Decaying Corpse of Lies Washington Post Throws Kamala Under Bus
REGARDING THE WASHINGTON POST NOT ENDORSING KAMALA HARRIS:
STATEMENT OF EUGENE DELGAUDIO, PRESIDENT OF PUBLIC ADVOCATE
I have my own opinions of the Washington Post years ago:
Delgaudio spoke........, saying, "The suicide bombers of the political left pull their own rings on their detonation devices as they advance on me, and Sterling (Virginia) , and all honest-to-God conservatives... I stand as a small David against the foul-smelling, decaying corpse of the Washington Post."
The fact that they won't endorse Kamala Harris brings an momentary pause to their wicked ways of the past, present and future at least. This is a tribute to new Public Advocate supporters who have propelled our social media outreach to 100 million views a year and made the Washington Post and other leftist media a little obscure mimeograph handout for lost liberals by comparison."
END OF STATEMENT FROM EUGENE DELGAUDIO
Leftists Melt Down After Washington Post Editorial Board Declines To Endorse Harris
Leftists suffered a meltdown Friday after the editors of the Washington Post announced they would no longer endorse in presidential races starting with this year's contest between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris.
"The Washington Post will not be making an endorsement of a presidential candidate in this election. Nor in any future presidential election," read a note from the Post's publisher and editor-in-chief, William Lewis. "We are returning to our roots of not endorsing presidential candidates."
Washington Post Endorsement Shock Stuns Kamala Campaign.
For the first time in 36 years, The Washington Post will not endorse a presidential candidate. Publisher and CEO Will Lewis announced the decision to the newsroom on Friday. "The Washington Post will not be making an endorsement of a presidential candidate in this election," Lewis wrote to staff.
He claimed there would not be any endorsements in "any future presidential election," either, adding: "We are returning to our roots of not endorsing presidential candidates."In a longer editorial on the newspaper's website, Lewis explained the return to a past editorial policy where endorsements were not made, a stance consistent with its approach prior to 1976. That year marked a shift when the paper supported Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter following its pivotal coverage of the Watergate scandal. Until now, 1988 stood as the last instance the Post withheld an endorsement in a general election.