The New York Times announced that it would endorse a
candidate for the Democratic Party’s nomination for President of the United
States, the first time in its 169-year history that the newspaper would do such
a thing. The Times’ editorial board interviewed nine candidates in extensive
interviews at its New York headquarters in December and announced its
endorsement for the Democratic nomination this past weekend.
The Times feels it’s important to get its voice into
people’s deliberations now, though its coverage has laid out clearly that it
does not want former Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Bernie Sanders or Mayor
Pete Buttigieg to be the nominee. It will at least lay its slant bare for all
to see earlier on, though it was shamelessly shilling for Hillary Clinton long
before the first ballot was cast in 2016.
So, the Times invited those candidates it judged
viable to come in and interview completely on the record with its pompous
editorial board to be part of “TheChoice,” as if it were some drama people were going to follow like
“Game of Thrones.” To their credit, Michael Bloomberg, Julian Castro and Tulsi
Gabbard declined to kiss the ring of the Times and sit for the chance to
be the window dressing on the editorial board’s tribute to itself.
The weekend edition pullout of printed excerpts had an
entire page dedicated to profile photos and titles of the editorial board, even
noting with an asterisk someone special who is not normally a member but joined
the board just for the important task of endorsing a Democrat before anyone
even votes.
We’re supposed to be wowed at the brilliance of these
professionals, who spent hours mugging for the cameras they invited into their
boardroom because they think the American voters give a rat’s ass about what
they think. And with all their brilliance and well-publicized rumination over
this important endorsement, they couldn’t even decide on a single candidate to
endorse!
They Gray Lady was too busy looking at herself in the mirror
to choose only one candidate, endorsing both SenatorAmy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Senator Elizabeth Warren of
Massachusetts.
“In a break with convention, the editorial board has chosen
to endorse two separate Democratic candidates for president,” the Times tells
us in its blacked-out opinion page heading made somber for this special
occasion.
The Times should have done the extra work and picked one of
the candidates. They did do voters a service by giving Senator Klobuchar
recognition; her campaign has so far failed to attract support that her
accomplishments merit. And the Times is right to credit Warren with being
policy-focused and experienced in multiple levels of Washington leadership.
Both Senators Klobuchar and Warren are serious candidates
with real ideas and qualifications. The Times insults both with its overwrought
half-endorsement that will serve to alienate them from the voters the need to
reach most.
New York, like the rest of the country, is in for a long
slog through a partisan election year. We can do without the
self-congratulatory fluff the Times has subjected us to.
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