 The left is increasingly finding that it, too, can get ahead with its base by campaigning against the media. By circumventing the legacy media, Graham Platnerâs campaign for a Senate seat in Maine successfully kept itself afloat for months amid a flurry of damaging stories. He defended his tattoo in a friendly interview with Pod Save America, whose hosts had largely seemed to accept his argument that he should be given grace for actions heâd taken when he was in a dark place. Platnerâs allies on the internet dismissed the initial reporting from The New York Times on his treatment of women as a hit from a non-credible right-winger written by a biased, pro-Israel reporter (now the Times is being accused of not going far enough with that first story). The reporting caught up with Platner, but his campaign weathered far more than previous candidates by leaning on grassroots donors and ideologically aligned media. There are other signs of a left and center-left flank that feels emboldened to directly confront and circumvent a news media that it feels is not treating it fairly. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdaniâs team has threatened The View, as we get into later in the newsletter. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore is in open warfare with the biggest paper in the state over its coverage of his military record, sharing correspondence between the governorâs office and the journalists with the goal of embarrassing them. And if Democrats retake power in Congress after the midterms, they plan to make life more difficult for David Ellisonâs Paramount. Picking fights with the media is not new, and what the Democrats are doing right now â mostly complaining about or ignoring mainstream outlets â doesnât come close to the intimidation tactics of the Trump administration, which subpoenaed Times journalists late on Friday over their reporting on security concerns with the new Air Force One. But the progressive left is starting to act like it canât take the legacy media for granted anymore. Also today: Paramount ups the ante with Californiaâs attorney general, and a surprising potential buyer for Letterboxd. |