USA TODAY US Edition

Breitbart rises with Bannon’s political fortunes

Conservati­ve news organizati­on moves out of the shadows

- Paul Singer @singernews USA TODAY

Breitbart News WASHINGTON has stepped out of the fringes of American politics and is now, quite literally, moving out of the basement as well.

The bare-knuckled conservati­ve news organizati­on has moved its office out of the house where former chief Steve Bannon lived, has begun to reluctantl­y disclose its ownership, and, in its quest for official recognitio­n, may even go so far as to publicly declare who runs the place.

Breitbart has for the past several years operated, basically, out of Bannon’s house. Bannon was the executive chairman of Breitbart News and the ideologica­l engine behind the site’s bareknuckl­ed anti-immigratio­n, antigovern­ment ideology. He and the site both operated out of a townhouse on Capitol Hill a couple of blocks behind the Supreme Court. It became known as the “Breitbart Embassy,” site of lavish parties upstairs and the typing downstairs of a staff of young reporters, whom Bannon referred to as “the Valkyries.”

But then Bannon became Donald Trump’s campaign chief last summer and is now chief strategist in the White House.

Breitbart is rising with Bannon and is now trying to become a credential­ed member of the Senate Daily Press Gallery, joining

The New York Times, USA TODAY and other mainstream news outlets. This would given it access to the Capitol that is on par with

congressio­nal staff. It would also allow them to participat­e in White House “pools,” providing coverage of events to the rest of the press corps when space for reporters is limited.

But membership in that club requires a level of transparen­cy Breitbart News has long shunned. The office location is the first hurdle. Breitbart News has declared the Breitbart Embassy as its office address, but that is not really true.

The Embassy is still the official address of Breitbart’s Washington bureau, but “since the summer we have been transition­ing people out of the house,” said spokesman Chad Wilkinson. One of the reasons for the move was security, Wilkinson said. “Some of our employees just weren’t comfortabl­e working at a Breitbart office there,” he said. It is, after all, just a townhouse, with no security desk.

Sometime this spring, Breitbart will have a regular office in downtown D.C., Wilkinson predicted. Meanwhile, most of the staff are telecommut­ing.

It is probably just as well: The Embassy is in a residentia­l neighborho­od where it is generally not legal to run an office.

Washington, D.C., property records show the building it is owned by Moustafa El- Gindy, a former Egyptian member of Parliament who has occasional­ly been quoted in Breitbart news stories. El- Gindy is receiving a homestead deduction on the property, a $72,000 tax credit that requires the owner to maintain residence in the building. He could not be located for comment on this story.

Breitbart CEO Larry Solov told the Senate press gallery that the company has a soon-to-expire lease in the building for corporate housing, offices and entertainm­ent. But zoning rules for the block do not allow commercial leases.

“That area of Capitol Hill is zoned only for residentia­l uses, with a very narrow set of ‘ home occupation’ exceptions allowing a resident (as opposed to a rotating group of occasional visitors) to work as an in-home tailor, music tutor, doctor, or the like, or to run a small bed & breakfast,” said Mark Eckenwiler, longtime chair of the zoning committee for the local Advisory Neighborho­od Commission, the city government unit for that area.

The uses Solov described to the press gallery “appear to violate the D.C. zoning regulation­s applicable to that location,” Eckenwiler said.

Since the lease is not public, it is impossible to know whether the terms meet the neighborho­ods restrictio­ns.

When Breitbart does get a new office, it will presumably make the address more public than the current address, which appears nowhere on the Breitbart news site. The site also provides no phone number and no way to contact the editors or reporters.

Beyond the address, Breitbart’s applicatio­n for press credential­s is also shining new light on the company’s management and ownership structure.

The site offers no “masthead,” the roster of editors and managers that news organizati­ons traditiona­lly publish in print editions or post on their websites. Solov told the Standing Committee of Correspond­ents last month that he would consider producing a masthead, but it still has not appeared on the site.

The bigger question is who owns the site, a piece of informatio­n Solov admitted he was loath to disclose.

The press gallery rules state that to qualify, a reporter “must not be engaged in any lobbying or paid advocacy, advertisin­g, publicity or promotion work for any individual, political party, corporatio­n, organizati­on, or agency of the U.S. Government, or in prosecutin­g any claim before Congress or any federal government department, and will not do so while a member of the Daily Press Galleries. Applicants’ publicatio­ns must be editoriall­y independen­t of any institutio­n, foundation or interest group that lobbies the federal government, or that is not principall­y a general news organizati­on.”

Solov reluctantl­y told the Standing Committee in February that Breitbart is partly owned by the Mercer family, one the largest sources of money behind committees supporting President Trump’s campaign last year. Solov would not say which of the Mercers was an owner.

Solov also told the committee that Bannon resigned from Breitbart last fall, shortly after the election, but was unable to provide any formal documentat­ion to that effect. He said Bannon simply called him to say he is stepping down.

Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said that Steve Bannon resigned from Breitbart last fall.

 ?? MARIO TAMA, GETTY IMAGES ??
MARIO TAMA, GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK, AP ?? Steve Bannon, who once operated Breitbart News out of his home, is now a top adviser to President Trump.
ANDREW HARNIK, AP Steve Bannon, who once operated Breitbart News out of his home, is now a top adviser to President Trump.

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