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The administration has downplayed the importance of the text messages inadvertently sent to The Atlantic’s editor in chief.
Shortly after his publication shared the full "attack plans" that were discussed in the Signal group chat he was accidentally invited to join, The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg appeared on ...
President Donald Trump and top officials have been fiercely critical of The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg after his reporting ...
Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic’s editor in chief, brushed off the risk of a legal threat from the Trump administration after ...
Face looking back at Trump makes him 'look bad' Re letter to the editor “Atlantic editor’s actions were unethical,” April 6 ...
The Atlantic has just released the precise attack plans laid out by Trump Administration advisers during a leaked chat on a commercial app prior to a military strike against Iran-backed Houthi rebels ...
The Trump administration has been at war with journalists—and a Biden-era DOJ prosecution has opened up a path for them to go after Jeffrey Goldberg.
The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg on Wednesday's 'Morning Joe' responded to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt's criticism of his claim that was invited to a Signal chatroom where war plans ...
Missouri’s Josh Hawley and Eric Schmitt back the administration after journalist Jeffrey Goldberg was accidentally added to a national security group chat. | Opinion ...
The White House reacted furiously on Wednesday after The Atlantic magazine published messages between national security officials in a Signal group chat in their entirety. Jeffrey Goldberg, the ...
New Yorker' magazine's Susan Glasser on 'Washington Week' called it a "badge of honor" for host Jeffrey Goldberg to have his character impugned by President Donald Trump. SUSAN GLASSER, NEW YORKER: ...
The journalist at the center of the Trump administration's Signal chat fiasco publicly released attack plans discussed by senior US officials.