Lodi News-Sentinel

Breitbart adjusting to life after Bannon departure

- By Gerry Smith

Breitbart News was already contending with an exodus of advertiser­s. Now the public face of the conservati­ve outlet is gone, and competitor­s are licking their chops.

Steve Bannon’s departure Tuesday settled the immediate crisis at Breitbart, which had to decide whether to stand by its executive chairman or part ways because of his rift with President Donald Trump. But a bevy of other right-wing news and commentary providers have sprung forth to cater to Trump supporters, and the anti-establishm­ent tone of Breitbart’s coverage may not be as titillatin­g now that Trump is very much the establishm­ent.

Little has been disclosed about Breitbart’s finances or other investors. The Mercer family has invested $10 million in the site, the New Yorker magazine reported. Bannon gave up his equity in Breitbart when he joined the White House, and the Mercers publicly split with him after his criticism of Trump’s family surfaced this month in Michael Wolff’s book “Fire and Fury.”

Even before that uproar, there were signs of trouble. Bannon had been unable to reverse a drop in Breitbart’s readership since returning to the outlet in August following his departure from the White House. Traffic declined 20 percent last year through November, when it attracted nearly 14 million unique visitors, according to comScore. Meanwhile, Fox News’ traffic increased 3 percent during that time, attracting nearly 87 million unique visitors in November.

“In many ways, we’ve seen a role reversal between Breitbart and Fox News,” said Kurt Bardella, a former Breitbart spokesman. “Fox is becoming the destinatio­n and platform that Trump shapes his worldview on.”

Breitbart had also become more dependent on its financial backers as advertisin­g waned, in part because of online activists protesting what they said were racist views promoted by the news outlet.

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