As Sen. Bernie Sanders continues to hit back at corporate-owned media outlets for what he and others have characterized as slanted and unfair coverage of his 2020 White House bid, the senator’s presidential campaign on Wednesday launched a newsletter aimed at providing “scoops, insights, and news nuggets about the election” that are neglected or ignored in the mainstream.
“We are launching Bern Notice—the Bernie 2020 campaign’s digital newsletter,” Sanders speechwriter David Sirota wrote on the newsletter’s website. “Whether you are a journalist, an activist, or a news junkie, this newsletter will have all sorts of goodies.”
“The elite corporate media promoted the lies that led to the Iraq War and ignored the truth about Wall St. fraud that led to the financial crisis,” Sirota added on Twitter. “Bernie Sanders is not wrong to distrust an elite media culture that helped create those disasters that ruined so many people’s lives.”
The campaign newsletter will build on Sanders’ existing alternative media apparatus, which includes the Hear the Bern podcast and the senator’s channel on the gaming website Twitch. The Vermont senator also has the largest Twitter and Facebook followings of any 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, platforms he has used to stream speeches and events outside of corporate news networks.
“We’ve said from the start that we will have to take on virtually the entire media establishment in this campaign, and so far that has proven to be true,” Sanders tweeted on Wednesday. “Ok. Fine. We are ready.”
The launch of the Bern Notice newsletter comes after Sanders’ criticism of the Washington Post—which is owned by Amazon CEO and world’s richest man Jeff Bezos—during a campaign stop in New Hampshire on Monday sparked furious backlash from the Post and other corporate media outlets.
“Anybody here know how much Amazon paid in taxes last year?” Sanders asked the crowd during a town hall in Wolfeboro. “See, I talk about that all of the time. And then I wonder why the Washington Post… doesn’t write particularly good articles about me. I don’t know why. But I guess maybe there’s a connection.”
Marty Baron, executive editor of the Post, quickly responded by accusing Sanders of peddling a “conspiracy theory.” MSNBC, which is owned by Comcast, soon piled on, accusing Sanders of echoing President Donald Trump’s attacks on the free press.
But progressives were quick to argue that—far from Trump-like rhetoric or a “conspiracy theory”—Sanders’ critique of the U.S. media landscape is on target.
Writing for Common Dreams on Wednesday, RootsAction.org co-founder Norman Solomon argued that Sanders is not attacking the free press, but offering a critique of a media system controlled by corporations whose interests are antithetical to the progressive agenda at the heart of the senator’s presidential bid.
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