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Tag: the new york times

  • New York Times journalists, other workers on 24-hour strike

    New York Times journalists, other workers on 24-hour strike

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    New York — Hundreds of journalists and other employees at The New York Times began a 24-hour walkout Thursday in the first strike of its kind at the newspaper in more than 40 years.

    Newsroom employees and other members of The NewsGuild of New York say they’re fed up with bargaining that’s dragged on since their last contract expired in March 2021. The union announced last week that more than 1,100 employees would stage a 24-hour work stoppage starting at 12:01 a.m. Thursday unless the two sides reach a contract deal.

    The NewsGuild tweeted Thursday morning that workers, “are now officially on work stoppage, the first of this scale at the company in 4 decades. It’s never an easy decision to refuse to do work you love, but our members are willing to do what it takes to win a better newsroom for all.”

    Negotiations took place Tuesday and some of Wednesday, but the sides remained far apart on issues including wage increases and remote-work policies.

    On Wednesday evening the union said via Twitter that a deal had not been reached and the walkout was happening. “We were ready to work for as long as it took to reach a fair deal,” it said, “but management walked away from the table with five hours to go.”

    “We know what we’re worth,” the union added.

    But New York Times spokesperson Danielle Rhoades Ha said in a statement that they were still in negotiations when they were told that the strike was happening.

    “It is disappointing that they are taking such an extreme action when we are not at an impasse,” she said.

    It was unclear how Thursday’s coverage would be affected, but the strike’s supporters include members of the fast-paced live-news desk, which covers breaking news for the digital paper. Employees were planning a rally for the afternoon outside the newspaper’s offices near Times Square.

    Rhoades Ha told The Associated Press the company has “solid plans in place” to continue producing content, including relying on international reporters and other journalists who are not union members.

    In a note sent to guild-represented staff Tuesday night, Deputy Managing Editor Cliff Levy called the planned strike “puzzling” and “an unsettling moment in negotiations over a new contract.” He said it would be the first strike by the bargaining unit since 1981 and “comes despite intensifying efforts by the company to make progress.”

    But in a letter signed by more than 1,000 employees, the NewsGuild said management has been “dragging its feet” bargaining for nearly two years and “time is running out to reach a fair contract” by the end of the year.

    The NewsGuild also said the company told employees planning to strike they would not get paid for the duration of the walkout. Members were also asked to work extra hours get work done ahead of the strike, according to the union.

    The New York Times has seen other, shorter walkouts in recent years, including a half-day protest in August by a new union representing technology workers who claimed unfair labor practices.

    In one breakthrough that both sides called significant, the company backed off its proposal to replace the existing adjustable pension plan with an enhanced 401 (k) retirement plan. The Times offered instead to let the union choose between the two. The company also agreed to expand fertility treatment benefits.

    Levy said the company has also offered to raise wages by 5.5% upon ratification of the contract, followed by 3% hikes in 2023 and 2024. That would be an increase from the 2.2% annual increases in the expired contract.

    Stacy Cowley, a finance reporter and union representative, said the union is seeking 10% pay raises at ratification, which she said would make up for raises not received over the past two years.

    She also said the union wants the contract to guarantee employees the option to work remotely some of the time, if their roles allow for it, but the company wants the right to recall workers to the office full time. Cowley said the Times has required its staff to be in office three days a week but many have been showing up less often in an informal protest.

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  • Elon Musk Moves Quickly On Twitter Restructuring : Huge Layoffs On Saturday?

    Elon Musk Moves Quickly On Twitter Restructuring : Huge Layoffs On Saturday?

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    Although many predicted that Elon Musk’s $44 billion deal to buy Twitter
    TWTR
    could still fall through, the billionaire did indeed close the transaction on Friday and his restructuring plan was already well thought out and quickly implemented. At least the beginning of it—who knows what turmoil lies ahead?

    Musk let go key executives CEO Parag Agrawal, CFO
    CFO
    Ned Segal and the head of legal policy Vijaya Gadde, according to the Washington Post. However, don’t shed any tears for the trio, who take with them golden parachute packages and accelerated vesting of stock options worth almost $200 million.

    However, that’s just the beginning of the bloodbath according to The New York Times
    NYT
    (which talked to four different sources at Twitter) the layoffs will begin on Saturday, ahead of a November 1 scheduled distribution of stock grants (and a key vesting date on some already issued stock grants).

    Although the company is no longer public, Musk had previously announced that he would pay out the equivalent of the value of the stock grants, estimated to be about $100 million, in cash.

    Interviews with various sources and document obtained by the Washington Post reportedly show that he plans to fire about 75% of twitter employees, likely well before a town-hall meeting with all employees on Friday. The New York Times reports many of the layoffs will occur tomorrow, October 30.

    Musk reportedly told Twitter staff on Wednesday that the 75% figure is inaccurate, however, he did not state to what extent the layoffs would go.

    Musk has courted key advertisers and said the platform will be an “advertising destination.” One advertiser, General Motors
    GM
    , has already put its Twitter ad buys on hold, although this could be due to Musk’s ownership stake in Tesla.

    His ownership also rubbed some high-profile users the wrong way. Media giant Shonda Rhimes, This Is Us executive producer Ken Olin, Billions showrunner Brian Koppelmen and Bill & Ted star Alex Winter all left or said they are leaving Twitter.

    NBA star LeBron James expressed concern over hate speech, citing a report by the Network Contagion Research Institute, which studies the spread of ideological content online, who said that the use of a racial slur on Twitter had increased by nearly 500% in the 12 hours after Musk’s deal was finalized.

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    Derek Baine, Contributor

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  • But Her Emails! Behind The New York Times’ Maddening Hillary Clinton Coverage

    But Her Emails! Behind The New York Times’ Maddening Hillary Clinton Coverage

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    “I live in constant fear,” Amy Chozick told me as she sat in my New York Times office. The rising-star reporter was worried about losing even a single Hillary Clinton scoop to another news organization. It was 2013, and Chozick had just been assigned to cover the Clintons, particularly Hillary Clinton. Her editors, including top editor Jill Abramson, had urged her to “own” the Clinton beat.

    Carolyn Ryan, Chozick’s boss and the senior editor for politics coverage, told me why there was such emphasis on Hillary Clinton when she hadn’t even declared her candidacy. With President Barack Obama set to finish his second term, the Times viewed Clinton, then secretary of state, as “the closest thing we have to an incumbent” in the 2016 election.

    Brendan Nyhan, a political scientist at Dartmouth College, pointedly wondered if a full-time Clinton beat would “cement the perception that she is the inevitable Democratic nominee and effectively serve to pre-anoint her.”

    Concerns like that, aired in my column, prompted one reader to comment: “Promoting the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, as the NYT seems to be doing, is equivalent to campaigning for a Republican win in 2016.”

    As public editor—the Times newsroom’s internal watchdog—I documented the many strange chapters of Clinton coverage, including Chozick’s feature story in the Sunday magazine about her subject’s sphere of influence, titled “Planet Hillary.” The cover image of her face as a fleshy globe floating in space drew scads of negative feedback. One reader, Kevin Egan, emailed me: “The now-viral image is hideously ugly, demeaning, sexist, and completely premature for an election almost three years away.”

    When the right-wing political consultant Peter Schweizer published his 2015 book, Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich, the Times made an “exclusive” deal to pursue one of his story lines. As one reader put it: “I’m very unsettled that the Times is hyping a book by an extreme partisan.” The paper in time published a front-page story, “Cash Flowed to Clinton Foundation amid Russian Uranium Deal,” a solidly reported piece that nonetheless became catnip for right-wing politicos. Sean Hannity of Fox News distorted it, implying that it proved that the U.S. secretary of state was corrupt, that she had risked national security for a quid pro quo deal.

    But real trouble had arrived a month earlier when Times reporter Michael Schmidt broke the story about Clinton’s questionable email practices. It appeared on the front page under the headline, “Clinton Used Personal Email at State Department.” No big deal, you might think. But soon all hell broke loose. In July, Schmidt and Matt Apuzzo wrote a story—sourced anonymously—about the Justice Department opening a “criminal investigation” into Clinton regarding her email practices. Again, it got front-page treatment. Almost immediately, Clinton’s people got in touch with the Times and protested, calling some aspects inaccurate. Quickly, some key language in the story was changed; now the inquiry was called a “security referral,” and the Justice Department inquiry was described as about the email practices, not about Clinton herself, as the story originally had stated. Two corrections were appended; later, an editor’s note was published, addressing how readers might have been confused by the conflicting information. (Three years later, in 2018, yet another note was added—intended, I believe, to suggest that the story had been essentially correct in its original form, as some Times journalists had maintained all along.)

    Soon after the “criminal investigation” story published, I wrote a blistering post and then a more tempered Sunday column, quoting executive editor Dean Baquet acknowledging a “screw-up.” My main takeaway was that the Times had been too hasty in publishing, especially since the story was based on anonymous sources. “We got it wrong because our very good sources had it wrong,” one ranking editor, Matt Purdy, told me. For many readers, those were infuriating words, reminding them of the disastrous coverage that preceded the Iraq War: unskeptical, anonymously sourced reporting by the Times, and many others, on the supposed weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

    Then came the infamous Comey letter. Just days before the presidential election, FBI director James Comey reopened the bureau’s emails investigation. The Times coverage went overboard. Editors devoted the entire top of the print front page to this development: three articles and a photograph, all “above the fold.” In just six days, the Times published as many prominent stories about Hillary Clinton’s emails as about all policy issues combined in the two months before the election, according to Columbia Journalism Review.

    What about the FBI investigation into Trump’s connections to Russia? The pre-election coverage was far quieter. Less than two weeks before the election, for example, the Times published a story on an inside page: “Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia.”  

    Years later, the Times and the Washington Post won Pulitzer Prizes for their revelations about Russian interference in the election and Russian connections to the Trump campaign and administration. Obviously, this turned out to be far more important story than Hillary Clinton’s email practices.

    So why didn’t campaign coverage reflect that? The answer is maddening.

     From NEWSROOM CONFIDENTIAL: Lessons (and Worries) from an Ink-Stained Life by Margaret Sullivan. Copyright 2022 by Margaret Sullivan. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin’s Publishing Group.


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    Margaret Sullivan

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