After the refusal of a cartoon criticizing Jeff Bezos, Ann Telnaes resigns from the Washington Post

After the refusal of a cartoon criticizing Jeff Bezos, Ann Telnaes resigns from the Washington Post
After the refusal of a cartoon criticizing Jeff Bezos, Ann Telnaes resigns from the Washington Post

“It’s dangerous for press freedom”

In mid-December, Amazon donated $1 million to the organization fund for Donald Trump’s inauguration on January 20. And Jeff Bezos recently made a trip to Mar-a-Lago, the Florida residence of the president-elect who promised to “straighten out” the media with legal action.

Read also: Neither Harris nor Trump, the neutrality of the “Washington Post” symbolizes the weakening of traditional media

Designer for the Washington Post since 2008 and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for press cartoons, Ann Telnaes explains in an article on her blog that she “never had a drawing rejected” because of the subject she had chosen to depict, “until now”. “The cartoon that was killed criticizes the tech and media bosses and billionaires who do everything to curry favor with the president-elect,” explains Ann Telnaes. In his eyes, the sketch was not rejected for legitimate editorial reasons, but for the message it conveys: “It changes the situation… and it is dangerous for the freedom of the press,” writes -her again.

In the drawing, Jeff Bezos is next to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg; from the boss of the artificial intelligence company OpenAI, Sam Altman; and the owner of the Los Angeles TimesPatrick Soon-Shiong. A little further on, a prostrate Mickey Mouse represents the Walt Disney Company, itself owner of ABC News. The channel had agreed to pay $15 million to end a defamation proceeding brought by Donald Trump.

Even before beginning his second term, the Republican signaled his intention to launch an avalanche of complaints against the media, which he calls “the enemies of the people.” Many lawyers believe that many procedures will not succeed, but that they risk creating an effect of intimidation and potential self-censorship.

Read also: Ann Telnaes, the woman who sketches Trump

“The only bias was to oppose the repetition,” defends the Washington Post

Requested by the AFP, the Washington Post contested Ann Telnaes’ version. Saying that he respected the cartoonist and all her contribution to the daily newspaper, the head of the editorial pages David Shipley affirmed that his decision to reject the cartoon had been “guided by the fact that we had just published an editorial on the same subject” and that another, satirical, was already planned. “The only bias was to oppose the repetition,” he said.

Jeff Bezos, who during Donald Trump’s first term opposed the Republican on defense contracts, had prevented the Washington Post before the November election to call for votes for Kamala Harris, while voting recommendations by editorial boards are a tradition in the United States.

Read also: “Trump is a gift for cartoonists”: Ann Telnaes and Matt Wuerker facing the American presidential election
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