From: Think Progress
By Igor Volsky
on Mar 12, 2013 at 4:00 pm
Right-wing
funders and business industrialists David and Charles Koch
may purchase the Tribune Company newspapers, which include
the Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, and the Los Angeles
Times. The brothers are “interested
in the clout they could gain through the Times’
editorial pages,” the Hollywood Reporter notes. Responding
to the report, a spokesperson for Koch told the website that
the brothers are “constantly exploring profitable
opportunities in many industries and sectors”:
In 2012, the brothers spent millions to defeat President Obama and even sent mailers to employees urging them to support Mitt Romney and other conservative candidates.
Missy Cohlmia, a spokeswoman for Koch Companies Public Sector, LLC, issued the following statement to THR: “As an entrepreneurial company with 60,000 employees around the world, we are constantly exploring profitable opportunities in many industries and sectors. So, it is natural that our name would come up in connection with this rumor. We respect the independence of the journalistic institutions referenced in today’s news stories, but it is our long-standing policy not to comment on deals or rumors of deals we may or may not be exploring. ”The Koch brothers own Koch Industries, the second-largest private company in America, and bankroll a network of Tea Party groups and Republican political war chests.
The Los Angeles Weekly was the first to report that the Kochs could be mulling the purchase of the newspaper assets, which make up $623 million of the company’s $7 billion holdings.
In 2012, the brothers spent millions to defeat President Obama and even sent mailers to employees urging them to support Mitt Romney and other conservative candidates.
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