‘Absolutely indefensible’: Bloomberg News slammed for scaling back coverage following owner’s 2020 bid

The announcement that Bloomberg News would refrain from investigating any of the 2020 Democrats after Michael Bloomberg announced his presidential bid was not well received.

Bloomberg launched his 2020 presidential bid Sunday morning. His announcement was followed by a statement from Bloomberg News Editor-In-Chief John Micklethwait about how the outlet would cover the election, given that Bloomberg owns the company.

Micklethwait revealed that Bloomberg had a heavy hand in guiding the editorials for Bloomberg News and that several of the editorial board members would be taking a leave to join their boss’s campaign. The newsroom was also hit by Bloomberg’s announcement.

“We will continue our tradition of not investigating (and his family and foundation), and we will extend the same policy to his rivals in the Democratic primaries,” Micklethwait wrote. “We cannot treat Mike’s Democratic competitors different from him.”

Micklethwait claimed Bloomberg News would not hide negative coverage of its owner but would not do its own reporting. He also explained that the newsroom would continue to investigate President Trump, despite halting investigations into 2020 Democrats.

“For the moment, our [investigative] team will continue to investigate the Trump administration as the government of the day,” wrote Micklethwait. “If Mike is chosen as the Democratic presidential candidate (and Donald Trump emerges as the Republican one), we will reassess how we do that.”

He added, “No previous presidential candidate has owned a journalistic organization of this size.”

Micklethwait’s announcement was destroyed online, as many questioned the legitimacy of a newsroom that refuses to investigate one side of a presidential race.

Bloomberg, 77, has not shied away from admitting that he doesn’t want negative reporting about him in the newsroom he owns. Last year, he said, “I don’t want the reporters I’m paying to write a bad story about me. I don’t want them to be independent.”

The billionaire was the mayor of New York City for 12 years starting in 2002, prior to his presidential bid. He has an estimated net worth of $54 billion, which he earned largely on Wall Street. He is one of 18 Democrats currently in the presidential primary.

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