Categories
Politics

Teen Vogue editor-in-chief Alexi McCammond resigns over outdated racist tweets

Alexi McCammond speaks at Politicon 2018 at the Los Angeles Convention Center on October 20, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.

Michael S. Schwartz | Getty Images

Alexi McCammond said Thursday she would step down as editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue – just days before its launch – after being angry about her decades of racist tweets about Asians.

“My past tweets have overshadowed the work I’ve done to highlight the people and topics that matter to me – topics that Teen Vogue has worked tirelessly on to share with the world,” McCammond said on Twitter.

McCammond said she and Teen Vogue publisher Conde Nast “decided to split”.

The 27-year-old’s big promotion and immediate resignation came after severe setbacks – also reportedly within Teen Vogue itself – over the racist and homophobic tweets she posted in 2011, some of which carried offensive stereotypes about Asians.

Conde Nast reportedly announced the news of McCammond’s departure in an internal email on Thursday.

“After speaking with Alexi this morning, we agreed that it would be best to part ways so as not to overshadow the important work at Teen Vogue,” Chief People Officer Stan Duncan wrote in an internal memo, reported Mediaite.

The resignation came a month after McCammond’s friend TJ Ducklo was suspended from the White House and then left the White House after he reportedly threatened a journalist about his relationship with McCammond and making a name for herself as a political reporter made at Axios.

Jonathan Swan, a noted political reporter and former McCammond colleague at Axios, defended McCammond later Thursday.

“I’ve worked with [McCammond] For four years, “Swan tweeted.” I know her well and I can say this clearly: the idea that she is racist is absurd. “

“Where the hell are we as an industry if we can’t accept a person’s sincere and repeated apology for tweets as a teenager?” he wrote.

As pressure increased on Conde Nast over McCammond’s tweets, Ulta Beauty reportedly paused a seven-figure ad purchase on Teen Vogue.

McCammond, named Emerging Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists in 2019, previously apologized for the tweets and regretted her regret in her statement on Thursday.

“I became a journalist to raise the stories and voices of our most vulnerable communities. That’s why, as a young woman of color, I was so excited to lead the Teen Vogue team on its next chapter,” said McCammond.

“I shouldn’t have tweeted what I did and I took full responsibility for it. I look at my work and my growth over the past few years and have my commitment to growth in the years to come, both as a person and as a Professional doubled. “

“I wish the talented Teen Vogue team all the best for the future. Your work has never been more important and I will put down roots for you.”

“There are still so many stories to tell, especially about marginalized communities and the problems that affect them. I hope to have the opportunity to rejoin the ranks of the tireless journalists who shed light on important issues every day.” ” She said.

Categories
World News

Trump tweets from POTUS deal with account taken down nearly instantly

US President Donald Trump makes a fist during a rally to contest the certification of the results of the 2020 US presidential election by the US Congress in Washington, USA, on January 6, 2021.

Jim Bourg | Reuters

President Donald Trump continued to tweet on the state-owned @POTUS account on Friday night, despite the fact that his @ realDonaldTrump account was permanently banned by Twitter earlier in the day.

“As I’ve said for a long time, Twitter has continued to ban freedom of speech, and tonight Twitter staff coordinated with the Democrats and the radical left to remove my account from their platform and silence me,” Trump wrote in a series of tweets that are no longer visible on the social media service.

The tweets were removed from service almost immediately. It’s unclear what steps Twitter took to manage the @ POTUS account.

Earlier in the day, the company announced that it would permanently suspend Trump’s personal account “because of the risk of further inciting violence”.

Twitter specifically pointed out that Trump’s tweets earlier in the day could be interpreted as supportive rioters. The company also noted that plans for future armed protests inside and outside the social media service had increased.

In his @POTUS tweets, Trump reiterated his call to repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a 1996 law that protects tech companies from being held liable for what users post on their platforms. The sentiment was endorsed by Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.

“I’m more determined than ever to remove Big Tech (Twitter) protection from Section 230 so they can be safe from lawsuits,” Graham tweeted.

Trump also said his administration was “negotiating with various other locations and will soon get a big announcement”. He added that his team is reviewing “the possibilities of building their own platform in the near future”.

“We are not being silenced! Twitter is not about FREE SPEECH,” wrote Trump in the now removed tweets.