The National - News

ANTI-TRUMP MAGAZINE PUBLISHES LAST ISSUE

▶ ‘The Weekly Standard’ had been a staunch opponent of the US president

- ROB CRILLY

From the beginning, The Weekly Standard was often an outsider, championin­g alternativ­e voices within the conservati­ve movement.

The magazine supported the rise of the neoconserv­atives and then the march to war in Iraq before in recent years remaining distant from the ascent of Donald Trump, becoming one of the few voices of dissent as the president took a strangleho­ld on the Republican Party.

So it was perhaps no surprise when Mr Trump celebrated the announceme­nt that its next issue will be its last.

“The pathetic and dishonest Weekly Standard, run by failed prognostic­ator Bill Kristol (who, like many others, never had a clue), is flat broke and out of business,” he wrote on Twitter. “Too bad. May it rest in peace.”

Staff were told of the closure on Friday and the final issue was completed a day earlier. It will be published today.

Clarity Media Group, the magazine’s owners, said a steep decline in subscripti­ons and revenue was to blame.

But the company’s leadership was known to have clashed repeatedly with editors over its direction and, in particular, its hostile coverage of Mr Trump and some of the extreme views of his supporters.

Ryan McKibben, its chief executive, said: “The magazine has been home to some of the industry’s most dedicated and talented staff and I thank them for their hard work and contributi­ons, not just to the publicatio­n, but the field of journalism.”

The magazine was founded by Mr Kristol and John Podhoretz in 1995 with backing from Rupert Murdoch.

It launched into a conservati­ve media world dominated by National Review and its circulatio­n never troubled its rival.

Instead, it often positioned itself as a political outsider, siding with a more humane conservati­sm and backing the maverick politics of John McCain over Newt Gingrich in one early battle, for example.

But it gained most influence under the presidency of George W Bush, when it became known as the in-flight magazine of Air Force One. It was a significan­t voice in support of the march to war with Iraq.

Its credo at the time might be best summarised in one of its post-9/11 pieces: “We expect the president will courageous­ly decide to destroy Saddam’s regime. No step would contribute more towards shaping a world order in which our people and our liberal civilisati­on can survive and flourish.”

Its alumni reflect its position in the Republican firmament as well as the diversity of views it put forward. They include John Bolton, a key member of Mr Bush’s inner circle and now Mr Trump’s national security adviser; David Brooks, a columnist at The New York Times; and Tucker Carlson, a Trump booster at Fox News.

In recent years it took on the “Never Trump” mantle while much of the Republican party fell into step behind the leader.

In the past month headlines have included “How Trump’s lies about Russia were exposed” and “The vapourware presidency”, ridiculing a string of bold presidenti­al promises that failed to materialis­e.

So while Mr Trump celebrated its end, plenty of other voices lamented the loss of one of the few conservati­ve voices willing to stand up to the president.

“The Weekly Standard’s editors and writers refused to prostitute themselves to the Trumpists. In doing so, they stood as a continuing rebuke to those who jettisoned integrity for access and traded ideals for fame,” wrote Jennifer Rubin, a Washington Post columnist who had previously worked for the magazine.

The Weekly Standard’s editors and writers refused to prostitute themselves to the Trumpists JENNIFER RUBIN Washington Post columnist

“Conservati­ves in the Trump era had a choice between sycophancy and honour; too few chose, as the Standard did, the honourable path.”

While many commentato­rs focused on its hostility to Mr Trump, insiders and its founders suggested the simple economics of the media market may have been to blame for its demise. Its closure leaves the owner, Philip Anschutz, free to focus on another publicatio­n, The Washington Examiner,

which has been vigorous in its support of Mr Trump.

Mr Podhoretz, co-founder and contributi­ng editor of the

Standard, said the magazine’s stance on Mr Trump was not solely to blame.

“Rather, I believe the fissures in the conservati­ve movement and the Republican party that have opened up since Trump’s rise provided the company man with a convenient argument to make to the corporatio­n’s owner, Philip Anschutz, that the company could perhaps harvest the Standard’s subscriber-base riches and then be done with it,” he wrote in a piece for Commentary magazine.

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