New Email Leak Reveals Clinton Campaign’s Cozy Press Relationship

StatUS

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
31,186
Reputation
2,110
Daps
68,823
Reppin
Everywhere
EXCLUSIVE: New Email Leak Reveals Clinton Campaign’s Cozy Press Relationship
Glenn Greenwald Lee Fang

Oct. 9 2016, 10:47 a.m.
INTERNAL STRATEGY DOCUMENTS and emails among Clinton staffers shed light on friendly and highly useful relationships between the campaign and various members of the U.S. media, as well as the campaign’s strategies for manipulating those relationships.

The emails were provided to The Intercept by the source identifying himself as Guccifer 2.0, who was reportedly responsible for prior significant hacks, including one that targeted the Democratic National Committee and resulted in the resignations of its top four officials. On Friday, Obama administration officials claimed that Russia’s “senior-most officials” were responsible for that hack and others, although they provided no evidence for that assertion.

As these internal documents demonstrate, a central component of the Clinton campaign strategy is ensuring that journalists they believe favorable to Clinton are tasked to report the stories which the campaign wants circulated.

At times, Clinton’s campaign staff not only internally drafted the stories they wanted published but even specified what should be quoted “on background” and what should be described as “on the record.”

One January 2015 strategy document – designed to plant stories on Clinton’s decision-making process about whether to run for president – singled out reporter Maggie Haberman, then of Politico, now covering the election for the New York Times, as a “friendly journalist” who has “teed up” stories for them in the past and “never disappointed” them. Nick Merrill, the campaign press secretary, produced the memo, according to the document metadata:


That strategy document plotted how Clinton aides could induce Haberman to write a story on the thoroughness and profound introspection involved in Clinton’s decision-making process. The following month, when she was then at the Times, Haberman published two stories on Clinton’s vetting process; in this instance, Haberman’s stories were more sophisticated, nuanced and even somewhat more critical than what the Clinton memo envisioned.

But they nonetheless accomplished the goal Clinton campaign aides wanted to fulfill of casting the appearance of transparency on Clinton’s vetting process in a way that made clear she was moving carefully but inexorably toward a presidential run.

Given more than 24 hours to challenge the authenticity of these documents and respond, Merrill did not reply to our emails. Haberman declined to comment.

Other documents listed those whom the campaign regarded as their most reliable “surrogates” – such as CNN’s Hilary Rosen and Donna Brazile, as well as Center for American Progress President Neera Tanden – but then also listed operatives whom they believed were either good “progressive helpers” or more potentially friendly media figures who might be worth targeting with messaging. The metadata of the surrogate document shows that the file was authored by Jennifer Palmieri, the communications director of the campaign. As The Intercept previously reported, pundits regularly featured on cable news programs were paid by the Clinton campaign without any disclosure when they appeared; several of them are included on this “surrogates” list, including Stephanie Cutter and Maria Cardona:


The Clinton campaign likes to use glitzy, intimate, completely off-the-recordparties between top campaign aides and leading media personalities. One of the most elaborately planned get-togethers was described in an April, 2015, memo — produced, according to the document metadata, by deputy press secretary Jesse Ferguson — to take place shortly before Clinton’s official announcement of her candidacy. The event was an April 10 cocktail party for leading news figures and top-level Clinton staff at the Upper East Side home of Clinton strategist Joel Benenson, a fully-off-the-record gathering designed to impart the campaign’s messaging:









A separate email chain between Clinton staff (one that was not among those provided by Gufficer 2.0 but appeared on the DCLeaks.com site earlier this week) contains plans for a separate off-the-record media get-together in May. Food and drinks were provided by the campaign for the journalists covering it, on the condition that nothing said would be reported to the public.

Many of the enduring Clinton tactics for managing the press were created by the campaign before she even announced her candidacy. A March 13, 2015 memo from Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook provides insight into some of the tactics employed by the campaign to shape coverage to their liking. In particular, Mook was concerned that because journalists were assigned to cover Clinton, they needed to be fed a constant stream of stories that the campaign liked. As he put it, a key strategy was “give reporters who must cover daily HRC news something to cover other than the unhelpful stories about the foundation, emails, etc.”


All presidential campaigns have their favorite reporters, try to plant stories they want published, and attempt in multiple ways to curry favor with journalists. These tactics are certainly not unique to the Clinton campaign (liberals were furious in 2008 when journalists went to John McCain’s Arizona ranch for an off-the-record BBQ). But these rituals and dynamics between political campaigns and the journalists who cover them are typically carried out in the dark, despite how significant they can be. These documents provide a valuable glimpse into that process.

Hillary Clinton looks at national press secretary Brian Fallon’s smart phone with aide Huma Abedin traveling press secretary Nick Merrill.
 

ExodusNirvana

Change is inevitable...
Joined
Jun 6, 2012
Messages
43,028
Reputation
9,794
Daps
156,315
Reppin
Brooklyn, NY
Trump specifically barred certain media outlets from the campaign until very recently, and there is a reason for that.

He knew that he had far more skeletons in his closet than HRC and wanted to limit the ability for the media to peer into his unmentionables.
 

StatUS

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
31,186
Reputation
2,110
Daps
68,823
Reppin
Everywhere
Trump specifically barred certain media outlets from the campaign until very recently, and there is a reason for that.

He knew that he had far more skeletons in his closet than HRC and wanted to limit the ability for the media to peer into his unmentionables.
And Hillary knows she doesn't have to worry about a thing which is why she hasn't held a press conference in forever to speak to the issues people have.
 

The_Sheff

A Thick Sauce N*gga
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
27,438
Reputation
5,697
Daps
127,680
Reppin
ATL to MEM
So one campaign actually had a strategy huh. We mad that one side actually used their brains and is trying to win? This is how politics works and is why there is a ton of money involved. The Trump campaign train wreck is not the status quo.
 

Regular_P

Just end the season.
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
84,414
Reputation
11,419
Daps
226,750
Just another smoking gun. "Bernie Bros" were paranoid though. :russell:
 

Bernie Madoff

Banned
Joined
Jun 23, 2012
Messages
11,925
Reputation
-2,457
Daps
18,695
Reppin
Otisville, Federal Correctional Institution
Trump specifically barred certain media outlets from the campaign until very recently, and there is a reason for that.

He knew that he had far more skeletons in his closet than HRC and wanted to limit the ability for the media to peer into his unmentionables.
:usure:

hillary has just as many if not more skeletons than trump...
 

Prince.Skeletor

Don’t Be Like He-Man
Joined
Jul 5, 2012
Messages
31,438
Reputation
-7,109
Daps
61,441
Reppin
Bucktown
At times, Clinton’s campaign staff not only internally drafted the stories they wanted published but even specified what should be quoted “on background” and what should be described as “on the record.”



wow
 
Top