5.) Politico staffers were not pleased Politico accused The New York Times and Washington Post of liberal bias
On May 31, Politico argued in a report authored by Vandehei and Mike Allen that The New York Times and The Washington Post were biased against Romney and in favor of Obama in their political coverage. “Some in the Politico newsroom weren’t happy with the piece. One staffer said it ‘went over extremely poorly’ with the rank-and-file and looked like top writers were simply ‘picking a fight unnecessarily’ with competitors.”
6.) Ben Smith can do whatever he wants in the eyes of Politico, even break his contract
Ben Smith pulled an exceptional move for a Politico reporter. He broke his contract with Politico to leave for BuzzFeed in 2012. Politico, looking to avoid a public fight, chose not to sue and instead settled an arrangement with Smith to produce a weekly column for Politico while not publishing under his own byline on BuzzFeed for the duration of the GOP nominating process, hence the use of “BuzzFeed Politics” instead. “Then Smith stopped writing the Politico column in March and began using a byline on BuzzFeed, even though Romney was not yet the official nominee. ‘We love Ben. We’re not talking about that contract,’ Vandehei says.”
7.) Politico staffers compete under a ‘star-system’ for attention from the bosses
“Politico staffers routinely talk of a Politico ‘star-system’ in which a handful of reporters in the VandeHarris orbit receive preferential treatment from company leadership, while the majority are left drilling in a far off journalistic galaxy. One former staffer likens the newsroom to ‘The Hunger Games,’ in which young people fight to the death for the enjoyment of the privileged class.”
8.) Politico reporters mostly suck on television
Most Politico reporters just aren’t that good on television. In 2008, “[Don] Ennis helped create Capitol Sunday, which aired on Allbritton’s ABC affiliate, WJLA-7, and featured the station’s top anchor, Leon Harris, as host, with a rotating cast of Politicos coming in. Ennis said Politico writers were usually great at answering specific questions, but their attempts at longer riffs on politics — the type of insidery banter that comprises much of the Politico Live broadcasts — didn’t work well in a visual medium. ‘What’s that expression from Saturday Night Live, not ready for primetime?’ says Ennis…” The show was cancelled in May of that year.
9.) There’s speculation that Politico is ‘a vanity project,’ and not profitable
“Since Allbriton is privately held, it’s impossible to dig into the financials and verify that claim and there have long been doubts about whether Politico actually has earnings putting the company in the black. Since wealthy people have been known to bankroll money-losing media outlets for the influence they carry, there have also been suggestions that Politico is a vanity project for Robert Allbritton, son of local media titan Joe Allbritton…”




