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Clint Brown @DissidentClint - Heres a story that will tell you the nature of reporters in DC. 
A couple years ago I was walking through the Capitol building with a friend in his 70s. Hes as old school Washington as it gets  a throwback to when the town was more civilized. A legend in DC. He was reminiscing about his staffer days as we all do. 
He was telling me how different things were before 9/11. Anybody could walk into the Capitol. And now this man who had spent decades serving in the building, who has presidents on speed dial, needed me to escort him because the security is tight and I had credentials. 
To emphasize the point that anyone could walk in, he pointed out to me all the areas where lobbyists used to stand hoping to catch members of Congress. Just here by these elevators. And over there in that reception room. Etc
I responded, well, since you need credentials to get in, thats where reporters stand now. You cant walk without getting a camera in your face. 
He responded, yes, reporters are the new lobbyists.
Quote
DataRepublican (small r) @DataRepublican
Hello, Mr. Desiderio,
Punchbowl News sells access to Capitol Hill for corporate clients. Their senior Senate reporter is you, Andrew Desiderio.
Here's how the access works: Punchbowl has a weekly show called "Fly Out Day," taped at the Punchbowl News Townhouse and described on their own site as an "exclusive first look" for Premium subscribers. Those Premium subscribers are the K Street corporate government affairs staff and trade association officials whose legislative interests depend on what Senate leadership decides to schedule or kill. 
The second-ever guest was Senate Majority Leader John Thune,  on September 11, 2025. This is documented in your own webste. 
Now lets go over your post carefully.
You say Mike Lee "primed the GOP base to believe" something. Thats manipulative framing, the language of a man working a crowd. But Thune "pointed out" something. Thats the language of a man correcting the record, establishing fact. 
This is not a one-off phrasing choice on your part.
Your Punchbowl coverage consistently frames Thune's positions as institutional reality and conservative alternatives as base management. Thune "declared" that the talking filibuster is dead. Lee and his allies "captivated Trump's base." Thune "had enough." The SAVE Act push is "a self-inflicted wound." These are not neutral verbs. They are a point of view and it's Thune's point of view, delivered with a byline.
There's a structural reason this happens.
Jake Sherman described Punchbowl's business model in his own words on The Rebooting podcast (January 2022): nearly 90% of the outlet's revenue comes from corporate sponsorships "trade groups and companies looking to get their public affairs messaging in front of those making public policy." The sponsors documented at Punchbowl include PhRMA, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Facebook, JPMorgan, Blackstone, the American Investment Council (private equity lobby), and others.
These sponsors need the goodwill of the Senate Majority Leader, who controls which of their legislative priorities come to the floor. Thune controls the floor. Thune sits in Punchbowl's townhouse. You reports Thune's framing as conventional wisdom.
When Desiderio writes that the talking filibuster "will ultimately fail" ... not might fail, not Thune argues it will fail, but when it ultimately fails ... is that journalism? Or is it the view from Thune's Fly Out Day chair?
You are busted, Mr. Desiderio.
https://x.com/DissidentClint/status/2031341966651162982

CNN @CNN - A post regarding the two individuals arrested for throwing homemade bombs outside of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home failed to reflect the gravity of the incident thereby breaching the editorial standards we require for all our reporting. It has therefore been deleted.
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https://x.com/CNN/status/2031364168855548101
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