Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 4:21 p.m. No.17412844   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2860 >>2872 >>2884

NEW YORK TIMES FACES BACKLASH OVER DAN GOLDMAN ENDORSEMENT DEBACLE

There are ties between the families of Goldman and Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger, who took an interest in the endorsement.

 

August 17, 2022

 

OVER THE WEEKEND, the New York Times editorial board unveiled its endorsements for the state’s upcoming congressional primary elections, backing a slate of Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney in New York’s 17th District, Rep. Jerry Nadler in the 12th District, and Dan Goldman in the 10th District.

 

The spectacle of the Times endorsing three white guys was itself enough to draw attention, but capping it off by backing Goldman, a self-funding heir to the Levi Strauss fortune, has brought an unusual amount of attention to the paper’s endorsement process.

The extremely crowded race in a deep-blue district features a current member of Congress, a former member of Congress, two members of the State Assembly, and one City Council member. Goldman, a former counsel in the first impeachment trial of Donald Trump, has not held public office and has thus far given $4 million of his exorbitant personal wealth to his campaign. That type of self-funding has previously been a disqualification for a Times endorsement, but the paper of record made an exception for Goldman.

 

The paper also skipped the open primary for New York’s 3rd District and missed an easy chance to endorse a nonwhite man in New York’s 16th, which pits incumbent Rep. Jamaal Bowman against Westchester County Legislator Vedat Gashi and County Legislator Catherine Parker.

 

As important in the context of the Times endorsement, Goldman’s family enjoys ties to members of the Sulzberger family, which has owned and run the New York Times Co. for six generations. The paper’s current publisher and chair of its parent company is Arthur Gregg “A.G.” Sulzberger. One of the rival candidates, Rep. Mondaire Jones, alluded to that relationship in a joint press conference attacking Goldman on Monday alongside another candidate, Assembly Member Yuh-Line Niou. “Look, I have no idea whether the generations of close family relationship between the Sulzbergers and the Goldmans had any role at all to play in the endorsement,” Jones said.

The Times editorial board insisted that the decision was based on merit but also disclosed that the board answers to the publisher. A.G. Sulzberger did not recuse himself despite the ties between the Goldman and Sulzberger families and has in the past overruled editorial board preferences. Sulzberger, who lives in the 10th District, expressed an interest in the race internally, according to a political operative not working on behalf of any of the candidates who spoke directly with multiple members of the editorial board, as well as another person close to Sulzberger.

 

“[O]ur election endorsements are independent decisions that emerge through reporting and discussion by a board of experienced journalists, through individual interviews with candidates. This board reports directly to the opinion editor and, through her, to the publisher,” according to a statement from the Times, which added that Sulzberger and Goldman do not personally know each other. Asked if there were any contacts between Goldman and Sulzberger family members during the endorsement process, Goldman campaign spokesperson Simone Kanter said, “The answer to your question is ‘no.’” He also cited the Times’ statement.

 

1/2con't

 

Sauce: https://theintercept.com/2022/08/17/new-york-times-dan-goldman-endorsement-mondaire-jones/

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 4:23 p.m. No.17412860   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17412844

>NEW YORK TIMES FACES BACKLASH OVER DAN GOLDMAN ENDORSEMENT DEBACLE

 

Jones was featured so much in the text of the endorsement that without the headline it could have been seen as backing both men. The two experienced women of color in the race who are at or near the top of the polls, Niou and City Council Member Carlina Rivera, were not mentioned in the endorsement at all. New York Magazine’s Ross Barkan noted that the endorsement was part of a pattern of “the Times’ growing disdain for the progressive left.”

 

According to conversations with multiple members of the Jones camp, the campaign was under the strong impression that a majority of the editorial board members were in support of his campaign, though no final decision had been made. But the Jones camp also understood the influence of the Sulzberger family on the process, and in particular A.G. Sulzberger’s ability to tip the scales, as Jones alluded to in his comments. There was a broad awareness in Jonesworld that majority support from the board did not always translate to an endorsement, and when the endorsement went to Goldman, a belief that the family’s personal preference factored in.

 

PERHAPS NO OTHER newspaper endorsement in the country matters as much as the Times’, particularly in the wealthier enclaves of New York City. It has the demonstrated capacity to move voters who are in its core audience. (The Times’ nod to Jones in 2020 helped him win his open primary in the district now pursued by Maloney.) Normally, the paper doesn’t get this opportunity, because seats come open so rarely. But a late change to redistricting in New York upended districts serving the affluent communities in Manhattan, giving the Times real power to shape certain races with its endorsement.

 

The ties between the Goldman and Sulzberger families include their mutual membership in elite Washington, D.C., circles. Shortly after announcing an abortive run for New York attorney general, Goldman banked a $1,000 check from Joseph Perpich, Cathy Sulzberger’s husband. It was the 81-year-old Perpich’s one and only contribution to a New York state political race.

 

Goldman’s mother, Susan Sachs Goldman, and Cathy Perpich (née Sulzberger), the sister of the previous New York Times publisher and aunt of its current one, both sat on the board of trustees of the elite Beltway private school Sidwell Friends, where all three Goldman children and all three Perpich (Sulzberger) children attended school. At Sidwell, Goldman was one year ahead of David Perpich, who sits on the board of directors of the New York Times Co. and is the publisher of Times products The Athletic and Wirecutter. Duke Magazine, the university’s alumni publication, profiled Perpich as the “NYT’s quiet strategist” in 2020.

 

As a 16-year-old student at Sidwell in 1993, “Danny” Goldman was quoted in the Times reacting to Chelsea Clinton’s entry into the private school. Days later, the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz criticized the Times for running the story without disclosing Cathy Sulzberger’s presence on the Sidwell board.

 

con't3/3(LONG article regarding NYT incestual relationship with Goldman)

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 4:27 p.m. No.17412872   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17412844

>>NEW YORK TIMES FACES BACKLASH OVER DAN GOLDMAN ENDORSEMENT DEBACLE

 

 

Both the Times’ official statement and a tweet thread from the company’s PR feed are carefully worded. In the tweet thread, the paper states that there are “no members of the Sulzberger family who have anything to do with candidate endorsements other than our publisher,” who is, of course, a Sulzberger. The thread stresses that the endorsements are “independent decisions” but adds that the board reports to the publisher, A.G. Sulzberger, through the opinion editor.

 

Daniel Okrent, the former public editor of the Times, had no knowledge of the specific endorsement in question but explained that similar situations have happened before. “The publisher of the paper is the authority over the editorial page,” Okrent said. “It’s not infrequent that the board might want somebody and the publisher wants someone else.”

 

Okrent didn’t find this instance particularly worthy of condemnation; after all, the publisher is ultimately responsible for what goes out under the paper’s name. In this case, he wasn’t sure whether it merited disclosure within the endorsement. “I can see how [the editorial board] would think, ‘If we say he’s a family friend, that would weaken our determination that he’s the best person for the job,’” he noted.

 

THE ENDORSEMENT ITSELF is unusually weak. It leads by saying that Goldman and Jones stand out from the mostly unnamed rest of the field. (Former Watergate-era Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman and Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon, along with Niou and Rivera, round out the top six candidates.) It highlights Goldman’s work on the Trump impeachment and says that “those who have worked with Mr. Goldman behind the scenes describe him as diligent and prepared and a person of integrity.” Longtime local reporter Errol Louis translated that to mean: “Queries within the alumni networks of Sidwell Friends, Yale, and Stanford Law, from which Goldman graduated, turned up good reports and no scandals.”

 

The endorsement celebrates Goldman “bring[ing] serious policy ideas to the race” but only mentions his support for a “ban on stock trading by members of Congress,” which has already been widely embraced by a majority of Democrats. The endorsement lauds Goldman for assisting with some research while in law school on the book “The New Jim Crow” but does not linger on Goldman’s immediate decision to become a prosecutor in the same criminal justice system the book had just lacerated.

 

Jones, by contrast, is described as a “prolific legislator” and a “bridge builder between the progressive wing of his party and its more moderate leadership.” The only mark against him is that he lacks experience working in the community he seeks to represent; Jones was elbowed out of his home district when Maloney, the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, moved to a more favorable seat. But of course Goldman similarly lacks that experience; the endorsement points out that “Goldman would need to use his first term to convince the large numbers of lower-income and middle-class Americans he would represent that he understands the issues facing those constituents.”

 

The Times editorial board is also known to harbor ill will in general toward candidates who self-fund their campaigns, a vestige of the anti-corruption piety that harkens to its mugwump roots. Goldman held off self-funding for much of the campaign, presumably fearful of losing the coveted endorsement. But on July 13, facing a cash shortfall, he dropped $1.24 million of his own money into his campaign coffers and another $750,000 a week later. Goldman later donated an additional $2 million of his own money.

 

Still more: https://theintercept.com/2022/08/17/new-york-times-dan-goldman-endorsement-mondaire-jones/

 

"Goldman won the prize without so much as a mention that he had broken the Times’ cardinal rule."

 

https://theintercept.com/2022/08/17/new-york-times-dan-goldman-endorsement-mondaire-jones/

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 4:40 p.m. No.17412947   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17412884

>F levis

 

Yeah, that. The more you know and I didn't know that either.

I think the question Goldman is answering in the pic is "how big is your peen?"

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 4:56 p.m. No.17413022   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3073 >>3098 >>3174 >>3206

Rich kid loses head for a Selfie IDd

 

Parents pay tribute to 'gorgeous-hearted' son, 22, who was killed by helicopter blade as they demand answers from Greek authorities

Jack Fenton, 22, was struck in the head by helicopter's rotor bladein Athens

His parents, Miguel and Tori, say that they miss their 'gorgeous-hearted' son

Robin Stanton-Gleaves who was on the trip said the accident was 'preventable'

 

August 18, 2022

 

"Greek investigators had said the Oxford Brooks student ran back on to the tarmac after safely disembarking so he could take a selfie, despite warnings from ground crew, and accidentally ran into a whirring blade."

 

"Ioannis Kandyllis, president of Greece's committee for aviation accidents probing the incident, said previously that Jack defied orders by running back towards the helicopter with his phone to his ear.

 

He claimed: 'All four passengers had disembarked and were escorted to a private lounge awaiting a private flight for London.

 

'But as they were in the lounge the victim broke away and returned to the tarmac rushing to the helicopter at a fast pace.

 

'Witnesses we spoke to said he was had a phone to his ear and was walking fast to the aircraft, defying ground crew shouting to him 'Stop! Stop!'

 

'Within seconds the tragic accident occurred. It was horrific.' "

 

Sauce/more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11124767/Parents-pay-tribute-gorgeous-hearted-son-22-killed-helicopter-blade.html

 

The parents blame safety protocols. Dumb/greedy AF

In the unlikely event anons don't know; Do NOT walk into Helo tail rotors. It won't end well.

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 5 p.m. No.17413032   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3039

>>17412948

>Watsonville plane crash, multiple fatalities

 

The presser is in an hour, no names yet

 

"At least three people have died after two planes collided over Watsonville, California, on Thursday afternoon.

 

The Federal Aviation Administration reported that a single-engine Cessna 152 and a twin-engine Cessna 340 crashed into each other while the pilots were attempting to land at the Watsonville Municipal Airport at around 3 p.m.

 

One of the planes plummeted into an adjacent field while the other slammed into a hangar.

 

The single-engine plane had one person on board and the other had two people on board, city officials said, confirming multiple fatalities"

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11125691/Multiple-dead-two-planes-smash-California.html

Anonymous ID: c7d5a9 Aug. 18, 2022, 5:25 p.m. No.17413096   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17413025

Grew up an only child. Turns out that wasn't horrible after all.

Sorry your sister is insane anon. Give her this book for Christmas and a copy for parentanons too (unless she was the Golden Child, then they won't care)

This could make for good holiday conversations…