By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
Who owns the media seems like a simple
and straightforward question that can be answered with a brief search,
corporate registration papers and ownership records. Or so you might
think.
The ongoing battle over the Washington Post between its
actual owner, Jeff Bezos, the 2nd wealthiest man in the world, who paid
$250 million for it, and the staff, show that, at least when it comes to
the media, the question of ownership is about more than who legally
owns it.
Last year, Bezos decided to change course at the paper
which had adopted its infamous “Democracy Dies in Darkness” tagline amid
a promise to bring down Trump as a sequel to Watergate. After eight
years in which the paper managed to do little more than settle out of
court after libeling a high school kid as a racist, subscriptions by the
true believers were declining.
Hoping to reboot the paper, Bezos
brought in Will Lewis, formerly of the UK’s Telegraph and the Wall
Street Journal, who in turn tried to bring in The Telegraph‘s Robert
Winnett as editor. The staffers revolted and coordinated a campaign with
allied leftist media to smear Lewis and Winnett until the latter
decided to drop out. While the objections around past British media
scandals, the real issue was that Bezos was bringing in new leadership
associated with centrist media to move the paper to the center. And the
employees wouldn’t have it. CNN staffers had similarly ousted their new
boss Chris Licht who had tried to move it more toward the center.
But
while CNN is a low-tier property in an entertainment conglomerate whose
executives are concerned with other matters, Bezos wouldn’t let matters
rest at the Washington Post.
The usually hands off owner
intervened aggressively, ordering the paper not to publish an
endorsement of Kamala Harris. In response, an editor-at-large,
columnists and editorial writers left, and and other columnists
including some with extremely checkered reputations like Karen Attiah,
at the heart of Qatar’s Jamal Khashoggi influence operation, Max Boot,
whose wife would be indicted for acting as an unregistered foreign
agent, and Jennifer Rubin, who was practically on Biden’s payroll, wrote
angry columns protesting the non-endorsement.
The Post featured
these diatribes prominently. Post columnists, including its alleged
‘humor’ columnist Alexandra Petri (married to the paper’s current deputy
opinion editor), took shots at Bezos in his own paper. The paper
promoted ‘outrage’ by readers who threatened to cancel their
subscriptions for ‘threatening democracy’ as if the average Post reader
were likely to vote for anyone but the ‘D’ even if he were the devil
himself.
Washington Post ‘cartoonist’ Ann Telnaes resigned after
the paper wouldn’t publish a cartoon of Bezos bowing before Trump. Other
staffers also headed for the exit in various tantrums.
Truly fed
up now, Bezos announced that the new missions of the editorial page
would be “personal liberties and free markets” and contended that “these
viewpoints are underserved in the current market of ideas and news
opinion.” Opinion page editor David Shipley resigned.
“Bezos
argues for personal liberties. But his news organization now will forbid
views other than his own in its opinion section,” complained former
executive editor Marty Baron, who had turned the paper into a
monoculture and appeared to have targeted the David Horowitz Freedom
Center for retaliation after Front Page Magazine had criticized his
mismanagement of the paper.
(Shortly after our criticisms, the
Post ran multiple hit pieces on the Center, accusing us of being the
secret force behind the Trump administration and inciting a federal
investigation of us.)
Democrats seemed baffled and outraged that
Bezos dared to set policy at a newspaper that he owned. “This is what
Oligarch ownership of the media looks like,” Sen. Bernie Sanders
complained. “The second-richest guy in the world, Bezos, owns The
Washington Post. He has now declared that the editorial page of that
paper is going Trump right-wing.”
That is how private ownership of things in general works. But the Post hasn’t gone ‘right wing’.
Apart
from more resignations, the paper’s opinion pages look much like they
used to. The Editorial Board has ‘moderated’ and appears largely in line
with the Amazon founder’s diktat, focusing its attacks on Trump mostly
over tariffs and offering tepid views on other issues, but the remaining
columnists and the rest of the op-ed section remains the same political
monoculture. (Along with George Will who, like counterpart David
Brooks, focuses on social observations.)
Current plans are to
divide up the paper into two divisions between a ‘politics’ and ‘news’
desk with the Democracy Dies in Darkness crowd being shuffled off into
the politics section in the hopes that the newspaper might finally be
able to report some non-Never Trump news. This has spurred more rejected
anti-Bezos editorials and columns, and another wave of resignations.
Why
should anyone outside D.C., the media or politics care about this
inter-paper drama? Because it goes to the larger question of confronting
what is really wrong with the media.
If the second richest man in the world doesn’t even control the paper he bought, who does?
The
answer is right in front of us. Much like the corporate world, the
C-suite isn’t really in charge, and neither are the owners, and
certainly not the shareholders. When even a man wealthy enough to drop a
quarter of a billion on a paper has struggled to enforce his will, the
average CEO is much less likely to have sway over what goes on in the
real centers of power.
The struggle sessions within the New York
Times, the ousting of CNN’s CEO, and a smaller scale struggle between
the owner of the LA Times and the staff show that while the formal power
may be with owners and CEOs, the actual centers of power lie in leftist
networks within the media that are able to defy owners, executives and
anyone who tries to moderate them.
The media always had its
biases and clubbiness, but during the Bush and Obama administrations the
centers of gravity shifted away from an older formal leadership, which
became all but irrelevant, to a younger internet-savvy club of
activists, which closely coordinated on their political agendas behind
the scenes while creating a new covert media cartel.
Early leaks
that revealed the coordination between members of the so-called
‘Juicebox Mafia’, activist bloggers turned journalists with a knack for
social media and appearing influential, were shrugged off. By the next
decade such coordination had become routine and unwelcome members like
Bari Weiss at the New York Times were ousted with bullying, leaks and
‘revolts’.
A major turning point was reached when Dylan Byers, a
member of the ‘Juicebox Mafia’, wrote an article smearing New York
Times’s executive editor Jill Abramson based on quotes from anonymous
staffers. Abramson was ousted and was replaced with Dean Baquet who
lived in terror of a similar fate. Just how little power Baquet had was
exposed when Donald G. McNeil Jr, the paper’s science and health
reporter, was ousted in a baseless cancel culture incident. Even though
Baquet urged that McNeil be given another chance, 150 staffers demanded
that he be ousted, and they got their way, making it clear that the
activist network was really in charge.
What happened at
universities, where non-activist faculty live in terror of activist
students, and administrators live in terror of activist faculty and
students, has happened in the media, and to varying degrees in
corporations. But where corporations began reclaiming power from HR
departments and DEI affinity groups in recent years, that has not
happened in the media.
And Bezos’s efforts to wrest control back over his paper may be a bellwether.
Bezos
bought the Washington Post for financial reasons, not ideological ones,
and his desire to retune the paper away from woke politics likely has
to do with winning federal contracts. The billionaire remembers clashes
over Amazon’s federal cloud contracts during Trump’s first term and
doesn’t want to see the company lose billions over tantrums by a paper
that was supposed to aid his business interests by influencing D.C.
politicians, not obstruct or sabotage them.
What he did not
understand was that the paper he bought was not really his. It belonged
to an activist network that used it as a platform with little regard for
who actually owned it. This media ‘deep state’ is in charge in a way
that mere corporate owners can never be because it is not dependent on
any single outlet or all of them but is an element of a larger political
organization.
Personnel is policy. Ideological networks and
cultural conformity are far more pervasive than mere orders and policy
statements can ever be. That’s why a leftist takeover is so hard to
end..Bezos is one of the biggest capitalists in the world, but he’s up
against an anti-capitalist movement that has plenty of experience
infiltrating and taking over workplaces.
And that is who ‘owns’ the media.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.

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