Ruth Marcus has been a writer for The Washington Post for forty years. Yesterday, she wrote a principled dissent to the decision of Jeff Bezos, the billionaire who owns the newspaper, to stop the editorial board from publishing its endorsement of Kamala Harris. In addition, 16 opinion writers published a statement criticizing the decision.
She wrote:
I love The Washington Post, deep in my bones. Last month marked my 40th year of proud work for the institution, in the newsroom and in the Opinions section. I have never been more disappointed in the newspaper than I am today, with the tragically flawed decision not to make an endorsement in the presidential race.
At a moment when The Post should have been stepping forward to sound the clarion call about the multiple dangers that Donald Trump poses to the nation and the world, it has chosen instead to pull back. That is the wrong choice at the worst possible time.
I write — I dissent — from the perspective of someone who spent two decades as a member of The Post’s editorial board. (I stepped away last year.) From that experience, I can say: you win some and lose some. No one, perhaps not even the editorial page editor, agrees with every position the board takes. At bottom, the owner of the newspaper is entitled to have an editorial page that reflects the owner’s point of view.
In addition, let’s not overestimate the significance of presidential endorsements. As much as we might like to believe otherwise, they have limited persuasive value for the vanishingly small number of undecided voters. They are distinct from endorsements for local office, involving issues and personalities about which voters might have scant knowledge; in these circumstances, editorial boards can serve as useful, trusted proxies. A presidential endorsement serves a different purpose: to reflect the soul and underlying values of the institution.
A vibrant newspaper can survive and even flourish without making presidential endorsements; The Post itself declined to make endorsements for many years before it began doing so regularly in 1976, as publisher and chief executive officer William Lewis pointed out in his explanation for the decision to halt the practice.
If The Post had announced after this election that it would stop endorsing presidential candidates, I might have disagreed with that decision, but I would not consider it out of bounds. The practice of endorsements comes with some costs. The newsroom and the Opinions section maintain rigorous separation, but it is difficult to make that case to an official aggrieved by the failure to secure an endorsement.
This is not the time to make such a shift. It is the time to speak out, as loudly and convincingly as possible, to make the case that we made in 2016 and again in 2020: that Trump is dangerously unfit to hold the highest office in the land.
This was The Post on Oct. 13, 2016: “Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is dreadful, that is true — uniquely unqualified as a presidential candidate. If we believed that Ms. Clinton were the lesser of two evils, we might well urge you to vote for her anyway — that is how strongly we feel about Mr. Trump,” the editorial board wrote in endorsing Hillary Clinton. Trump, it — we because I was a member of the board then — said, “has shown himself to be bigoted, ignorant, deceitful, narcissistic, vengeful, petty, misogynistic, fiscally reckless, intellectually lazy, contemptuous of democracy and enamored of America’s enemies. As president, he would pose a grave danger to the nation and the world.”
Every word of that proved sadly true.
This was The Post on Sept. 28, 2020: It — we — called Trump “the worst president of modern times,” in endorsing Joe Biden “Democracy is at risk, at home and around the world,” the editorial warned. “The nation desperately needs a president who will respect its public servants; stand up for the rule of law; acknowledge Congress’s constitutional role; and work for the public good, not his private benefit.”
What has changed since then? Trump’s behavior has only gotten worse — and we have learned only more disturbing things about him. Most significantly, he disputed the results of a fair election that he lost and sought to prevent the peaceful transfer of power. He encouraged an insurrection that threatened the life of his own vice president — leading to his second impeachment — and then defended the insurrectionists as “hostages.” He will not accept the reality of his 2020 loss or pledge to respect the results of next month’s voting, unless it concludes in his favor.
He has threatened to “terminate” the Constitution. He has demeaned his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, as “mentally impaired.” He has vowed to fire the special counsel who brought two criminal cases against him and “go after” his political enemies. He wants to use the military to pursue domestic opponents — “radical left lunatics” like former House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) or Rep. Adam Schiff (D-California) — and rout out “the enemy from within.”
I could keep going but you know all this, and you get my point: What self-respecting news organization could abandon its entrenched practice of making presidential endorsements in the face of all this?
Lewis, in his publisher’s note, called this move “consistent with the values The Post has always stood for and what we hope for in a leader: character and courage in service to the American ethic, veneration for the rule of law, and respect for human freedom in all its aspects.” It was, he added, “a statement in support of our readers’ ability to make up their own minds on this, the most consequential of American decisions — whom to vote for as the next president.”
But asserting that doesn’t make it so. Withholding judgment does not serve our readers — it disrespects them. And expressing our institutional bottom line on Trump would not undermine our independence any more than our choices did in 1976, 1980, 1984, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016 or 2020. We were an independent newspaper then and, I hope, remain one today.
Many friends and readers have reached out today, saying they planned to cancel their subscriptions or had already done so. I understand, and share, your anger. I think the best answer, for you and for me, may be embodied in this column: You are reading it, on the same platform, in the same newspaper, that has so gravely disappointed you.

History is full of moments when we collectively justified not taking a full stand with a full stop signaling we would not continue down the road to fascism (or tyranny. There are too many small (CNN) and large (WAPO) signals that Snyder is correct
“Most of the power of authoritarianism is freely given,” Snyder’s “On Tyranny” reads. “In times like these, individuals think ahead about what a more repressive government will want, and then offer themselves without being asked. A citizen who adapts in this way is teaching power what it can do.”
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“A presidential endorsement serves a different purpose: to reflect the soul and underlying values of the institution.”
This is an interesting suggestion. I think the underlying values of any newspaper or any organization that operates with the purpose of presenting truth in factual form would need no other value except to present truth, facts that are pertinent to the world as it exists.
It is certainly true that few people will be swayed by any information put out there by anyone. I cannot imagine that a subscriber to the Post would be among the undecided voter. Considering that a few undecided voters in about 7 states might be the difference between Trump and real government, our democracy remains in peril no matter what the Post does.
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I’m not buying the intimation she made at the end suggesting that because WaPo published her dissent, that makes a significant difference. She doesn’t work at WaPo anymore, but truly, even if they publish dissents, both individually and as a group, from other editors who are still employed there, I don’t think I can just forgive Bezos and forget, because there’s waaay too much at stake in this election, for the US as well as for the world at-large. He deserves for the Washington Post, Amazon and Whole Foods to be boycotted!
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Ruth Marcus still works for the Washington Post.
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Yes, you are right. Sorry, I should have said the Editorial Board there, from which she said she “stepped away last year.”
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I cancelled my subscription an hour ago.
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This is my concern: If Bezos doen’t have the guts to have his paper make a presidential endorsement, how can I every trust the Post in the reporting of hard news? And a decision not to endorse 10 days before the election just shows that Bezos is unfit to be the owner of such a renowned (formally?) institution. Newspapers are not toys for spolied rich guys.
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Agree, Andy!
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I agree, Andy. The Washington Post has made a colossal mistake by confusing editorial opinion with ownership’s preferences. I cancelled my subscription early this morning.
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I wish everyone could read AND UNDERSTAND how brutal Trump would be if he is elected. The people closest to him know he wants to be a dictator. [Unfortunately, Trump lovers would say this is a far L nonsense. They refuse to believe that Trump wouldn’t be a great president.] He wants to round up 15 million immigrants, close public schools, privatize the U.S. postal service and prevent gays from joining the military.
13 ex-Trump aides back Kelly’s ‘dictator’ warning
Saturday, October 26, 2024
Thirteen former Trump administration officials released an open letter Friday amplifying warnings from John Kelly, Donald Trump’s longest-serving White House chief of staff, that the former president would rule like a dictator if he returned to office.
The former officials wrote that they were shocked but “not surprised” after Kelly, a former Marine general, told The New York Times that Trump had said more than once that “Hitler did some good things” and had complained that U.S. generals were not sufficiently loyal to him.
“This is who Donald Trump is,” wrote the 13, all “lifelong Republicans,” according to the letter. “Donald Trump’s disdain for the American military and admiration for dictators like Hitler is rooted in his desire for absolute, unchecked power.”..
“The American people deserve a leader who won’t threaten to turn armed troops against them, won’t put his quest for power above their needs, and doesn’t idealize the likes of Adolf Hitler,” the letter said….
The letter, organized Wednesday after Kelly’s comments were published in the Times on Tuesday, was signed by several outspoken supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris, including two who gave speeches at the Democratic National Convention: Stephanie Grisham, a former Trump White House press secretary, and Olivia Troye, who was an adviser to Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence.
Other signers included Anthony Scaramucci, who had a memorable 10-day run as communications director in the Trump White House; Brooke Vosburgh Alexander, who was a top aide in the Commerce Department; Alyssa Farah Griffin, who served as Pence’s press secretary; Mark Harvey and Peter Jennison, who worked on the National Security Council; Sarah Matthews, a former deputy White House press secretary; and Robert Riley, who was the U.S. ambassador to Micronesia.
Three former Homeland Security Department officials also signed the letter: Kevin Carroll, Elizabeth Neumann and Sofia Kinzinger, who is married to former Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, one of the most vocal Republican opponents of Trump after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
“For the good of our country, our democracy, and our Constitution, we are asking you to listen closely and carefully to General Kelly’s warning,” they wrote…
https://www.westhawaiitoday.com/2024/10/26/nation-world-news/13-ex-trump-aides-back-kellys-dictator-warning/
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I have heard tRump supporters state to the press when heading into his rallies, they support him being a dictator! I was floored the first time I heard that, but the reporters persisted to get them to understand what they were saying. And it wasn’t just one time! I have heard them say, “Our country could use a dictator for a while, you know, to get us back where we need to be”.
What they don’t understand is once we have a dictator, we will be lost as a country, dictators don’t just go away!
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People at Trump rallies are wearing T-shirts proudly proclaiming that they are voting for a convicted felon. Not funny.
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The excuses of all the news outlets that have recently decided not to endorse a candidate for the presidency really reeks. If anyone is aware of the stark difference between the two candidates, it is a news organization with a national reach and reputation. Bezos appears to be trying to put his finger on the scale by his decision to prohibit the Post’s endorsement of Kamala Harris, especially this late in the game. I guess we can begin to see which of the ultra-wealthy want to be one of Trump’s inner circle/oligarchs.
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Sometimes I think his supporters think it’s all a game, like this is a reality show or something. Wearing “I’m voting for the Felon” shirts, etc. We saw a fire truck yesterday, followed by two pickups. All three were festooned with tRump flags and had people hanging out of windows yelling at cars. The fire truck had banners that read “He’s been impeached, convicted, shot and he’s still standing”. The guys in the fire truck had bullhorns and were screaming “F Liberals”. I mean, this is serious, it’s not a game.
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Great post at emptywheel on Trump as cosplay. Kayfabe comes from the WWE, defined as:
a shorthand term that involves acknowledging the staged, scripted nature of professional wrestling, as opposed to a competitive sport, despite being presented as authentic.
https://www.emptywheel.net/2024/10/21/donald-j-trump-cosplayer/
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May 21, 2021Hedge fund Alden Global Capital, known for making deep newsroom cuts, won approval to acquire Tribune Publishing, which includes the Chicago Tribune, The Baltimore Sun and New York Daily News.
Here is what the Chicago Tribune now says about endorsing a candidate for President:
One final note. The Tribune is endorsing in every contested race except for President of the United States. That’s in response to a policy, announced more than a year ago, by our owners. That’s not a choice made by the editorial board. However, no-one has interfered with any of our other selections. You have my word on that.
Just wanted to keep you apprised. Enjoy the fall day. Early voting is open.
— Chris Jones, editorial page editor
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