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They quit 

By: clo2 in FFT4 | Recommend this post (2)
Mon, 22 Nov 21 12:27 PM | 15 view(s)
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They quit

Every month or so, while conversing with sources at Fox News, I express surprise that Jonah Goldberg and Stephen Hayes are still employed by the network. The two men are reality-based conservative thinkers who refused to capitulate to Donald Trump. Unfortunately, Fox viewers rarely got to hear from them. This year they were booked by the network's producers so rarely that their contracts could be likened to golden handcuffs.

Now they are ditching the cuffs. Hayes and Goldberg announced Sunday night that they have resigned from Fox. The pair wrote in a blog post for The Dispatch, their online home, that Tucker Carlson's "Patriot Purge" propaganda film was the last straw.

"Fox News still does real reporting, and there are still responsible conservatives providing valuable opinion and analysis," the men wrote. "But the voices of the responsible are being drowned out by the irresponsible," and Carlson is the case in point. CNN and many other news outlets have described how "Patriot Purge" is disturbing evidence of right-wing radicalization, complete with January 6 denialism and paranoid descriptions of a "new war on terror" targeting Republicans. Goldberg and Hayes simply could not take it anymore.

New York Times media columnist Ben Smith, who broke the resignation news on Sunday, called up Carlson for reaction, and the trollish host naturally celebrated, saying "our viewers will be grateful" that Goldberg and Hayes are gone. But the conservative movement will suffer for it.

A rare view inside Fox

Goldberg, in a phone interview with Smith, provided a rare on-the-record peek inside Fox's political positioning. Per Smith, "Goldberg said that" he and Hayes "stayed on at Fox News as long they did because of a sense from conversations at Fox that, after Mr. Trump's defeat, the network would try to recover some of its independence and, as he put it, 'right the ship.'" But Fox's decision to promote and publish "Patriot Purge" in early November was "a sign that people have made peace with this direction of things, and there is no plan, at least, that anyone made me aware of for a course correction," Goldberg said.

In Sunday night's post on The Dispatch, the two commentators said the "Patriot Purge" web series "creates an alternative history of January 6, contradicted not just by common sense, not just by the testimony and on-the-record statements of many participants, but by the reporting of the news division of Fox News itself."

Hayes and Goldberg praised the "news side" (which keeps shrinking at Fox) but acknowledged that the opinion side has radicalized. "The release of 'Patriot Purge' wasn't an isolated incident," they wrote, "it was merely the most egregious example of a longstanding trend." So they're out. "We do not regret our decision," they concluded, "even if we find it regrettably necessary."

reliablesources@newsletters.cnn.


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