Wikipedia:

The Politico

The Politico
The_Politico_Frontpage_2007-02-15.jpg
The February 15, 2007 front page of
The Politico
Type Daily newspaper
Format Tabloid

Owner Allbritton Communications
Editor-in-Chief John F. Harris
Founded January 23, 2007
Price Free [1]
Headquarters 1100 Wilson. Blvd., 6th Floor
Arlington, Virginia 22209 Flag of the United States United States
Circulation Approximately 25,000

Website: politico.com

The Politico is a Washington, D.C.-based political journalism organization that distributes its content via television, the internet, newspaper, and radio. Its coverage includes Congress, Washington lobbying, and the 2008 presidential election.[1] It was a sponsor of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library's 2008 Republican Presidential Candidates debate on May 3, 2007.

John F. Harris and Jim VandeHei left The Washington Post to become The Politico's editor-in-chief and executive editor, respectively. The Politico is financed by Robert Allbritton, chairman and chief executive of Allbritton Communications, which owns television stations in Washington and elsewhere. Frederick J. Ryan Jr., former Assistant to U.S. President Ronald Reagan[2], and currently chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Foundation, is president and CEO of The Politico.[3]

Distribution and content

The newspaper has a circulation of approximately 25,000, distributed for free on Capitol Hill and elsewhere in Washington, D.C.[1] The newspaper prints three issues a week while Congress is in session, and sometimes publishes one issue a week when Congress is in recess. [4]

The Politico is a partner with several news outlets who co-report and distribute its video, print, and audio content. Partners include CBS News,[5] Allbritton Communications's ABC stations WJLA and KTUL,[6], and radio station WTOP.[7]

Politico journalists covering political campaigns plan to carry a video camera with them to every assignment,[6] and journalists are encouraged to promote their work elsewhere.[7] Though The Politico seeks to break the traditional journalism mold, it expects to initially make much of its money from Washington D.C.-focused newspaper advertising.[8]

Criticism

On March 22 2007, Politico writer Ben Smith erroneously reported via a blog[9] that John Edwards would suspend his presidential campaign in the wake of his wife's cancer recurrence, a claim that was headlined by the Drudge Report and cable news channels including MSNBC.[10] Smith later apologized for relying on a single anonymous source for the story.[11]


References

External links


 
 
 

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