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Journalists Join Team Obama

February 17, 2012

Journalists are leaving their media outlets in record numbers to join up with the Obama reelection effort, according to the Washington Examiner.

A total of 19 reporters and executives from various television and newspaper outlets have either joined the administration or signed up with left-leaning groups that shill for the president, the Examiner reports.

Per the Examiner:

Those inside the administration hit 14 this month when the Post’s Stephen Barr joined the Labor Department. That’s a record, say some revolving door watchers, and could even be much higher: The Post reports that "dozens" of former journalists have joined the administration, although Washington Secrets couldn’t verify that tally.

Many are in communications and speech writing offices, most prominently Jay Carney, the president’s spokesman who ran Time’s Washington bureau, and husband to ABC’s Claire Shipman. Some joined as the news business collapsed, many to finally voice their politics, and others, notably former Transportation spokeswoman Jill Zuckman, because she liked her future boss, Secretary Ray LaHood, a rare Republican in the administration. That relationship rocked: LaHood broke through the lower-tier Cabinet P.R. ceiling to become one of the most well-known Transportation secretaries ever. She had worked for the Chicago Tribune.

The revolving door isn’t a surprise to critics of the media and Obama. "The number of reporters going into the Obama administration merely confirms what I knew and what most conservatives long believed," said Noam Neusner, himself one of the few reporters hired as a Bush speech writer. "There is a vast supply of liberals in newsrooms, they are very happy to support Obama administration policies if they can get hired and they barely hide their ideology in the way they cover the news." Neusner, who I worked with at U.S. News, said that he too might have been guilty of a pro-Bush bias, but said correctly: "My editors and colleagues were surprised to hear that I was a Republican."