robert Kagan told The Daily Beast, referring to the Bezos-owned space company. "Which tells us that there was an actual deal made, meaning that Bezos communicated, or through his people, communicated directly with Trump, and they set up this quid pro quo." (Bezos said he had no prior knowledge of the Blue Origin meeting, and that "Neither campaign nor candidate was consulted or informed at any level or in any way about this decision.")
Overshadowed as ever in the politicized ruckus is the basic economic fact that the newspaper business has collapsed by about 75 percent since 1990 across all measures (circulation, revenue, staffing); and is now hemorrhaging money after decades of 20 percent profit margins. (The Post in 2023 alone lost $77 million.) In an industry desperate to shed expenses, arguably the most cost-ineffective section of the entire newspaper is the one being so bitterly fought over this week: unsigned editorials.
When Michael Kinsley took over the L.A. Times opinion pages in 2004, he infamously (within the paper, anyway) prepared a PowerPoint presentation on "pie-in-the-sky" ideas to be discussed at a company management retreat. Included among those thought bubbles was axing unsigned editorials altogether, a proposal that proved awkward internally when he left a copy of his presentation near the office printer.
But the economic logic as laid out by Kinsley was not just brutal, but inevitable. The L.A. Times editorial board, which I was hired for in 2006 very soon after the former Slate editor was axed, had at the time of his PowerPoint around 15 members, who between them were responsible for around 20 unsigned editorials a week at about 400 words each. Some of those employees had other editing and writing responsibilities, but several others did not. With the kind of salaries that would make 99 percent of L.A. freelancers physically ill with envy, the section's effective dollar-per-word rate approached peak-era Vanity Fair.
These are the kinds of luxuries you can afford when you're the most profitable newspaper in the history of the world—less so when you're bleeding $40 million per year. And those numbers look even worse when you account for measurable impact (including readership) of the editorials themselves.
In an informative Poynter piece that lamented the long-term non-endorsement trend, Rick Edmonds nonetheless offered several good explanations for its rise, including: "At Gannett [owner of USA Today and more than 100 other newspapers], extensive studies found that editorials, at least in digital format, were among the least-read content," and "Studies have shown that a news outlet endorsement has little impact on how people vote," and "No matter how many times the clarification is offered that an editorial board and the newsroom operate separately, many readers don't see the distinction or don't believe there is one."
Donald Trump won 46.8 percent of the national vote in 2020 after daily newspapers had overwhelmingly endorsed his opponent, Joe Biden, by a Wikipedia-collated count of 107 to 14 (with one anyone-but-Trump). He won 46.1 percent of the vote in 2016 when newspapers lopsidedly preferred Hillary Clinton 244 to 20 (with Libertarian Gary Johnson receiving 9 and independent Evan McMullin one). He is currently polling at 47.5 percent as a lower count of dailies nonetheless maintain the same basic ratio: 40 to 6 as of Thursday morning.
All of which is a far cry from where the sentiment of newspaper ownership—which traditionally has been the deciding force in unsigned-editorial slant, as opposed to the more separately managed newsroom—has traditionally been. Republican Richard Nixon, for example, won the 1972 endorsement war in nearly as big a landslide as the Electoral College tally: 753 to 56. Though it is also true, as I laid out in this 2018 article, that both the Nixon administration and the media ownership class were openly reminding one another about the connection between editorial content and executive-branch decision-making.
As my former L.A. Times colleague Robert Greene (who I have tremendous professional respect for) wrote this week in The Atlantic in a piece explaining his resignation:
The Times editorial board went more than three decades without endorsing in presidential races, largely because readers and the newsroom were so outraged by the endorsement of Richard Nixon for reelection in 1972 that publishers were too cautious (or rather, too chicken) to again take a stand. But soon after I arrived at the Times, the editorial board promised to start endorsing for president again in the 2008 primary.
Nixon won his home state of California by 13.5 percentage points; one of nine GOP wins in the Golden State in the 10 presidential elections between 1952 and 1988. But 1972—and its immediate aftermath of the Watergate investigation, Nixon's resignation, and the valorization of the journalistic role thereof—was a political inflection point in newspaperdom.
The American Journalist Survey, a decennial industry study operated out of Indiana University, has found that the self-reported political party identification of working journalists has shifted massively leftward during the past half century: From a ratio of three Democrats to two Republicans in 1971 (35.5 percent to 25.7 percent, with 32.5 percent independent and 6.3 percent other), to 11:1 in 2022 (36.4 percent to 3.4 percent).
The Trump era, which journalists have responded to with calls for the "moral clarity" of rejecting "bothsidesism" in the name of protecting democracy, has only accelerated this long ideological drift. When you combine political polarization with a collapsing business model, the loudest cost centers are going to be the first to go.
As with the decline of many local institutions, from church to Little League to social clubs, there is some unreplicable loss associated with the demise of editorial boards. Though definitionally insular (I tried in my small way to share our newsmaker conversations with the public), they served as a way for the local and sometimes national political class to check one another, deliver progress reports, argue ideas. When I spoke with the then-L.A. Times publisher in 2008 about potentially returning to run the page, and he wondered aloud—Michael Kinsley-style—about the value of continuing unsigned editorials, I blinked rather than reach for the axe. Like the canned peaches at town meetings in the classic HBO show Deadwood, there was some mystery in the civic ritual that I felt too conservative to toss aside.
But kiloliters of red ink have spilled since then. What you're hearing this week is the thrashing of an old whale yanked rudely from the sea and dumped unceremoniously onto the sand: It will be loud, not particularly dignified, and will soon die. Bezos and company managed all of this poorly—this decision should have been made in spring, not October—but as the last generation of non-vulture capitalists willing to bet on the newspaper business, they acknowledged what many journalists still cannot: Those glory days are over.
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They are called news papers, but they are really opinions papers.
He's just hedging his bets
Their main goal is to control what we think and what to think.
It is to generate approval for the government.
Bird cage liners.
-jcr
Are the PA claims really false? Registration forms to vote are not the same as ballots, sure, but as the article points out: “Generally, experts say, fraudulent registration forms are intercepted by officials or result in someone being added to the voter rolls and then removed due to inactivity.” (btw can we get rid of the phrase “experts say”? Name names).
I digress, the “or” there is important, and I don’t think the concern should be so easily dismissed. “Without evidence,” I’d bet the vast majority of fraudulent registrations *do* result in those names being added to the voter roll. Furthermore, if you were intending to follow through on your fraudulent registration and vote, would those names be caught due to inactivity, or not?
“Generally, experts say, fraudulent registration forms are intercepted by officials or result in someone being added to the voter rolls and then removed due to inactivity.”
I think it's the active fraudulent voters we're worried about, not the inactive ones. But that's just me.
So what are they saying? That people submit fraudulent registrations for laughs and then never follow through with fraudulent votes?
People submit fraudulent forms and that later get removed is through inactivity. What do you think is going on with the ones that are not inactive to be noticed and removed?
i would guess 'harvesters' submit fraudulent registrations and while they are awaiting deletion due to inactivity (does that even happen in D run States?) that gives them a reserve fund of fake voters that they can draw on should they deem it necessary.
"(btw can we get rid of the phrase “experts say”? Name names)"
Hahaha, no of course not! What do you think this is?
Bezos is spending $100M/year to keep a pack of ungrateful sniveling lefturds off the dole, and he's taking one last shot at salvaging his investment. It's not going to work, and when he gets sick of it and closes it down, nothing of value will be lost.
-jcr
Washington Post Shuts down, doing hundreds of thousands of dollars in improvements to the newspaper publishing business.
Again, my reading of "But it's less likely that we're coming to our senses than that partisanship is skewing the data in a more accurate direction than usual." says that if Bezos shutters the WaPo so hard that it puts Joe Lancaster and Jacob Sullum out of a job permanently, the public perception of crime gets more accurate or more sensible.
Putting Sullum and Lancaster out of a job is a laudable goal. Maybe they can learn to code.
No way in hell that happens. WaPo is the main glowie mouthpiece, and they’re not giving up their Operation Mockingbird asset. If Bezos dumps it, they’ll have Reid Hoffman, Larry Fink, Bezos’ ex-wife, or some other champagne marxist buy it out and run it for them.
The FCC didn’t just sign off on Soros’ purchase of about 70% of the radio airwaves because they’re worried about business monopolies. It’s about controlling the flow of information and approved narratives.
Who is 'they?'
“They “ are your masters.
And "they" own you.
The dems are sad because a couple of papers didn't kiss the ring.
That's about it. Welch is trying to act like Reason is any better than the other Democrat media outlets because they publish a mostly bs article about their political loyalties.
These papers don't have to officially endorse a candidate for any English speaker to understand they're voting Democrat. Likewise with Reason, we have read enough of their articles to see they are vehemently anti-right and at least begrudgingly pro-left.
So true. The only explanation for criticism of one team is support for the other team. That's why the articles critical of Harris, Biden and Democrats don't exist. That would equal support for Trump and Republicans, and that's just impossible because it goes against the narrative. So those articles are hallucinations.
All the articles critical of Trump and Republicans though, they're real. And it's all Reason does, because those other articles are figments of the imagination.
.
Really, this garbage again, Sarc? It's almost as bad as a Sqrlsy copypasta post.
It's all the little retard has.
He really is a one note retard.
Wherein they write cowardly things like, "I don't regret any vote I've ever cast because the weight of a single vote is inconsequential."
No shit, Boehm. We're not looking to blame one Reason staffer's singular vote as the reason an election swung. The point of the question is whether your process for deciding where you vote has been flawed in the past and if you've ever had to recalibrate. The whole point isn't to grade you on your voting history but to get insight on your process for making decisions to inform the readers.
I regret that I was still voting straight Republican in 2004 and voted for W. Bush. I don't regret any vote I've ever cast for a libertarian, not Gary Johnson or Jo, and certainly not for writing in Ron Paul in 2008. I've made some tough choices in state elections at times (which has led to me writing some unanswered letters to my state rep) but the choices are often between different varieties of garbage, and I hold my nose and cast those.
" but the choices are often between different varieties of garbage, and I hold my nose and cast those."
Why? Nobody is forcing you to vote, In fact it only adds legitimacy to a process you find so much fault with.
I didn't say the process sucked, I said the options often suck. There's still sometimes worse options to avoid.
Laugh about it, shout about it
When you've got to choose
Every way you look at it, you lose
"There’s still sometimes worse options to avoid."
Isn't that exactly what 'they' want you to believe?
They do. And it’s also true.
It's partisan bullshit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c9z33lasnkU
"Conservatives, libertarians, and centrists nodded vigorously at Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos's explanation that 'presidential endorsements…create a perception of bias,' and that 'most people believe the media is biased.'
Go fuck yourself in the face, Welch. You do not get to lump yourself in with the "this is bullshit" set after months of aiding said bullshit. Reason has quite clearly created a perception of bias by being, you know, fucking biased.
oh lol now they don't matter. how is life being literally transparent?
Journalists and left-leaners, meanwhile, warned of "looming autocracy" and asserted connect-the-dot observations as explanatory fact.
And the Journalisming left-leaners that I follow made an excellent argument for not doing [presidential] endorsements: It creates an editorial incentive for their endorsed candidate to succeed. Not just in the campaign, but once in orifice. How hard is this to understand?
> It creates an editorial incentive for their endorsed candidate to succeed. Not just in the campaign, but once in orifice.
If not for editorial endorsements, we might have all been spared the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal. 😛
Bezos and company managed all of this poorly—this decision should have been made in spring, not October—but as the last generation of non-vulture capitalists willing to bet on the newspaper business, they acknowledged what many journalists still cannot: Those glory days are over.
Sure, I would say he should have done it in [year Bezos took over the WaPo], but sure. I agree with Megyn Kelly on this one... it's simply too little, too late.
The Seattle Times has its answer to the WaPo:
Lol, they sound like a Media Matters brochure.
Same cult.
THey sound like a high school fan club.
"the other leading candidate clearly threatens the foundation of our 248-year-old American democracy and the rule of law."
And people wonder how the rhetoric got so bad that people started to take shots at Trump. It's saying shit like this and then the crazies believe it.
Especially because these fuckheads actually believe that it's only democracy when they win.
That line about the "rule of law" is especially hilarious. When the fuck did these journoscum ever believe in the rule of law when it didn't hurt their political opposition?
Has the "Chaz Gazzette" endorsed anyone yet?
I read that as Chad Gazette for a second.
They can afford to. They don't have to worry about any unrealized capital gains being taxed.
For the record, the board, which operates independently of the newsroom, backed Vice President Kamala Harris Sept. 1.
LOL. Did you guys hear something? I thought I heard a whisper of "We're relevant too!" but it could've just been the wind.
You forgot to add the /s at the end of the last sentence.
Democracy's foundations are apparently impervious to party insiders staging a coup and selecting a candidate who won zero primaries in her first try, or to one party refusing to implement common sense election integrity controls, or intent on importing new voters by giving them free stuff.
" "It makes us look craven and hypocritical, maybe even a bit sexist and racist….In these dangerous times, staying silent isn't just indifference, it is complicity." "
"IF YOU'RE NOT WITH US YOU'RE AGAINST US!" isn't really the best way to win the hearts and minds of people.
Silence is violence!
But words are also violence.
And violence is mostly peaceful, at least when it's committed by their political allies.
“In these dangerous times, staying silent isn’t just indifference, it is complicity.”
Okay, Garza, I won’t be silent about it.
Fuck you, fuck your family, fuck your city, fuck your paper, fuck your political religion, and fuck anyone who agrees with you.
That was completely rude. You should agree to disagree first.
Even if the general public still trusted “newspapers” to provide “the news,” fewer and fewer people would still 1) get their news from newspapers; or 2) care about the news in the first place. I still care about world events, both sociopolitical and natural, but have found myself more and more lately trying to tone down the almost non-stop din bombarding me from every angle and at every turn. Add to that din the undeniable fact that most of the “news” aimed at us is highly emotional nonsense designed to grab media share, not to inform or to discuss.
Bezos has apparently figured out that the long term future of the Washington Post depends on re-establishing some semblance of journalistic credibility. Not taking sides in elections may be a first step. Their online hits are down 50%, which means that only their die hard readers pay any attention to them anymore. If they cannot establish themselves as a reliable trustworthy source, there will be no Washington Post.
"Bezos has apparently figured out that the long term future of the Washington Post depends on re-establishing some semblance of journalistic credibility."
The owner stepping in to cancel an editorial is not the way to do it.
"Their online hits are down 50%, which means that only their die hard readers pay any attention to them anymore."
I don't believe Bezos bought the Post to make money, and he's more interested in influencing Washington power brokers and politicians than typical online readers. His intervention should make that clear.
The owner stepping in to cancel an editorial is not the way to do it.
Yes it is. It absolutely is.
Don't forget:
mtrueman|8.30.17 @ 1:42PM|#
"Spouting nonsense is an end in itself."
No it isn't. Absolutely not. Editorial independence means the freedom of writers and editors to do their job as they see fit.
They also have the freedom to be fired.
Editorial independenceOwning the business meansthe freedom of writers and editors to do their jobto do as they see fit.An owner can make mistakes. Interfering with the day to day operations of the Post is one. I'm sure Bezos never intended to lose a quarter million subscribers over the course of a couple of days, don't you think? Bezos has had a pretty good record at preserving the editorial independence of the Post till now.
An owner owns it. FOAD, asshole.
“Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos’s explanation that “presidential endorsements…create a perception of bias,” and that “most people believe the media is biased.”
Of course it’s biased. Newspapers have been biased advocates of various causes since day one. At least with endorsements, the bias is out in the open instead of hidden away.
"The man who reads nothing at all is better educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers." Thomas Jefferson.
Books are biased, too. They can't help but reflect the beliefs of those who write them.
This "terrible mistake" is "an abandonment of the fundamental editorial convictions of the newspaper that we love," 21 Washington Post columnists wrote in a joint letter.
What a bunch of gayrods.
I’m wondering if Mr. Bezos and company haven’t been getting sub rosa communications from the FEC about their function as the DNC newsletter, and decided to back off before the penalties kick in.
No. There's nothing illegal or immoral about functioning as a DNC newsletter.
Doing the work of the DNC is pure evil.
Pure evil is not illegal.
Neither is assholery, asshole. FOAD.
Yet most of what democrats do IS illegal. And especially unconstitutional, which also equals illegal.
Most of your kind belong in prison or at the business end of a firing squad.
"Yet most of what democrats do IS illegal."
You mean they play for keeps. Bad show, old bean.
You mean like lying, cheating and voter fraud.
Oh, I almost forgot, sending out someone to kill Trump.
"You mean like lying, cheating and voter fraud."
The Democrats aspiring to the presidency want to win. Don't the Republicans?
As a democrat, you’re criminal Marxist traitor scum. You should all be dealt with accordingly.
The evil Democrats look set to win the White House. Looks like you're in for a spell at their re-education camps. Bring your toothbrush.
Whoosh.
Not real bright, is he?
Bezos is richer than King Solomon. If the WAPO folds, he loses a money losing "asset" and we on this side of the aisle are happy.
So why did he go out of his way to piss off the left by stepping away from the endorsement game? I suspect that Kamala isn't just your run of the mill bad candidate - she's probably somewhere between Katy Hill and Diddy. Maybe all he has is some rumors and allegations from people inside her life. But given what the left is being investigated for nowadays, it might not be pretty.
I think you made a connection there. Harris may very well have been on the inside of some of Diddy's parties and as we all know, Musk has openly stated, the elites are scared shitless that Diddy's vids and photos are going to be made public. They are absolutely in a panic.
They should be.
"So why did he go out of his way to piss off the left by stepping away from the endorsement game? "
Bezos has a long history of bad blood with Trump. It goes back at least as far as Trump's determination to have the Post Office increase the rates it charged to Amazon for delivery. From 2018:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/trump-personally-pushed-postmaster-general-to-double-rates-on-amazon-other-firms/2018/05/18/2b6438d2-5931-11e8-858f-12becb4d6067_story.html
"Maybe all he has is some rumors and allegations from people inside her life."
That she sucked the penis of a California politician? Oral sex is a beautiful thing and nothing shameful about it.
Do you really believe trading sexual favors for political patronage is nothing to be ashamed of? I respectfully suggest it is a shameful thing- not the sexual act itself (albeit that is no one else's business) but the fact that she was sleeping with a married man in order to obtain career advancement.
“the fact that… ”
Now it’s a fact? In your original post it was only rumors! I think you are too gullible and too willing to attribute the worst motives to actions you can't possibly have anything but second or third hand knowledge of.
trueman is a slimy pile of shit, ain't he
I believe another name for it is "prostitution".
These hysterical attacks are not persuasive. Get back to us when you've got something better. No time to lose.
Which I wouldn't mind if she was honest about it. It's about time sex workers got some representation. But she's not a representative, but a persecutor of anyone else who does what she did.
Didn’t you recently also confess a fetish to watching small children masturbate?
No. But children do masturbate, a practice best enjoyed in private by perverts of all ages.
thrashing of an old whale yanked rudely from the sea and dumped unceremoniously onto the sand
And unlike ambergris, what is being vomited up smells awful.
There, I made the weird metaphor worse...
"TV exec tells Brian Stelter the inconvenient truth: Trump victory means MSM is dead in current form"...
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/tv-exec-tells-cnns-brian-stelter-inconvenient-truth-trump-victory-means-msm-dead-current
We can only hope so.
Regime “journalists” are a herd of mindless, bleating sheep. If there is ever another civil war they will be among the first to lose their heads.
It's all about feelings. How can we be smug if the paper of record in our city (or the nation) doesn't endorse the same candidate as us? How can we work for this newspaper disseminating news if we don't get to tell people who to vote for every 2 years?