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Journalism is War

por George Archibald

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In the 1980s, Rep. Newt Gingrich, then Republican whip and organizer of House Republican conservatives, was a major source for The Washington Times. Gingrich and his band of young-turk conservative Republican House members elected in the late 1970s and early eighties were tired of their partys leaders who had become the lazy, perpetual minority. Gingrich, Trent Lott and other young Republican House members reached out to reporters like George Archibald, fed them stories, gave them access to documents and sources and briefed them in daily meetings in Gingrichs second-floor whips office in the U.S. Capitol. All told, the years from 1989 to 1998 were a field of juicy clovers for The Washington Times news reporters. The circulation director often commented that The Washington Times sold 10,000 extra single copies each day when sex was on Page One, 10,000 more copies from orange boxes on the streets when the Redskins football team was out front and 10,000 more when they had a big political scandal. The recipe was clear and became the Times mantra. Washington is a dog-eat-dog town where overpaid hangers-on work constantly to secure their own positions politicians, congressional and executive branch staff members and civil servants, lobbyists for corporate, union and other bosses, lobbyist and interest-group political fellow-travelers whose paychecks come from Washingtons primary business politics around the clock. In Journalism is War, George Archibald recounts stories behind these stories Democratic vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraros financial ethics problems in 1984, Reagan media adviser Michael Deavers lobbying scandal leading to his perjury conviction in 1986, House Speaker Jim Wrights disgrace and resignation in 1989, subsequent congressional scandals in the early 1990s and cultural conflict stories to the present. Fasten your seat belt. These are the behind-the-scenes revelations about the selfish, narcissistic, power-hungry political and media players on all sides who played the game for their own benefit and power -- who was stabbing whom and why. No holds barred… (más)
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In the 1980s, Rep. Newt Gingrich, then Republican whip and organizer of House Republican conservatives, was a major source for The Washington Times. Gingrich and his band of young-turk conservative Republican House members elected in the late 1970s and early eighties were tired of their partys leaders who had become the lazy, perpetual minority. Gingrich, Trent Lott and other young Republican House members reached out to reporters like George Archibald, fed them stories, gave them access to documents and sources and briefed them in daily meetings in Gingrichs second-floor whips office in the U.S. Capitol. All told, the years from 1989 to 1998 were a field of juicy clovers for The Washington Times news reporters. The circulation director often commented that The Washington Times sold 10,000 extra single copies each day when sex was on Page One, 10,000 more copies from orange boxes on the streets when the Redskins football team was out front and 10,000 more when they had a big political scandal. The recipe was clear and became the Times mantra. Washington is a dog-eat-dog town where overpaid hangers-on work constantly to secure their own positions politicians, congressional and executive branch staff members and civil servants, lobbyists for corporate, union and other bosses, lobbyist and interest-group political fellow-travelers whose paychecks come from Washingtons primary business politics around the clock. In Journalism is War, George Archibald recounts stories behind these stories Democratic vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraros financial ethics problems in 1984, Reagan media adviser Michael Deavers lobbying scandal leading to his perjury conviction in 1986, House Speaker Jim Wrights disgrace and resignation in 1989, subsequent congressional scandals in the early 1990s and cultural conflict stories to the present. Fasten your seat belt. These are the behind-the-scenes revelations about the selfish, narcissistic, power-hungry political and media players on all sides who played the game for their own benefit and power -- who was stabbing whom and why. No holds barred

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