'The Golden State Is eating Its Golden Geese' California Defaults on Loan: Businesses...
Rescue Party: The Dems Desperate Search for a Normal 2028 Presidential Candidate Begins
Daytime Dysfunction: 'The View' Continues to Give ABC's Lawyers MAJOR Headaches
Literally NO ONE Is Asking for This: CBS News Insists 'Some' Voters Are...
Heaven on Earth: Take a Glimpse Inside the Restored Notre Dame Cathedral
Unpopular Opinion: Rand Paul Warns Trump Against Using Military to Deport Illegals, Gets...
Donald Trump Nominates Former Florida AG Pam Bondi for Attorney General
Bob Casey Jr Finally Concedes to Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania Senate Race
This TOTALLY Did Not Happen! Climate Activist Says Hurricanes Convinced His Barber Climate...
LET THEM FIGHT: Cenk Uygur Calls Out Joy Behar and 'The View' and...
Daily Mail: We're All Gonna Die From Climate Change! (In 75 Years, That...
'You'll See Things Our Way': Jaguar DOUBLES DOWN on Cringe Ad With Vaguely...
Mayor of Dearborn, Michigan Will Have Netanyahu Arrested If He Enters the City
Biden's America: NFL Issues Security Alert for Players Regarding S. American Crime Syndica...
Karine Jean-Pierre Explains How Much Cheaper Your Thanksgiving Meal Is This Year Thanks...

The Guardian seems to be walking back its story about Paul Manafort meeting with Julian Assange

As Twitchy reported earlier Tuesday, the editor of the WikiLeaks Twitter account was wagering “a million dollars and its editor’s head” that former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort had never met Julian Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, despite reporting by the Guardian.

Advertisement

WikiLeaks has kept up the pressure all day, and now it looks like the Guardian has softened some of the language in its report. Using a site called newssniffer.co.uk, WikiLeaks tracked some stealth-edits to the Guardian’s story.

That screenshot’s probably tough to see, but for one, the Guardian added “sources say” to its headline about Manafort holding secret talks with Assange. It also changed, “It is unclear why Manafort wanted to see Assange” to “would have wanted to see Assange,” and changed “the last meeting” to “the last apparent meeting.”

They’re little changes, but the fact that the Guardian made them at all suggests the paper might not be as certain of its reporting as it was earlier.

Advertisement

Advertisement

All we know for sure right now is that WikiLeaks threw down the challenge and the Guardian blinked.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement