Newsweek Embraces the Anti-Democracy Hard Right
Newsweek positioned political activist Josh Hammer to run their opinion pages during the runup to the 2020 presidential election, and since that time, the publication has taken a marked radical right turn by buoying extremists and promoting authoritarian leaders.
Although opinion pages in ostensibly nonpartisan, mainstream publications promote political opinions, sometimes controversial ones, Newsweek stands alone among such brands in its willingness to elevate such figures as Jack Posobiec, known for promoting the Pizzagate disinformation campaign, and Dinesh D鈥橲ouza, whose film 聽researchers roundly debunked for spreading conspiracies about the 2020 election. Under Hammer鈥檚 leadership, Newsweek has also aired bigoted views, like appearing to call for the state to deny adults access to trans-affirming medical care and supporting a ban on all legal immigration into the U.S. They have also spread baseless conspiracies about COVID-19, with one of Hammer鈥檚 collaborators describing vaccines designed to fight the virus as a 鈥渂ioweapon.鈥
Newsweek has also failed to disclose potential conflicts of interest emerging in the content published through Hammer鈥檚 opinion section and his Newsweek-branded podcast, 鈥淭he Josh Hammer Show.鈥 Hammer donated to the campaign of Arizona U.S. Senate candidate Blake Masters and at least four times published the work of a man who ran one of Masters鈥 fundraisers. On his podcast, Hammer told Newsweek鈥檚 audience to 鈥済o ahead and vote for Blake Masters.鈥 Hammer also promoted hard-right Hungarian leader Viktor Orb谩n in a Newsweek dispatch authored from Hungary, without disclosing that he arrived there in collaboration with a group directly affiliated with the Hungarian government. Hammer also claims membership in a number of reactionary activist groups, and regularly publishes people who are also affiliated with them. He will appear on behalf of the New York Young Republican Club alongside Posobiec and QAnon influencer-turned-congressperson Marjorie Taylor Greene聽in December.
Hatewatch reached out to Newsweek for comment about the reporting published in this analysis. Newsweek first introduced Hatewatch to a representative of the journalism-focused non-profit Poynter, whom they contracted to advise them on ethics in 2019. Hatewatch had three different conversations with Poynter about Newsweek and their relationship, which are detailed later in this analysis. A representative from the public relations agency LBG PR replied asking for our questions. Hatewatch responded by emailing 19 different specific questions inspired by the reporting in this analysis, and LBG PR issued the following statement in reply:
Newsweek鈥檚 opinions section features voices across the political and cultural spectrum. While he offers up his own opinions on the Newsweek platform, as Opinions Editor, Josh Hammer has embraced the mission of 'The Debate' and delivered an expansive forum for diverse perspectives and dialogue.
Campaigning for Blake Masters through Newsweek
Blake Masters, the Republican candidate for Arizona鈥檚 U.S. Senate seat, has emerged as a favored candidate of white nationalists, neo-Nazis and other admirers of fascism. (One of his major donors, tech billionaire Peter Thiel, has said he no longer believes freedom and democracy are 鈥渃ompatible.鈥) The notorious white supremacist website American Renaissance聽has republished versions of stories about Masters鈥 controversies from other outlets, drawing cheers from their notoriously racist comment section. White nationalist Nick Fuentes, who praises such fascist dictators as Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini, also supports Masters. Neo-Nazi Andrew Anglin听辞蹿 the hate site The Daily Stormer 聽about Masters in June:
I cannot give a more forceful endorsement, and I demand that anyone in Arizona (who is not some kind of known neo-Nazi or whatever) get in contact with his campaign and see what kind of help he needs.
Hammer donated $500 to Masters in February, according to public records, and seven months later told Newsweek鈥檚 audience in explicit terms to vote for him.
鈥淚f you are in Arizona and listening to this podcast, go ahead and vote for Blake Masters,鈥 Hammer told Newsweek鈥檚 audience on a Sept. 5 podcast.
Newsweek鈥檚 opinion section has featured other Masters advocates. A man named Austin Stone has published at least four opinion pieces under Hammer鈥檚 leadership. Stone gave $5,800 to Masters鈥 campaign on Aug. 5, 2021, which is the maximum allowed. Stone hosted a fundraiser for Masters, which featured as guests a who鈥檚 who of radical right figures including Posobiec, the anti-LGBTQ, right-wing activist , and British disinformation hustler . All three of those men have contributed to Newsweek and boast ties to the Claremont Institute, who gave Hammer a fellowship in 2018. Newsweek also published the opinions of Nick Lindquist, a strategist for Stone鈥檚 consultancy firm. Lindquist donated $250 to Masters on Oct. 26, 2021.
News articles on Newsweek鈥檚 own website underscore why their opinion editor鈥檚 advocacy of Masters might provoke concern.Newsweek reported in August 2021 that Masters railed against 聽racism, and this June that he blamed gun violence on evoking talking points that white nationalists often embrace. Newsweek in June that Masters amplified unfounded conspiracies about the 2021 attack on the Capitol by asking, 鈥淒on鈥檛 we suspect that like one-third of the people outside of the Capitol complex on January 6 were actual FBI agents hanging out?鈥 An 聽also declared, 鈥淏lake Masters Suggests Female, Black and Gay Officials Hurting U.S. Economy,鈥 referring to comments he made about employees of the Federal Reserve.
Newsweek opinion and shifting the 鈥極verton window鈥
When searching Apple podcasts for 鈥淣ewsweek,鈥 several products , but first among them is 鈥淭he Josh Hammer Show,鈥 Hammer鈥檚 weekly podcast. Newsweek positions a stream of 鈥淭he Josh Hammer Show鈥 . Newsweek also links to it a second time on the homepage through , meaning that casual visitors can listen to Hammer speak twice without even visiting the opinion section he runs.
Newsweek published the first episode of Hammer鈥檚 podcast on Feb. 1, and he used it to talk about how the purpose of his show would focus on building a political movement, rather than simply comment on the news, something that stands out from the work of opinion editors from publications that aspire to be mainstream. He used the phrase 鈥淸shifting] the Overton window鈥 in describing the show, which refers to the idea of moving the culture to places where previously unthinkable political realities would emerge. Among many other places, writers for such racist, radical-right websites as 听补苍诲 聽commonly write about shifting or destroying the current 鈥淥verton window.鈥 Hammer suggested that the goal of his Newsweek-branded podcast is to workshop ways to defeat 鈥渢he woke, illiberal left鈥:
We鈥檙e going to have a lot of great guests, we鈥檙e going to bring them on in a weekly fashion for you, we鈥檙e going to spruce in some monologues, some guest commentary, and what we鈥檙e going to be talking about here, this is a conservative podcast, we鈥檙e talking about conservatism, what is conservatism, what has conservatism been doing right, what has it been doing wrong, what has the Republican party, which obviously is the vehicle for conservatism, what has that been doing right, what has that been doing wrong, what needs to be changed. And it鈥檚 a really exciting time obviously to be engaged in this sort of conversation. I mean if you go back just a few years ago obviously 2016 Donald Trump comes out of nowhere, shakes up the world, absolutely obliterates the field in a highly contested presidential primary, slays all sorts of old orthodoxies, that proves that they were way more easily destroyful [sic] than anyone had previously thought, And that period of intellectual ferment, of all sorts of new thoughts, of Overton window shifting, of exploring new ideas. What is it that we really stand for? What do we want this to be about? How do we best form a movement? How do we best organize a political party? Ultimately of course for the goal of defeating the woke, illiberal left and ultimately saving America.
The guests on Hammer鈥檚 show reliably advance pro-Trump, reactionary and sometimes overtly authoritarian viewpoints. Some of them, such as Michael Knowles, express hateful views of the LGBTQ+ community. Knowles, a pundit for Ben Shapiro鈥檚 The Daily Wire, used his appearance on the Newsweek-branded show to argue that he is within his rights to tell adult transgender women that they are not women. Knowles made the comment in the context of a discussion with Hammer about how conservatives could wield state power to enforce upon all people the values they hold.
鈥淲hat the new conservatives 鈥 are saying is: 鈥楴o, I actually can tell the difference between a man and a woman. I actually can tell men that they shouldn鈥檛 mutilate themselves to look more like women,鈥欌 Knowles said on Hammer鈥檚 show.
Hatewatch emailed Knowles to clarify whether he supported using state power to forbid adults from transitioning, but he did not respond by press time. Following initial publication of this story, he shared his response聽on Twitter. In his , Knowles confirms he does in fact support the use of state power to prevent adults from transitioning, comparing gender affirming surgery to cutting off the limbs of a hypothetical able-bodied person "claiming to be a quadriplegic." On Twitter, Knowles said he emailed his response in September, but Hatewatch found no record of the correspondence.
Hatewatch also emailed the question to Newsweek, but they ignored it. Through Newsweek, Hammer repeatedly argues for using wielding state power to enforce what he describes as conservative values. He has also argued for using the state not to better anyone鈥檚 life in particular, but to enact revenge on political opponents, as he wrote in Aug. 12 op-ed called 鈥淎merican Stasi,鈥 referring to the defunct East German military police:
The imperative for conservatives is to respond not merely by tsk-tsking but by recognizing 鈥渨hat time it is鈥 in this ailing, late-stage republic and to demonstrate a willingness to counter the Left鈥檚 brazen assaults with our own willingness to prudentially engage in escalatory, tit-for-tat, mutually assured destruction tactics. Sometimes, the only way out is through.
In his op-ed written from Hungary, wherein Newsweek failed to disclose the purpose of his visit, Hammer described Viktor Orb谩n鈥檚 authoritarian Fidesz Party as a potential model for American politics. He argued in it for a 鈥済reater imperative to wield state power.鈥 Fidesz has 聽state power, as Hammer describes it, to 听补苍诲 dissent.
Hammer hosted Daniel Horowitz of The Blaze on April 5, who described vaccines that treat COVID-19 as a 鈥渂ioweapon.鈥 More specifically, Horowitz said that elites were 鈥渃reating, foisting upon us viruses, blocking the treatment for it and then foisting another bioweapon upon us to treat it.鈥 Hammer also featured Ann Coulter on June 14. Coulter has contributed regularly to the white nationalist website VDARE, including several pieces聽defending Derek Chauvin, the police officer found guilty of murdering George Floyd. Coulter used her appearance to advocate for banning all legal immigration into the U.S.
鈥淲e need a total moratorium on immigration,鈥 Coulter said on her June 14 appearance on Newsweek鈥檚 podcast, echoing rhetoric that is familiar to readers of white nationalist websites.
Newsweek ignored questions Hatewatch asked about whether they knew they aired opinions including calling COVID-19 a bioweapon, advocating for the government to bar legal immigration into the U.S. and forbidding adults to be transgender. They also ignored questions about Hammer鈥檚 trip to Hungary.
Propaganda about civil war
Hammer repeatedly frames news events in terms of friends fighting enemies in a civil war. Hammer himself fights in the war he describes, along with his friends, according to his rhetoric. He often invites the listener along, talking about what 鈥渨e鈥 must do to defeat 鈥渙ur鈥 enemies:
The onus for our side is 鈥 to call out the nonsense 鈥 to soberly recognize where we are in what appears to be a falling, decadent, late-stage republic and to act accordingly 鈥 to know what time it is 鈥 and to command our side鈥檚 battle stations accordingly 鈥 to go to battle in this roiling, cold civil war against our domestic foes.
Hammer made those comments on an Aug. 8 episode of his Newsweek-branded podcast, one in which hosted the extremist Posobiec, a man primarily known聽for spreading viral disinformation campaigns, such as Stop the Steal and Pizzagate. Posobiec has promoted and worked with antigovernment groups and hate groups who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, including the , respectively. He also associates with Polish neofascists, and filmed far-right propaganda videos at least twice with a pair of terroristic,聽 brothers. On Twitter, Hammer has called the racist internet performer
Hammer and Posobiec spoke about the FBI鈥檚 retrieval of classified documents from Trump鈥檚 Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida, making conspiratorial assertions without offering evidence in support. 鈥淲hat do we do when the notion of equal justice under law is just crumbling before our very eyes?鈥 Hammer asked Posobiec during that appearance. Posobiec then claimed of Attorney General Merrick Garland, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have any specific reporting on this but I like to think 鈥 he鈥檚 getting revenge鈥 for Republicans blocking his Supreme Court candidacy in 2016. Hammer agreed with enthusiasm, replying: 鈥淚t is vindictive. It is revenge.鈥
鈥淸Trump] is unambiguously the victim here,鈥 Hammer told Posobiec. 鈥淗e is clearly the victim of an unprecedented sicking of federal law enforcement.鈥
Newsweek published the podcast more than two weeks before the Justice Department revealed a 听辞蹿 the affidavit they used to justify the raid of Trump鈥檚 property. A few weeks after Hammer鈥檚 conversation with Posobiec, and the day after President Biden gave a Sept. 1 speech criticizing the Trump-influenced聽rebrand of the Republican Party, Hammer 聽comments framing America as a country at war, a common trope of vintage fascist propaganda:
No more 鈥榩eace-time鈥 conservatism, people. Stop fighting last century鈥檚 war. Our side needs a lot of war time consiglieres, and we need them now.
Hyping 2000 Mules聽 through Newsweek
Hammer hosted right-wing performer Dinesh D鈥橲ouza on the May 10 episode of his podcast to promote his book and accompanying film 2000 Mules, which falsely allege that Biden defeated Trump in the 2020 election due to widespread fraud. Non-partisan fact checkers from across the journalism industry have . Radical right publisher Regnery even 听辞蹿 2000 Mules from stores in September due to potentially 鈥渓ibelous鈥 claims.
鈥淎 mule is a paid operative that is hired, in our case, by a left-wing organization, to deliver fraudulent and illegal votes to a mail-in drop box. So, that鈥檚 what a mule is,鈥 D鈥橲ouza said on Newsweek鈥檚 podcast, 鈥淭he Josh Hammer Show.鈥 鈥淭he mule is a middleman. The mule doesn鈥檛 come up with ballots. The mule goes to a left-wing organization, is handed a satchel or a backpack filled with ballots and then they go kind of on a route from one drop box to another, to another.鈥
D鈥橲ouza continued, suggesting that operatives pick this strategy in order to avoid detection. Hammer made no effort to interrogate D鈥橲ouza during the conversation, allowing him to describe the plot of the book in detail. Newsweek never offered an update to that podcast to address concerns over the legitimacy of D鈥橲ouza鈥檚 claims.
鈥淲e found in five states, or actually in the urban areas of five states, more than 2,000 mules,鈥 D鈥橲ouza concluded. 鈥淭he actual number of mules is vastly greater.鈥
Early warning signs from coup-plotter John Eastman
Hammer started working for Newsweek in May 2020. In August 2020, The New Republic labeled Newsweek a 聽known for laundering 鈥渞ight-wing ideas and conspiracy theories.鈥 The New Republic鈥檚 criticism followed Hammer鈥檚 opinion section publishing a now-infamous op-ed by lawyer John Eastman. Eastman floated in his Newsweek piece a legal argument for nullifying non-white, California-born Kamala Harris鈥檚 then-current vice presidential candidacy. Readers repeatedly called Eastman鈥檚 op-ed racist on social media and in comment sections. Employees of the publication complained internally, and Hammer, along with Cooper, applied multiple editors鈥 notes to Eastman鈥檚 post.
Newsweek鈥檚 editorial notes did not detail the significant overlap between Hammer and Eastman at University of Chicago Law School and in prominent reactionary advocacy groups. (Newsweek readers 聽in the comments.) Both the Federalist Society and the Claremont Institute feature the two men on their websites. Hammer described Eastman as 鈥渕y friend鈥 on his Newsweek-branded podcast as recently as August. He has also referred to him as his friend . He wrote about Eastman鈥檚 influence on him in a Q&A published on the , depicting him as a mentor figure:
I had heard of Claremont and the Claremont Review of Books going back at least as far back as college, but I first started hearing of friends applying to the John Marshall Fellowship when I was in law school at the University of Chicago. Given (University of Chicago Law alum) John Eastman鈥檚 long-standing leadership of the John Marshall program, the ties between that particular fellowship and Chicago are of course quite deep.
Shortly after Hammer and Newsweek published Eastman鈥檚 op-ed, the lawyer pushed the Stop the Steal disinformation campaign and helped lay out a blueprint for Trump staging . Hammer has portrayed Eastman on his podcast as a victim of a corrupt FBI, which he claims targets Trump supporters unfairly. (聽this June.) Eastman has also involved himself in other anti-democracy activism, including lobbying the Supreme Court to adopt 聽which would 听补苍诲 weaken U.S. elections.
Hammer speaks cagily about the outcome of the 2020 election on his Newsweek podcast. For example, he described the outcome of the 2020 election in Arizona as something 鈥渁 lot of people had some very heated thoughts on, one way or the other.鈥 Although that may be true of some people misled by a radical-right , Biden unequivocally won Arizona. Even a 聽GOP-led attempt to recount ballots in the state found Biden ahead of Trump, and even added votes onto his total lead.
Hammer called depictions of what happened on Jan. 6 as an attempted coup or insurrection to be 鈥渓udicrous鈥 and 鈥渓aughable, on its face,鈥 during a 2022 episode of Newsweek鈥檚 鈥淭he Debate鈥 podcast focused on the attack鈥檚 anniversary. He compared the attack, which left five people dead, to the anti-tax, 18th-century Whiskey Rebellion under George Washington, and suggested the majority of Trump supporters involved could be described as 鈥減eacefully rioting.鈥
Fallout with 鈥楾he Debate鈥
Newsweek claimed in their statement about Hammer to Hatewatch that he 鈥渉as embraced the mission of 鈥楾he Debate.鈥欌 However, Hammer鈥檚 name no longer appears as a co-host of the podcast of that name. Newsweek listed him as a co-host alongside veteran journalist Celeste Headlee as recently as the Jan. 6, 2021, episode in which he described pro-Trump Jan. 6 participants as 鈥減eacefully rioting.鈥 Headlee continues to host 鈥淭he Debate鈥 alongside journalist Andrew Tallman.
One month earlier, podcast producers had to edit out a conversation between him and Headlee, a veteran journalist who has anchored NPR programs including 鈥淎ll Things Considered鈥 and 鈥淲eekend Edition.鈥
Newsweek鈥檚 鈥淭he Debate鈥 podcast featured two guests during its Dec. 3, 2021, episode: reactionary YouTube performer Dave Rubin and libertarian journalist Nick Gillespie. The episode ostensibly focused on the sustainability of our two-party political system in the U.S. Rubin quickly tilted the conversation to attack what he described as 鈥渨oke鈥 people.
Headlee objected to Rubin using the slang word 鈥渨oke鈥 to generalize about people with whom he disagrees, noting the term鈥檚 origins in the Black community, and said, 鈥淚鈥檓 the only person of color here.鈥 (Headlee鈥檚 family lineage is Black and Jewish.) Hammer interjected to endorse what he perceived to be the soundness in using the term, describing it as an 鈥渋lliberal, leftist ideology.鈥 In the unedited version, Rubin said, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e a woman of color, what color are you?鈥 according to Headlee.
鈥淚t kind of devolved from there,鈥 Headlee said to Hatewatch. 鈥淛osh was upset. He felt that I had embarrassed him in front of his friends.鈥
Headlee said Hammer did not apologize but instead expected an apology from her. Hatewatch reached out to Rubin through an email address belonging to his publicist, and on Sept. 15, he tweeted out a response to his followers criticizing 澳彩开奖 as a 鈥渇ar-left hate group.鈥 He also belittled Headlee, calling her 鈥渢he girl鈥 and added that 鈥渟he looked white to me, and I honestly can鈥檛 remember what she said.鈥 (Hammer 聽by liking the tweet.) A day later, Rubin continued on Twitter, posting photos of Headlee, asking his followers to determine her race.
鈥淚鈥檝e been a journalist for a very long time,鈥 Headlee told Hatewatch of the incident on Newsweek鈥檚 鈥淭he Debate鈥 podcast. 鈥淚t was a very uncomfortable position to be in. It was uncomfortable and it was 鈥 upsetting. It was an upsetting situation.鈥
Newsweek did not respond to questions about Hammer鈥檚 interaction with Headlee. The publication gave him his solo podcast show a little less than two months later.
Accusations of special treatment for Hammer
Hatewatch interviewed over two dozen current and former Newsweek employees, most of whom intersected with Hammer, and the feedback they gave about him and his worldview was universally negative. Employees, the majority of whom declined to be named, citing conditions of Newsweek鈥檚 contract, described the company鈥檚 managerial staff as giving Hammer preferential treatment and a kind of celebrity status, which they did not believe his resume or contribution warranted. One former Newsweek reporter, Benjamin Fearnow, told Hatewatch by phone that Hammer made suggestions to him over the Slack messaging platform about how he should write his news articles, making recommendations to cite reactionary academics in a Newsweek section over which he had no authority. Newsweek did not answer a question about Fearnow鈥檚 claim.
The employees also said managers, such as editor Nancy Cooper and chief content officer Dayan Candappa, indulged Hammer鈥檚 involvement in radical-right politics, while striking a markedly different tone with other employees. Far from labeling itself as an activist organization, Newsweek has warned writers in multiple meetings and on email chains about publicly supporting political causes, employees said. K. Thor Jensen, a , told Hatewatch that the publication鈥檚 editor Cooper fired him over his use of social media in February 2020. Jensen鈥檚 editor had recently started a conversation with him over violating a policy of advocating political support for left-leaning causes. Nicole Goodkind, now a reporter for CNN Business, recalled to Hatewatch a meeting in fall 2018, during the runup to midterm elections, wherein Newsweek鈥檚 leadership warned employees against promoting political views online. Four other employees also recalled the meeting she described.
鈥Newsweek has a firm policy of newsroom editors and [reporters] not donating to political campaigns. This does not apply to those in the opinions section,鈥 LBG PR told Hatewatch.
In addition to the details previously mentioned about Hammer鈥檚 advocacy of Blake Masters, both in and out of Newsweek, he has also repeatedly hyped him on Twitter.
鈥淗uge congrats to [Blake Masters], a real political talent who is going to be a tremendous force for good as a U.S. Senator,鈥 Hammer posted to Twitter on Aug. 3, after Masters won the GOP Primary in his state. 鈥淟et鈥檚 retire Mark Kelly,鈥 he wrote of his Democratic opponent, the husband of 聽Gabby Giffords.
Poynter relationship and 鈥榡ournalism in a for-profit world鈥
Journalism experts have raised concerns about Newsweek鈥檚 business practices for years, dating back to before they formed a partnership with Poynter in April 2019. When Newsweek formed the relationship with Poynter, Columbia Journalism Review had already started work on 聽called 鈥淒ropshipping Journalism,鈥 which detailed how the company鈥檚 financial troubles harmed its quality of reporting and dealt a blow to the mental health of the employees delivering that reporting.
Hatewatch reached out to Poynter about Newsweek鈥檚 opinion section on July 7, regarding Hammer鈥檚 connections to Blake Masters, and media business analyst Rick Edmonds responded. Edmonds said that while some publications with a clearly understood political slant, like The Nation or The National Review, might tolerate involvement in a political campaign, Newsweek鈥檚 treatment of Hammer鈥檚 political activism would be considered highly unorthodox.
鈥Newsweek鈥檚 current owners are trading on its name, and it is not at all news that the company has gotten into financial trouble,鈥 Edmonds said, regarding Hammer鈥檚 involvement in hard right causes and activism. 鈥淚f the selling point is that this is Newsweek like you remember Newsweek, it鈥檚 especially deceptive.鈥
Days later, Newsweek introduced Hatewatch to Kelly McBride, a senior vice president and the chair of the Craig Newmark Center for Ethics and Leadership at Poynter. In 2018, McBride 聽Poynter鈥檚 use of money donated from Koch Industries, owned by the reactionary billionaire Charles Koch, from criticism. In response to Edmonds鈥 comments, McBride told Hatewatch that analysts at Poynter were permitted to have differences of opinion. After Hatewatch relayed details about Hammer鈥檚 promotion of radical-right talking points and politicians, McBride said that she would look into some of the details published in this investigation.
鈥淭he advice I have given Newsweek is with the understanding that they intend and aspire to be a credible national news source and that they want to use their name and their brand for good,鈥 McBride said of Hammer on July 12. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to call them up and get some more details on this.鈥
Hatewatch followed up with McBride two months later, on Sept. 12, after Hammer brought the neo-Nazi collaborator and disinformation specialist Posobiec onto his podcast and ranted about going 鈥渢o battle in this roiling, cold civil war against our domestic foes,鈥 referring to other Americans with whom he shared political disagreements. Hatewatch asked McBride about her discussions with Newsweek and whether she found it ethical for Hammer to ask Newsweek鈥檚 audience in Arizona directly to vote for Blake Masters.
鈥淪o 鈥 they haven鈥檛 asked me to look at that,鈥 McBride said. 鈥淚 can say generically, and if you use this, make sure you use this in the proper context of 鈥榞enerically,鈥 we work with a lot of clients who engage in a lot of practices that are outside the work of our consultancy. And, you know, that is 鈥 that is journalism, you know, in a for-profit world.鈥
Hatewatch asked McBride if Poynter would take money from Gateway Pundit, the notorious website that publishes hard-right disinformation, including lies about the 2020 election and stories that from the Proud Boys.
鈥淕ateway Pundit has never called and asked for help, but we would take the phone call,鈥 McBride said.
Hatewatch asked if Poynter would then take money from Gateway Pundit after taking a phone call of this nature.
鈥淚f they wanted to get better on ethics, yeah,鈥 McBride said.
Hatewatch reached out to other experts in journalism for context about Hammer鈥檚 employment and political activity. Few agreed to comment on the record and no one spoke favorably of Hammer. Some responded by simply dismissing the credibility of Newsweek outright. New York University journalism instructor Jay Rosen referred Hatewatch to a tweet he issued in response to a Newsweek opinion piece authored by Donald Trump Jr. with the headline, 聽from March 16.
鈥Newsweek is not a thing. It鈥檚 like an animal that lives in the discarded shell of another animal,鈥 .
聽Megan Squire contributed to this reporting.
Editor's note: This story has been updated to include comment from Michael Knowles, who posted his response on Twitter following initial publication. He also said on Twitter that he sent his reply in September, but Hatewatch found no record of the email.
The author, Michael Edison Hayden, worked for Newsweek from September 2017 to May 2018, covering far-right extremism as a beat from the publication鈥檚 politics desk. He also appeared as a source in the Columbia Journalism Review feature about Newsweek,
Hayden reported for Newsweek on some of the radical right figures mentioned in this story, including the extremist Jack Posobiec聽on multiple occasions.
Photo illustration by 澳彩开奖