Washington Post kills ad calling for Trump to fire Elon Musk, fueling censorship outcries

The Washington Post reportedly killed a $115,000 advertisement calling on President Trump to fire DOGE chief Elon Musk — sparking renewed outcry over censorship at the Jeff Bezos-owned publication.

Advocacy group Common Cause wanted the anti-Musk wraparound ad, which would cover the front and back pages, to run this week but it was scrapped without management providing a reason, according to The Hill.

Common Cause, along with partner Southern Poverty Law Center Action Fund, had planned to spend $115,000 for both the wraparound ad and a similar full-page ad inside the paper, the outlet reported.

Non-profit Common Cause is running a campaign to demand President Trump fire Elon Musk. commoncause.org

“We are forced to ask ourselves if The Washington Post – a pillar of investigative journalism during Watergate – is unwilling to challenge those in power?” Virginia Kase Solomón, president at Common Cause, told the New York Post in a statement.

“Under Jeff Bezos’ ownership, concerns about corporate influence over the press have only grown, and this decision raises serious questions about the paper’s independence.”

A Washington Post spokesperson directed the New York Post to its advertising guidelines, which state that the paper reserves the right to refuse or revise any advertisements.

The ad featured a large photo of Musk in front of the White House with the text: “Who’s running this country: Donald Trump or Elon Musk?”

“The Constitution only allows for one president at a time. Call your senators and tell them it’s time Donald Trump fire Elon Musk,” the ad continued, according to The Hill.

The Beltway broadsheet has been staggered by internal dissent since Bezos scrapped a presidential endorsement for then-Vice President Kamala Harris in October. 

Last month, workers demanded a meeting with Bezos to discuss issues causing “readers to question the integrity of this institution.”

A large photo of Elon Musk in front of the White House would have covered the front and back pages of the paper. christianthiel.net – stock.adobe.com

The DC-based non-profit had sent a copy of the planned ad to The Washington Post’s advertising department ahead of time, and an advertising sales representative had seemed confident about the ad running – raising no red flags, Solomón told The Hill.

Papers with the wraparound ad would have been delivered to subscribers at Congress, the Pentagon and the White House.

But the publication – which was bought by Amazon founder Bezos in 2013 – told Common Cause that they had to drop the wrap, but could keep the one running inside.

“We said ‘Thanks, no thanks,’ because we had a lot of questions,” Solomón told The Hill.

Papers with the wraparound ad would have been delivered to subscribers at Congress, the Pentagon and the White House. The Washington Post

She said the paper had provided sample art to Common Cause as a guideline for what their own ad would look like.

The sample was a wrap ad featuring a large photo of Trump giving a thumbs up to highlight his promise to “end the electric vehicle mandate on Day 1,” funded by the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, according to The Hill.

“It was a thank-you Donald Trump piece of art,” Solomón said.

Some social media users started circulating the canceled ad on X, citing it as the paper’s latest capitulation to Trump.

“Democracy dies on the cutting room floor,” Pulitzer-winning journalist Mike Stanton wrote in a post on X, twisting the WaPo’s “Democracy Dies in Darkness” tagline.

Common Cause launched its “Fire Elon Musk” campaign earlier this month to protest the billionaire’s growing power as Trump’s right-hand man.

Musk runs the Department of Government Efficiency, a task force aimed at slashing federal spending. 

DOGE has put a freeze on federal funding and called for the government to “delete entire agencies.” 

The Washington Post provided a pro-Trump wraparound ad as sample art to Common Cause, according to Virginia Kase Solomón. AFP via Getty Images

Meanwhile, the left-leaning newspaper has suffered backlash internally and from readers since the endorsement scandal. 

More than 250,000 readers canceled their WaPo subscriptions in the days after news broke that the editorial board had been blocked from publishing their endorsement of Harris.

Editorial board members and longtime reporters at the paper penned scathing resignation letters.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Supreme Court rules that government watchdog fired by Trump may temporarily remain on the job

CNN  —  The Supreme Court on Friday dashed President Donald Trump’s plan to immediately fire the head of an independent agency that investigates whistleblower claims, allowing Hampton Dellinger to remain in the job through at least the middle of next week. By declining to back Trump’s emergency appeal, the conservative court nominally sided with Dellinger,

PolitiFact checks facts on Donald Trump’s Ukraine comments

Get The Facts: Examining claims President Trump made about Ukraine-Russia war Updated: 5:11 PM EST Feb 21, 2025 95 IN 101 DELAY FREE. WE’RE GETTING THE FACTS ON A RECENT COMMENT BY PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP ABOUT THE WAR IN UKRAINE. WHILE ANSWERING REPORTERS QUESTIONS ABOUT U.S. AND RUSSIA REPRESENTATIVES MEETING IN SAUDI ARABIA WITHOUT ANYBODY

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin targeting Feb. 25 for 10th space tourism launch

Blue Origin is targeting next Tuesday (Feb. 25) for its 10th space tourism mission, which will send six people to the final frontier. If all goes according to plan, Blue Origin‘s suborbital New Shepard vehicle will lift off from the company’s West Texas site on Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. EST (1630 GMT; 9:30 a.m. local

Celebrities who love gambling, from Drake and Bruno Mars to Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley and Tiger Woods – but who bet $US1.5 million to side with Taylor Swift fans on last year’s Super Bowl?

Many celebrities are known for taking risks – whether it’s in the roles they take on, the music they produce, or the opportunities they pursue outside their fields. When this is in the realm of their careers, the rewards are often worth the gamble. However, not all risk-takers are as lucky when it comes to

International Mother Language Day: Hispanic influencers and celebrities defend the importance of speaking Spanish | Culture

On February 21, the world celebrates International Mother Language Day, established by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1999 to recognize the importance of preserving native and mother languages across all cultures. In the United States, a country known for its linguistic diversity, this date holds particular significance in a political

US President Donald Trump ‘horrified’ by return of Bibas children

President Donald Trump is ‘horrified’ by the scenes coming out of Israel following the return of the Bibas children’s bodies on Thursday, National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said Friday morning at the Conservative Political Action Conference.  “His heart breaks,” Waltz said of Trump. “My message, President Trump’s message to those families, we are with

Elon Musk has problem with X Community Notes after Ukraine corrections

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX and owner of social media platform X, speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference at the Gaylord National Resort Hotel and Convention Center in Oxon Hill, Maryland, Feb. 20, 2025. Andrew Harnik | Getty Images For X owner Elon Musk, the solution to monitoring misinformation online has been

Taylor Swift’s surprising role in the casting of ‘It Ends With Us’ has been revealed

Taylor Swift‘s involvement in the production of the film adaptation of It Ends With Us seems to run deeper than previously disclosed. In a resurfaced interview with Access Hollywood, director Justin Baldoni revealed that the global superstar played a pivotal role in approving Isabela Ferrer’s casting as the younger version of Blake Lively‘s character, Lily.

Vladimir Putin prepares for return of western companies to Russia

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free Your guide to what the 2024 US election means for Washington and the world Vladimir Putin has ordered his cabinet to prepare for the return of western companies, a sign of a potential corporate renaissance from the unfolding US-Russia rapprochement. Russia’s president said on Friday he wanted

black panther: Black Panther’s $500-billion fortune: This MCU superhero is richer than Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos

The world of superheroes is highly captivating. They represent an idealised version of human potential — whether through super strength, intelligence or reality-defying abilities. They embody fantasies of power and control, allowing people to imagine overcoming obstacles that seem insurmountable in real life.Even in their fictional realms, superheroes possess extraordinary resources that enable them to

Europe can afford to defend itself without US but needs more coordination: study

Europe needs to spend around €250 billion (US$261.6 billion) annually in defence investments to secure itself without US support, a sum the bloc could bear given its economic strength, according to a study published on Friday. This spending, equivalent to 1.5 per cent of the EU’s gross domestic product, would allow Europe to mobilise some

US President Trump’s claims about Zelenskyy and Ukraine fact-checked | Conflict News

United States President Donald Trump has made a series of claims about Ukraine and its leader as he seeks to end the country’s three-year war with Russia. Trump’s relationship with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy soured publicly as Trump called Zelenskyy a “dictator” and said he “started” the war with Russia, a claim PolitiFact rated pants-on-fire false.

What are we to make of Trump’s Ukraine policy? | Matt Duss

It’s been quite a week for US foreign policy. Following a phone call last week between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, US and Russian delegates met in Saudi Arabia to smooth relations between the two countries and discuss possible paths to ending the war in Ukraine. Ukraine was not invited to the talks. Quite reasonably,

Ukrainians in N.L. in disbelief over Trump’s comments that their country provoked Russian invasion

Mariya Lesiv and Yuliia Veretennyk, two Ukrainians living in Newfoundland and Labrador, say they were shocked and disgusted by comments made by U.S. President Donald Trump about Ukraine. (Submitted by Mariya Lesiv, Henrike Wilhelm/CBC) Two Ukrainians living in Newfoundland and Labrador say U.S. President Donald Trump’s comments about their country are dangerous, harmful and show a lack

NPR’s Book of the Day : NPR

Reid Hoffman has invested in AI for years. The LinkedIn co-founder said he used AI to vet his new book, Superagency, written with Greg Beato, which makes an optimistic case for an AI-powered future. In today’s episode, Hoffman joins NPR’s Steve Inskeep for a conversation about the book that touches on his decision to back

What did China’s tech entrepreneurs tell Xi Jinping at the symposium?

Ren, the face of China’s resilience against US hostilities in technology, told Xi that concerns had eased over China’s lack of home-grown chips and operating systems – the “heart and soul” of modern technology – according to a report from the People’s Daily on Friday. “I firmly believe that a stronger China is rising at

Can Europe afford to defend itself without the US?

This article is an on-site version of our Europe Express newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday and Saturday morning. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters Good morning. More bad news for Ukraine: Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is skipping a virtual

Jeff Bezos Wants To Know Who You’d Pick As The Next 007 As James Bond’s Future Now In Amazon’s Hands – Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN)

Amazon.com Inc.’s AMZN MGM Studios, which the e-commerce giant acquired for $8.5 billion, has taken over the creative direction of the legendary James Bond series.  What Happened: On Thursday, Amazon MGM Studios announced it had reached a deal with Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, forming a joint venture that grants Amazon creative control over

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x