The paper reported:
This month a Koch representative contacted Eddy W. Hartenstein, publisher and chief executive of The Los Angeles Times, to discuss a bid, according to a person briefed on the conversation who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the conversation was private. Mr. Hartenstein declined to comment.
The Koch brothers are known for
having funnelled multiple millions of dollars into wingnut and lunatic fringe political campaigns. They are wealthy, powerful
ideologues with deep convictions that less government is better. They
have used their money to fuel the tea party sedition and to fund wingnut and libertarian think tanks including The Cato Institute, the
Heritage Foundation and the tea party-connected Americans for
Prosperity and FreedomWorks.
This news should make anyone who
cares about journalism, transparency and the pursuit of fact-based
reporting, nervous. No city should desire a newspaper with the pedigree
and reach of the L.A. Times in the hands of ideologues of any stripe.
And at this stage, they are the
only known interested bidder for the group of newspapers owned by
Tribune. A group of local billionaires, including Ron Burkle and Eli
Broad, are investigating buying the L.A. Times only, which remains a
profitable enterprise despite the challenged sector. Rupert Murdoch is
another reportedly interested bidder on the L.A. Times, though not the
entire newspaper group.
And as if this were to make anyone breathe easier, the Times reported:
One person who has previously advised Koch Industries said the Tribune Company papers were considered an investment opportunity, and were viewed as entirely separate from Charles and David Kochs' lifelong mission to shrink the size of government.
According to insiders, the sale of Tribune is meant to be completed in the next three months.
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