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The administration has downplayed the importance of the text messages inadvertently sent to The Atlantic’s editor in chief.
Donald Trump's administration was left red-faced last month after journalist Jeffrey Goldberg was mistakenly added to a top ...
A report on Sunday revealed the phone error months earlier that eventually led to a journalist being added to a secret ...
Jeffrey Goldberg joins Ashley Parker to discuss breaking the Signal story, the fallout, and more. Watch the recording of this ...
The president is privately upset with the sloppiness of his advisers. Publicly, he’s focused on attacking the press.
It is instead reserved mainly for the journalist: The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg. The response to the scandal reveals a disjuncture between the seriousness with which MAGA ...
CEO Nicholas Thompson on the editorial independence that shaped the magazine’s blockbuster story—and the business risks of ...
Goldberg reported on how he was inadvertently ... Trump added that he is “not a big fan of The Atlantic,” something he’s previously made clear, and which makes the unintentional leak all ...
However, instead of adding national security council spokesperson Brian Hughes, Waltz mistakenly added Jeffrey Goldberg, the ...
Today on Radio Atlantic, a much higher-stakes texting error: The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, received a connection request on Signal from a “Michael Waltz,” which is the ...
On January 21, 2017, President Donald Trump’s then–press secretary, Sean Spicer, claimed that Trump had drawn the largest ...
A startling error by US national security adviser Mike Waltz reportedly led to The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg ...