Mark Halperin was born in 1965 in New York City into a family already positioned inside the architecture of American power. His father, Morton Halperin, served on the National Security Council under Nixon and Kissinger, moving at the level where foreign policy gets made rather than reported. That background is not merely biographical. It placed the younger Halperin inside a world where influence runs through relationships, where consensus forms through informal signaling, and where the difference between being in the room and outside it determines everything. He absorbed the grammar of elite coordination before he ever entered a newsroom.
He graduated from Harvard in 1987 with a degree in government, then joined ABC News in 1988 as a desk assistant and researcher for World News Tonight with Peter Jennings. The early years look unremarkable from the outside: off-air reporter, White House reporter, producer. But by the late 1990s, he had moved into a role that gave him something more valuable than airtime. As political director at ABC, he controlled how the network framed politics across television, radio, and digital platforms. And then he did something that defined his career.
The Note, launched at ABCNews.com, looked on the surface like a daily tip sheet. In practice it became a coordination device for the American political class. Every morning, campaign operatives, journalists, lobbyists, and donors read it to see what the smart take was that day. Halperin did not just report the conversation. He helped set it. Before Twitter, before algorithmic feeds, before Substack, The Note functioned as a manual clearinghouse of elite attention. If he highlighted a narrative, it spread. If he ignored something, it struggled to break through. He was shaping what counted as politically real.
He also named the audience. His concept of the “Gang of 500” identified the specific cluster of consultants, lobbyists, reporters, and operatives in Washington and New York who, he argued, actually decided political viability. By naming this group, he gave them a mirror. The Note became the official scoreboard for their internal status games. The effect was circular and self-reinforcing: Halperin’s authority rested on the attention of the Gang, and the Gang’s authority rested partly on being recognized and ranked by Halperin.
This was not neutral journalism. It was the construction of an information cartel with Halperin at the center node. The model that made it work was what critics later called horse-race journalism, but that label undersells the ideological content. The horse-race frame treats politics as a game of strategy, momentum, and insider positioning. It flatters campaign professionals and political correspondents by making them the protagonists. Policy recedes. Voters become spectators. What matters is who is up and who is down, who has the better operation, who read the field correctly. Halperin did not invent this frame, but he systematized and legitimized it.
Part of his power came from the information loop he maintained with Matt Drudge. During the 2004 and 2008 cycles, Halperin used The Note to feed narratives that Drudge would amplify. Drudge’s traffic would then send cable news producers scrambling to book guests on the exact frame Halperin had introduced. The circuit ran from insider tip sheet to tabloid aggregator to cable panel and back again. It meant that even a story with thin policy substance could dominate the news cycle through sheer repetition within the loop.
When he left ABC in 2007, he carried his influence into new platforms rather than surrendering it. At Time magazine, he wrote “The Page.” At MSNBC, he became a senior political analyst appearing regularly on Morning Joe, where his blunt style occasionally crossed lines. In June 2011, he described President Obama on air as “kind of a dick,” drawing a brief suspension. The incident revealed something important about his position: he could say things other correspondents could not precisely because his value to the network was not his neutrality but his access and his voice. He was useful to too many alliances to discard over a single gaffe.
His partnership with John Heilemann produced the books that defined his public brand. Game Change (2010) and Double Down (2013) converted campaign reporting into narrative drama, offering readers access to closed-door conversations, strategic calculations, and personal crises. They became bestsellers and cultural events. But the genre itself is worth examining. Access journalism at this level does not just tell stories. It canonizes insider narrative as authoritative political knowledge. The underlying trade is explicit: proximity to campaigns in exchange for the power to frame what those campaigns meant. Halperin and Heilemann did not cover the 2008 and 2012 elections so much as produce the definitive account that everyone else had to react to.
In Double Down, they extended this into verdict-issuing. They popularized the idea that a single debate performance could be “fatal” or “transformative.” They treated Barack Obama’s first debate against Mitt Romney in 2012 as a decisive event, reinforcing a political culture where optics and momentum substitute for policy substance. The effect, cumulatively, was to help turn American electoral politics into a branch of entertainment. The insider account became the only account. Voters who consumed this journalism were made to feel like participants in a game they could not actually influence.
By the mid-2010s, Halperin stood at the center of political media. He co-managed Bloomberg Politics, reportedly earning around a million dollars a year alongside Heilemann, a sum that signaled his access brand had become a luxury good that a billionaire would subsidize to buy immediate relevance in the Washington conversation. He co-hosted With All Due Respect, co-produced The Circus on Showtime, and remained one of the principal narrators of American electoral politics. His financial and institutional position reflected not just journalistic skill but the conversion of social capital into market value.
The rupture came in October 2017. During the early weeks of the #MeToo movement, CNN reported that at least a dozen women accused Halperin of sexual harassment and misconduct dating back to his ABC years. Allegations included pressing his body against women, propositioning subordinates, groping, and in one case masturbating in front of a colleague. Halperin apologized publicly for pursuing inappropriate relationships with junior colleagues while disputing some specific claims. He attributed his conduct to a younger self.
Halperin’s institutional support collapsed almost overnight. NBC and MSNBC cut ties. Showtime removed him from The Circus. HBO canceled a planned miniseries based on his books. Penguin dropped a book deal. ABC said no formal complaints had been filed during his tenure there. The speed and uniformity of the response did not reflect a slow moral reckoning. It reflected a change in the cost structure facing elite institutions. The #MeToo moment had raised the price of defending him above the price of discarding him. His coalition, which had tolerated or ignored his behavior for years because he was useful, evaporated when usefulness no longer outweighed liability. This is alliance logic, not moral awakening alone.
For several years, he operated outside mainstream institutions. But he did not disappear. He had already converted his influence into portable assets: books that still circulated, a recognizable analytic voice, relationships across the political class, and an audience with specific loyalties. These are forms of reputational capital that survive institutional backing better than credentials tied to a single employer or platform. Other figures with weaker or less diversified brands vanished after comparable scandals. Halperin retained enough to reassemble.
His comeback tracked the new geography of political media. In 2019, he published How to Beat Trump, drawing on his network of strategists including David Axelrod and James Carville. He hosted a weekend show on Newsmax, building a different audience from the one he had cultivated at MSNBC. He launched a paid-subscription blog, then moved it to Substack, establishing a direct financial relationship with readers that bypassed institutional gatekeepers entirely. In 2024, he founded 2WAY, an interactive video platform built around live audience participation in political discussions. The platform reflects a shift from broadcasting to engagement, from shaping elite consensus in the background to convening audiences in real time.
In 2025, he joined Megyn Kelly’s MK Media network as host of Next Up with Mark Halperin. This is a different coalition than the one he occupied at ABC or Bloomberg. The audience is narrower, the approval he needs is no longer universal, and the institutional prestige is lower. But the structure of what he does remains recognizable. He still synthesizes campaign information into narrative, still operates as a node connecting political figures to audiences, still derives authority from access. What has changed is the scale and the gatekeeping. In 1997, he needed ABC News executives to have a platform. By 2026, he needs a Zoom-style interface, a niche alliance, and a direct revenue stream. Cancellation, in the modern media environment, often amounts to institutional eviction rather than total silencing.
His trajectory maps three distinct eras of American political media. The first is the network era, where a handful of organizations controlled political information and figures like Halperin operated inside those structures as accredited interpreters. The second is the insider coordination era, where tools like The Note allowed individual journalists to shape elite consensus more directly and efficiently than any broadcast could. The third is the fragmented era, where influence distributes across platforms, personalities, and niche audiences, and where the path back from institutional disgrace runs through subscriptions and podcasts rather than editorial boards.
Halperin built the information infrastructure of one era, profited from a second, collapsed inside a third, and then rebuilt in a fourth configuration that did not exist when he started. His career also exposes the tension at the heart of political journalism between access and credibility. The more embedded you are with campaigns, the better your information and the more suspect your independence. Halperin built his power on access. After 2017, he lost institutional credibility but retained enough access and audience to remain relevant. Those two forms of capital proved separable.
By treating politics as a game of strategy and insider positioning, by issuing verdicts on debate performances and campaign operations, by naming and flattering the Gang of 500, he made political knowledge into a specialized product consumed rather than a civic capacity exercised. The insider account he championed was genuinely informative in some respects. It was also displacive. The more readers focused on the logic of the campaign, the less they focused on the effects of the laws being passed. Halperin did not create this substitution alone, but he was its most effective craftsman for a generation.
#MeToo Trajectory
Halperin admitted to pursuing relationships with junior colleagues and apologized for inappropriate conduct, but he denied the sexual assault claims. That basic split holds to this day. He concedes the lesser charges and disputes the gravest ones. He has not changed that posture.
The trajectory since then has two clear phases.
The first phase, from 2018 to roughly 2023, was failure. Each comeback attempt drew open mockery and got killed. The 2018 Page Six reports about meetings with CNN and PBS produced ridicule and the “Hairy Lecher” coverage. In 2019, Scarborough and Brzezinski tried to engineer a midterm web show on MSNBC, and the network scrapped it. Halperin reportedly lashed out at MSNBC chief Phil Griffin after Griffin put the kibosh on the comeback attempt. Through this stretch he issued repeated apologies, some prompted by figures like Roland Martin who told him to apologize directly to the women rather than tweet at them. The apologies bought him little.
The second phase, beginning around late 2024, is where the tide turned in his favor. The change came from a route nobody plotted in 2017. He stopped trying to get back into legacy media and built his own platform, 2WAY, launched October 2024. He also leaned right. That decision is the hinge. His revival came largely from his decision to ingratiate himself with the right, and it worked because a series of conservative women welcomed him into the fold.
The defenders now are not Halperin. They are the people who once attacked him. Megyn Kelly, who in 2017 hosted one of his accusers on the Today show and asked aloud where his apology to his victims was, brought him onto her MK Media network in March 2025. Meghan McCain, who trashed him on Twitter and on The View, joined 2WAY and framed it through “the presumption of grace and forgiveness.” The language they use is forgiveness and second chances, and it carries a partisan charge. The defense is no longer “he didn’t do it.” The defense is “people can change and the censorious left got this wrong.”
The attacks shifted to match. In 2017 the attack was the conduct itself. By 2025 the attack moved to the rehabilitation and to the enablers. The sharpest recent pieces target Kelly, not Halperin. The Daily Beast ran his accuser Eleanor McManus writing that Kelly went from MeToo ally to business partner with her abuser. Dianna Goldberg May, another woman Halperin harassed at ABC News, called the partnership a shocking abdication of all that Kelly espoused during the MeToo movement. Slate framed the whole thing as a clear formula for rehabilitating certain MeToo men. The accusers still speak, and the recurring point from them is that he never did the direct, personal repair they asked for back in 2019.
So the tide has moved, and in his direction. 2WAY hit nearly 70,000 YouTube subscribers within about seven months of its hard launch, raised $4 million in seed money, and added shows and names. The reputational rehabilitation among conservative media is largely complete. What he has not won is the argument with the women themselves, and he has not tried to on their terms. He found a constituency that does not require him to.
Slate reports June 30, 2025:
Halperin, after all, was one of the more prominent media men of #MeToo, accused of various acts of sexual assault and harassment by a dozen women. Three women said he pressed his erect penis against them through his clothes; one said he grabbed her breasts. Another said he masturbated in front of her. Others who worked with him said he propositioned them for sex. One woman, then a White House intern, had lunch with Halperin, and as media journalist Paul Farhi reported in the Washington Post, “as they stood outside the restaurant afterward, Halperin suddenly threw her up against the plate-glass facade and pinned her arms against it. Then he lunged at her, mouth agape, ‘like someone who was going to eat you.’ She said she slipped his grip, wriggled free and got away.” (At the time, Halperin denied many of the specific allegations but issued a statement: “During this period, I did pursue relationships with women that I worked with, including some junior to me,” and apologizing that his behavior was “inappropriate and caused others pain.” He did not respond to a request for comment on this article.)
After initial reporting from CNN’s Oliver Darcy, tales of Halperin’s bad behavior poured out, as woman after woman related stories of what they said were his creepy propositions and habit of inviting young female journalists to his hotel room. He tried, many women said, to use his position to extract sex from the young, beautiful, and ambitious women with whom he surrounded himself. And that position was a vaunted one. Before these accusations were made publicly, Halperin was among the most powerful men in political journalism, scoring seven-figure salaries and writing the book Game Change and its sequel, for which he reportedly received many millions in the advance alone.
His downfall was also spectacular, coming as it did just as #MeToo felled Harvey Weinstein and gained steam. There were enough women who said Halperin had harassed or assaulted them that they started a support group, which they announced on Megyn Kelly Today, Kelly’s short-lived stint on the Today show, where the commentator lauded their courage.
The core idea of mobbing among animals is that prey species gang up on a predator they could not face alone. The benefit comes from the group, not the individual. An individual bird stands little chance against a hawk, but a flock does, and the risk to each member gets diluted. The mobbing also identifies the predator publicly. It draws attention to him so no stealth attack works. And the behavior teaches the young which threats to recognize.
That is how MeToo functioned against Halperin in 2017. Twelve women came forward. No single one of them could have ended his career. His conduct had been an open secret for years at ABC and Bloomberg, and the open secret protected him because each woman faced him alone and stayed quiet. The CNN report changed the math. Once the first accusers called, others answered, the way a mobbing call summons nearby birds. The group did what no individual could. They marked him as a predator in public, and the marking stuck for years.
Mobbing among animals is seasonal. Attacks fall off sharply between nesting seasons, because the behavior exists to protect the young, not to punish the predator. The hawk is not killed. It is driven off the territory, and when the chicks are grown the pressure relaxes. The kittiwake does not mob at all, because it nests on cliffs where no predator reaches the young, so there is nothing to defend.
From this view, the mob never aimed to destroy Halperin. It aimed to protect the nesting ground, which in 2017 was legacy newsrooms, the workplaces where the harassment happened and where junior women were at risk. He got driven out of that territory. NBC, Showtime, the book deals, all gone. Then he moved. He built 2WAY on YouTube and joined a conservative network. That is new ground, off the colony, where the original mob has no nest to defend and no standing. The pressure relaxed not because he changed but because he left the territory the mobbing existed to protect. The season ended.
The frame also explains the defectors. Megyn Kelly and Meghan McCain both joined the 2017 mob and both now sit beside him. The signaling-theory reading in the article covers this. A bird that mobs displays its own fitness and status to potential partners. The risky attack is partly a performance for an audience. In 2017 the audience rewarded the display, so Kelly hosted his accusers and asked where his apology was. By 2025 her audience changed. She runs a conservative network now, and that audience rewards the opposite display, the grace-and-forgiveness posture. The behavior tracked the payoff, not the predator.
Prey sometimes call in a stronger predator to handle the first one. Halperin did the inverse. He attached himself to a mightier protector, the conservative media ecosystem and its grievance against the censorious left, and that protector now shields him from the original mob. His defenders do not argue he is innocent. They argue the people who mobbed him were the real threat. He recruited a bigger bird.
The Four Questions
Mark Halperin rebuilt a career after 2017 from the wreckage of NBC, Showtime, Bloomberg, HBO, and Penguin Random House, all of which cut him loose after multiple harassment allegations. The rebuild reveals the coalition he now serves.
Who does Halperin rely on for status, income, and protection?
The old answer is gone. None of the legacy institutions will have him back. His current supply chain runs through three channels. First, paying subscribers to 2WAY, the interactive video platform he founded in 2024, where community members join daily live video conferences. Second, Megyn Kelly, who brought him onto MK Media in March 2025 to host Next Up with Mark Halperin and who gives him SiriusXM distribution for The Morning Meeting on her channel. Third, Newsmax, which carries him on cable. Legacy prestige outlets play no part. His protection comes from the right-leaning independent media ecosystem that treats his 2017 fall as an MSM excess rather than a disqualifying record.
A secondary layer of protection runs through his pedigree. His father Morton Halperin worked for Henry Kissinger on the Nixon National Security Council Wikipedia and spent decades as a civil liberties figure at the ACLU and Open Society Institute. That Democratic establishment lineage gives Halperin a residual permission slip on the center-left that a pure Newsmax host lacks. He can still book Steve Elmendorf, Jim Kessler, Third Way types. The father’s reputation does work the son can no longer do on his own.
Who does he need to attract or retain as allies?
Four groups. The 2WAY subscriber base, which has to keep paying. Right-wing guests who confer legitimacy on that side: Jack Posobiec, Robby Starbuck, Mary Margaret Olohan of The Daily Wire, Jonathan Turley, Elise Stefanik, and Stephen Moore all appear on his shows. Center-left operatives who let him project a bipartisan frame rather than a partisan one: Elmendorf, Kessler, Melissa DeRosa, and Tim Rice among them. And the tight Kelly-Spicer-Turrentine independent media clique, where reputation travels fast and poaching runs both ways. When Sean Spicer and Dan Turrentine launched a competing show after appearing on 2WAY, sources described Halperin as viewing it as theft of his format and audience after the investment he put into the platform. The fight exposed how narrow the ecosystem runs and how much each host depends on the others for guest flow and cross-promotion.
What beliefs and signals mark membership in his coalition?
Hostility to legacy media gatekeeping, signaled through framing rather than through direct attack. Respect for Trump as a political force to analyze rather than a pathology to denounce. Horse-race reporting treated as a serious craft. A cultivated neutral register that lets guests from The Daily Wire and from Third Way sit in the same hour without the show reading as partisan. Pro-Israel foreign policy framing. Faith in direct-to-audience subscriber economics and interactivity as the next model of news.
Membership also shows in what coalition members do not say. You do not denounce Trump in MSNBC tones. You do not join pile-ons against cancelled men, since the coalition rests on the premise that cancellation went too far. You do not treat the January 6 narrative as settled. You do not mock populist voters. You do not bring up Halperin’s past.
What might he have to give up if he changed his public position?
If he pivoted back toward the MSNBC register, he loses everything he rebuilt. The legacy outlets are not coming back for him. Kelly drops him. Newsmax drops him. Right-wing guests stop answering the phone. Subscribers churn. The center-left bookings he still lands depend on his right-flank access, not on his liberal credentials, so those dry up too.
If he went full MAGA, he loses the bipartisan frame that distinguishes 2WAY from a generic right-wing show. The Elmendorf and Kessler bookings vanish. His father’s residual cover stops working. He becomes a commentator rather than a reporter, and the Game Change brand he still trades on requires the reporter pose.
If he addressed the 2017 allegations honestly and at length, he reopens a file the coalition has agreed to leave closed. The people who might reward candor are not his customers.
If he soured on 2WAY’s subscriber model and went back to ad-supported distribution, he surrenders the one asset that belongs to him rather than to a platform that can fire him. The subscribers replaced the institutions.
Each piece of his current product holds the others in place: the polished reportorial tone, the mixed guest list, the silence on 2017, the Kelly alliance, the Newsmax appearances, the father’s name traveling quietly behind him. Remove any one and the structure weakens.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory
Halperin’s position at ABC News gave him access to candidates, operatives, and senior journalists who returned his calls because he had the platform that could amplify their messages. The coalition he served in this phase was the bipartisan political class coalition that assumed a particular kind of horse-race political journalism was the proper frame for covering American democracy. His work reinforced this frame. The frame treated politics as competition between campaigns rather than as contest over policy. The campaigns rewarded coverage that focused on strategy and tactics because strategy and tactics coverage neutralized policy critique. Halperin supplied this coverage at a high level and received access, income, and standing in return.
The Game Change phase extended this coalition position. His books with John Heilemann, Game Change on 2008 and Double Down on 2012, operated as authoritative insider accounts of presidential campaigns. The books earned sales and influence partly because campaign staff cooperated with the authors on the understanding that cooperation would produce congenial treatment. The cooperation was not total. Some figures were treated more harshly than others. The pattern of harshness tracked coalition logic: sources who cooperated got the softer treatment, sources who did not got the sharper treatment. Sarah Palin received more damaging treatment in Game Change than other figures from the same campaign because the McCain side of the campaign cooperated with the book against Palin. Pinsof’s framework treats this as expected coalition behavior. The book was not neutral journalism reconstructing what happened. It was a product built in cooperation with specific sources whose cooperation shaped the product’s contours, and the Palin treatment served both the cooperating sources’ interests and the book’s commercial interests by giving readers a villain.
Halperin’s work during this period exemplified what Jay Rosen has called the Church of the Savvy, the political journalism mode in which the highest praise is that a figure is savvy, meaning capable of strategic calculation, and the deepest criticism is that a figure is unsavvy, meaning unable to calculate. The frame is coalitional. It serves the political class by elevating strategic calculation above policy content. It serves political journalism by making the journalist’s own access and pattern recognition the central expertise the coverage supplies. It marginalizes policy journalists whose work emphasizes substantive consequences over strategic maneuver. Halperin was a leading producer of the Church of the Savvy mode. His coalition was its audience: operatives, donors, party staff, campaign consultants, senior political journalists, and the specific segment of engaged citizens who consumed political coverage as entertainment structured by the savvy frame. The coalition was substantial. It paid Halperin well for what he supplied.
The collapse in 2017 deserves close analysis because it shows the Alliance Theory pattern under stress. Multiple women came forward with allegations of sexual harassment covering his time at ABC News. The allegations were substantive enough that ABC News, NBC News, where he was then working as a senior political analyst, and MSNBC all severed ties. HBO cancelled a project. His publisher cancelled a contract. The collapse was rapid and coordinated across multiple institutions that had previously competed for his services. The coordination was not a conspiracy. It was coalition behavior. The institutions that had platformed him were themselves part of a larger professional coalition that had moved, in 2017, to treat credible harassment allegations as disqualifying. The individual institutions did not each make independent decisions. They responded to each other’s decisions and to the coalition’s shifting standards about what kinds of figures could remain platformed. Halperin did not change. The coalition changed. His position in the coalition, which had been secure as long as his professional performance was useful and his private conduct was absorbed through mechanisms coalitions use to absorb the private conduct of useful members, became untenable when the coalition’s rules about acceptable conduct shifted.
The coalition that had absorbed his conduct for years is worth specifying. His ABC News colleagues and superiors, the political operatives who worked with him, the sources who cooperated with his books, the political journalists who traveled on campaigns with him, and the editors who published his work, had functioned as a network that tolerated behavior the broader culture would not have tolerated. Pinsof’s framework treats this as standard coalition operation. Coalitions protect members whose contributions exceed the costs of their liabilities. When the accounting shifts, the protection stops. The accounting shifted in 2017. The protection stopped. Halperin was expelled.
The specific form of the expulsion is also instructive. He was not prosecuted. The allegations, whatever their substance, did not produce criminal charges. The coalition expulsion operated through professional consequence: loss of employment, loss of platforms, loss of contracts, loss of the network relationships that had made the career possible. This is what coalition expulsion looks like in the contemporary professional class. The mechanism is diffuse. No single decision-maker expels the member. The coalition collectively withdraws its support, and the individual decisions aggregate into the expulsion. The aggregation feels to the expelled member like coordinated persecution and feels to each individual institution like independent judgment. Both feelings are partially accurate. The coordination is real but not centralized. The independent judgment is real but conditioned on what other coalition members are doing.
The reconstruction phase is where the Alliance Theory reading becomes most productive, because Halperin had to find a coalition willing to platform him after the mainstream coalition had expelled him. The options were limited. Conservative media had never been his primary home but had capacity to absorb him if he was willing to produce the content that coalition needed. Independent platforms like Substack had emerged as viable venues for figures whose institutional positions had collapsed. Newsmax, OAN, and the broader right-wing cable ecosystem had capacity to employ him if he accepted the terms.
He took several of these options. His Newsmax appearances during the Trump years platformed him before an audience that had limited memory of his earlier coalition position and that was happy to receive an analyst with mainstream credentials who appeared willing to treat Trump’s claims with the deference the Newsmax audience expected. His substack and the 2WAY digital network he co-founded with other figures in similar positions gave him a direct-to-audience channel that escaped the mainstream coalition’s expulsion. His podcast appearances on shows like Smerconish, Megyn Kelly, and others who were themselves operating across coalition lines extended the reconstruction.
The content produced during the reconstruction phase tracks the coalition migration. Halperin’s earlier work had been neutral in the specific sense the Church of the Savvy demanded: deference to both parties’ strategic operations, reluctance to take positions on policy, treatment of campaigns as games with equally legitimate players. His reconstruction-phase work shifted the framing. Treatment of Trump became measurably more sympathetic, or at least less critical, than treatment of Biden and Harris. Analyses of Democratic vulnerabilities became more prominent than analyses of Republican vulnerabilities. The shift was not total. Halperin retained some of his earlier mode. But the direction of drift tracked what his new platforms rewarded. Newsmax rewards content favorable to Republican positions. 2WAY’s audience, which overlaps with the broader anti-mainstream-media coalition, rewards skepticism of mainstream media coverage of political figures on the right. Halperin produced content in these directions at rates higher than his earlier work had produced it.
Pinsof’s four criteria for ally choice apply cleanly to the reconstruction phase.
Similarity operates through the specific markers of the coalition Halperin entered. Willingness to treat mainstream media with skepticism rather than deference. Willingness to entertain framings of political conflict that the Church of the Savvy had previously dismissed. Willingness to appear on platforms mainstream colleagues had treated as beneath them. Use of vocabulary and analytical frames that the new coalition recognized as appropriate. Halperin displayed enough of these markers to be absorbed by the new coalition.
Transitivity produced clustering with specific figures whose audiences overlapped with his new target audience. Dan Abrams, who had his own network ambitions with NewsNation. The broader set of figures operating across mainstream-adjacent and mainstream-skeptical platforms. The specific podcast ecosystem that circulates figures between mainstream and heterodox spaces. Halperin’s appearances with these figures reinforced his new coalition position. Their appearances with him reinforced theirs. The network effects were mutual.
Interdependence was substantial. Halperin needed platforms. The platforms needed analysts with his level of experience and name recognition. Newsmax could not hire someone with thirty years at ABC News and NBC News every day. Halperin could not access mainstream audiences without platforms willing to employ him. The match was close enough that both parties benefited. The benefits held the arrangement in place.
Stochasticity applies to the specific configuration of post-2017 media that made the reconstruction possible. Had Substack not emerged, had the right-wing cable ecosystem not consolidated into multiple competing networks, had the mainstream media’s own credibility not eroded during the Trump and COVID years, Halperin might have had fewer options. The specific coalition that took him in was a product of institutional ruptures that could have gone differently. The reconstruction succeeded partly because the coalition that absorbed him was itself expanding during the years he needed it. Different timing would have produced different outcomes.
The three propagandistic biases run through the reconstruction-phase work in identifiable ways.
Perpetrator biases protect allies. Halperin’s work during the reconstruction has been consistently softer on Trump’s actions than on Biden’s comparable actions. When Trump was indicted, the coverage emphasized procedural concerns about the prosecutions. When Biden family business dealings received attention, the coverage treated the attention as legitimate and extensive. The asymmetry is visible once you compare specific segments on specific topics. It is not total. Halperin is not a Trump propagandist. He retains enough of his earlier mode to provide cover against the specific charge of pure partisanship. But the drift is measurable.
The same bias protects Halperin from self-audit on his own conduct. The 2017 allegations have received limited extended treatment from Halperin himself. He has addressed them in specific interviews at specific moments, has offered acknowledgments that fell short of full accounting, and has moved on. The coalition that took him in did not require a fuller accounting and in fact benefited from the absence of one, because the absence lets the coalition continue to treat him as a figure wronged by coalition politics rather than as a figure whose removal had substantive grounds. Trivers’s self-deception finding applies. Halperin probably experiences his reconstruction as deserved rehabilitation rather than as coalition migration into a venue less demanding about his past. The belief is load-bearing for his current function.
Victim biases operate at two levels in the reconstruction phase. Halperin himself sometimes deploys the narrative of having been victimized by MeToo excess, cancel culture, or mainstream media coalition politics. The narrative serves the reconstruction by framing his expulsion as unjust rather than as substantive consequence. It also serves the broader coalition he now operates in, which uses cases like Halperin’s to support its general narrative about mainstream media overreach. The coalition needs individual cases of people who can credibly claim to have been mistreated. Halperin supplies one. His specific case is complicated by the substance of the allegations, which the coalition handles by emphasizing procedural concerns about how the allegations were made, by how his employers responded, or by the cultural moment in which the response occurred. The procedural framing protects the victim narrative by shifting attention from substance to process.
At a second level, the coalition’s general victim narrative about mainstream media bias against conservative or heterodox voices gets supported by Halperin’s continued presence in the reconstruction coalition. He embodies the claim that serious people with serious credentials can be expelled from the mainstream for reasons the coalition treats as illegitimate. His credentials make the claim more credible than it would be if the only expelled figures were people without mainstream credentials. He contributes credibility to the narrative by existing in the coalition. The contribution is part of what the coalition values in him.
Attributional biases govern Halperin’s treatment of political figures and events. Success by Trump receives explanations that locate the success in Biden’s weakness, voter frustration with mainstream institutions, or the failures of Democratic strategy. Success by Democrats receives explanations that locate the success in specific tactical advantages, temporary conditions, or external factors. Failure by Trump receives explanations that externalize the failure: opposition coordination, media bias, prosecutorial overreach. Failure by Democrats receives explanations that internalize: specific policy mistakes, poor candidate choices, strategic failures. The asymmetry is consistent enough to track across segments. Individual segments can be defended as analytically independent. The pattern across segments reveals the direction of drift.
The strange bedfellows in Halperin’s current coalition are worth naming. The coalition contains traditional conservatives who had wanted mainstream media reform for decades before Trump, Trump-aligned populists who consider traditional conservatives part of the problem they are solving, independent-centrist figures like Halperin himself who are allowed into the coalition because they serve specific functions, heterodox liberals who have moved into coalition-adjacent positions on specific issues, and explicit partisan operatives who work inside the coalition. No consistent principle unites these positions. Shared opposition to the mainstream media coalition that expelled Halperin and that targets other coalition members holds the group together. The coalition manages its internal contradictions through the same mechanism all coalitions use: focus on external enemies, downplay internal disagreements. Halperin’s work supports this management by providing analyses that treat the external coalition as the problem, rather than analyses that would force the internal coalition to address its own contradictions.
His income depends on continued platforming by Newsmax, by 2WAY, by podcast networks willing to book him, and by whatever new venues emerge in the heterodox media ecosystem. If the mainstream coalition rehabilitated him, he might return to mainstream venues, but the return would require coalition labor he has not performed and perhaps cannot perform without further reckoning on the 2017 allegations. If the heterodox coalition fragmented or moved against him, he would find himself in a second expulsion with fewer options than the first. His current position depends on the specific configuration of his current coalition holding together. The configuration is not stable.
The specific truths he cannot say, without damaging his position, include several worth naming. He cannot fully address the substantive grounds of his 2017 expulsion, because doing so would force either the admission of conduct his current coalition needs him to minimize, or denials that would invite the production of further evidence. He cannot say that the Church of the Savvy frame he spent his career producing was itself coalition infrastructure that served specific political interests, because the admission would undermine the authority the coalition draws from his credentials. He cannot say that the mainstream media coalition’s handling of his case, whatever its defects, was within the range of reasonable responses to substantive allegations, because the admission would undermine the victim narrative his current coalition depends on. He cannot say that his current work is shaped by the preferences of platforms that reward specific framings over others, because the admission would undermine his claim to continued analytical independence. These are the costly truths. Writers do not tell them. Halperin does not tell them.
He styles his output as neutral analysis produced by a veteran observer who has seen enough to cut through partisan framings. The positioning has coalition function. It allows the coalition that platforms him to claim independence that pure partisan commentators cannot claim. The positioning also permits Halperin to retain some of the earlier coalition’s aesthetic while serving the current coalition’s interests. He does not sound like a Trump supporter. He sounds like a dispassionate observer who happens to notice, repeatedly, that the mainstream coverage of Trump has been unfair. The cumulative effect of repeated dispassionate observations all pointing in the same direction is advocacy, but the specific advocacy is disguised by the dispassionate style.
The comparison with Halperin’s former colleagues who remained inside the mainstream coalition is instructive. Heilemann, his Game Change co-author, continues to operate inside the mainstream coalition and produces work shaped by its expectations. The two men worked on the same books. Their post-2017 trajectories diverged entirely. The divergence reflects coalition position more than anything about their individual analytical capacities. Heilemann’s current work displays the biases his coalition rewards. Halperin’s current work displays the biases his coalition rewards. The biases run in different directions because the coalitions run in different directions. Neither man is fundamentally more independent than the other. Both are doing coalition work. The visibility of the coalition work differs because one is operating inside a coalition whose biases are treated as default neutrality, and the other is operating inside a coalition whose biases are treated as ideological drift. The asymmetry of treatment does not correspond to an asymmetry in the underlying structure.
The rapid migration visible in Halperin’s career is itself worth analyzing. A figure who had operated inside the ABC News-NBC News-MSNBC-HBO-Penguin coalition for three decades does not reappear inside the Newsmax-2WAY-heterodox podcast coalition without substantial internal adjustment. The adjustment can be narrated in principled terms: he saw the mainstream coalition’s biases more clearly after his expulsion, he grew to appreciate arguments he had previously dismissed, he found his earlier work had missed important truths. These narratives are available and may be sincere in Halperin’s own experience. The Alliance Theory reading treats the narratives as coalition infrastructure rather than as descriptions of the adjustment’s causes. The coalition he is in now requires members who can tell the story of having been wrong in the direction the coalition defines as wrong, and right in the direction the coalition defines as right. Halperin supplies the story. The supply is part of his coalition function.
What makes Halperin analytically interesting beyond his specific case is that he represents a type of figure the current media landscape produces regularly. The figure is a former mainstream professional who was expelled or marginalized, who has rebuilt through migration to heterodox platforms, who retains mainstream professional style while serving heterodox coalition interests, and whose credibility depends on the specific combination of credentials and coalition position. Matt Taibbi occupies adjacent territory, though his trajectory differs. Glenn Greenwald occupies it more fully. Bari Weiss does something similar though from a different original position. The type is not unique to Halperin. The coalition that supports the type needs figures like him. The figures need the coalition. The arrangement is stable as long as the coalition’s resources hold, and as long as the mainstream coalition continues to generate expellees who can be absorbed.
The larger Pinsof observation that applies across this class of figures: the mainstream coalition and the heterodox coalition produce mirrored intellectual output. Both claim to be neutral analysts. Both display the propagandistic biases their audiences reward. Both produce figures whose careers track coalition migration more than independent inquiry. The symmetry is not total, because the specific biases run in different directions and the specific audiences differ. But the structural features are the same. Readers who recognize the mainstream coalition’s biases and trust the heterodox coalition to be free of comparable biases are making a mistake the framework identifies clearly. Readers who recognize the heterodox coalition’s biases and trust the mainstream coalition to be free of comparable biases are making the same mistake in the other direction. Both sets of readers are doing the coalition’s work by maintaining the asymmetric trust the coalition needs.
Mark Halperin is a skilled political journalist whose earlier work contained real analytical capacity and whose current work, whatever its coalition function, still reflects that capacity. His reporting produced material that would not otherwise be available to public readers. His access yielded information of genuine interest. His analytical frames, limited as they were by the Church of the Savvy mode, were executed at a high level of craft within the mode. None of this is diminished by noting that his career has been shaped throughout by coalition logic, that his specific current position reflects the coalition that absorbed him after mainstream expulsion, that his propagandistic biases now run in the directions his current coalition requires, and that his reconstruction has required specific silences about his past conduct and his current platforms’ preferences. The capacity is real. The coalition function is also real. The framework insists on both simultaneously, and the honest reading holds both without collapsing into either defense of Halperin on grounds of his capacity or dismissal of Halperin on grounds of his coalition position. He is a figure whose career demonstrates what coalition logic looks like when it operates through a specific trajectory of rise, fall, and reconstruction across distinct coalition formations. The demonstration is valuable. The figure himself is neither hero nor villain of the story. He is a man who has done what men in his position usually do, more skillfully than most, under specific conditions that the framework can describe with unusual precision.
The wars are real. So, possibly, is what the combatants are fighting about.
Convenient Beliefs
Stephen Turner’s concept of the convenient belief is not about lying. It is about the beliefs that keep you inside the coalitions that make your professional life possible. Turner observes that going beyond what is convenient to believe is mostly unprofitable. The profit in holding a convenient belief is not always financial, though financial interests are usually entangled with it. The profit is in remaining inside a coalition that provides the conditions for a career, a reputation, and a sense of purpose. That profit is real enough that very few people, even intelligent and self-aware people, have any incentive to give it up. Halperin’s career illustrates every major feature of this framework, and in doing so it reveals something about how political journalism works as an institution.
The first convenient belief Halperin held, and helped entrench, was that the insider’s view of politics is the authoritative view. This belief is convenient for an obvious reason: it is the belief that makes the insider valuable. If the strategic logic of campaigns, the positioning calculations of candidates, the backstage maneuvering of operatives, constitutes the real story of American politics, then the person with access to that backstage is in possession of genuine political knowledge. The journalist who can report it has something that voters, academics, and outsiders cannot replicate. His authority rests on access, and access requires the belief that what you get through access is the thing that actually matters.
Turner would note that this belief was not arbitrary. It was generated and sustained by a specific coalition: campaign professionals, political journalists, Washington operatives, and the editors and producers who depend on this class for content. Every member of that coalition benefits from the same belief. Campaign strategists need journalists who think the strategic layer is the meaningful layer, because that framing elevates the strategist’s role. Journalists need access to the strategic layer, which only the strategist can provide. Editors and producers need the conflict and drama that the insider narrative generates. The belief that insider positioning constitutes political reality circulates through this system because everyone in the system profits from it.
The Note, Halperin’s daily newsletter at ABCNews.com, was the infrastructure through which this belief reproduced itself. It named the relevant audience, the Gang of 500, and in naming them gave them a mirror. It signaled each morning what the insider community was taking seriously, which created the social fact it described. A politician or campaign that The Note treated as serious became serious, not because Halperin had assessed the underlying reality independently, but because his assessment was the coordination point around which the Gang of 500 organized its attention. This is Turner’s convenient belief operating at institutional scale: the belief that insider consensus tracks political reality was maintained by a daily practice that made insider consensus look like political reality.
The second convenient belief was that horse-race coverage constitutes journalism rather than advocacy for a specific epistemology of politics. The horse-race frame treats electoral contests as games of strategy and momentum. Polling numbers become character assessments. Debate performances become proxies for fitness. Fundraising totals become measures of viability. Who has the better operation, who read the terrain correctly, who connected with the base: these are the questions that horse-race journalism treats as the questions. Policy analysis, ideological consistency, the effects of proposed legislation on actual constituencies: these are, at best, supporting material.
This frame is convenient for Halperin in Turner’s precise sense. It requires exactly the resources he has and rewards exactly the skills he developed. Access to campaigns, relationships with operatives, an ear for strategic reasoning, comfort inside the closed world of political professionals: these are the inputs that horse-race coverage requires. A journalism that prioritized policy analysis or longitudinal accountability would need different inputs and reward different skills. By holding and propagating the belief that the strategic layer is the interesting and important layer, Halperin was not simply expressing a preference. He was protecting an investment.
He was also, Turner would note, protecting the investments of everyone else in his coalition. The operatives whose strategic reasoning he reported needed a journalism that treated strategy as the story. The network executives who employed him needed the drama and conflict that insider narrative generates better than policy analysis does. The audiences who read Game Change and Double Down needed the feeling that they were gaining access to the real story behind the public story. Every member of the relevant coalition benefited from the belief that horse-race coverage is what serious political journalism looks like.
Game Change, co-authored with John Heilemann, is where this framework crystallizes most visibly. The book converts insider access into what it presents as authoritative political history. It is full of closed-door conversations, private anguish, strategic miscalculations, and interpersonal conflicts that the authors could only have obtained through the cooperation of campaign sources. The implicit claim is that these scenes constitute the real account of the 2008 election. What happened publicly is merely the surface. What happened in these rooms is the substance.
Turner’s framework identifies what this claim obscures. Access journalism does not give the journalist the insider’s view neutrally. It gives him the insider’s view as the insider wants it framed. Sources cooperate with journalists like Halperin because they expect the resulting account to serve their interests, or at least not damage them. The access is not free. It is purchased with the implicit promise that the strategic layer will be treated as the interesting layer, that the source’s role will be treated as significant, and that the resulting narrative will confirm the value of what the source does. The convenient belief that access equals truth is sustained by a system in which access is always conditional.
The belief also has a self-sealing quality that Turner identifies as characteristic of institutionally embedded convenient beliefs. When critics charged that Game Change was gossip dressed as history, Halperin and Heilemann could respond that the critics lacked access to the sources, and therefore lacked the information required to assess the account. The very exclusivity that makes the insider narrative suspect is reframed as the credential that makes it authoritative. Those inside the coalition can evaluate it. Those outside cannot. The belief that insider access generates authoritative knowledge thus protects itself from external critique by designating external critics as unqualified to criticize.
The third convenient belief concerns what counts as political seriousness. Halperin spent his career as a gatekeeper of that category. The Note told the Gang of 500 what was serious each morning. His television appearances performed the judgment of what a serious political analyst sounds like. Game Change and its sequels established the form that a serious account of a presidential campaign takes. In each case, seriousness was defined in ways that placed Halperin at or near the center of what seriousness required.
Turner would point out that this is the standard operation of a coalition that has achieved sufficient institutional control to enforce its formation on those seeking access to the relevant professional community. The formation makes the coalition’s convenient beliefs feel like the natural conclusions of genuine expertise. Those who challenge the definition of seriousness from outside are designated as lacking the formation required to understand what they are criticizing. Those who challenge from inside face the full weight of social enforcement mechanisms that make deviation from the formation feel like professional failure. Halperin’s authority as a definer of seriousness rested on exactly this structure. He was not just expressing views about politics. He was enforcing a formation.
What makes the 2017 collapse interesting through Turner’s lens is not the moral dimension but the structural one. The allegations against Halperin revealed that his institutional backers had tolerated behavior that violated their stated norms for years. NBC, MSNBC, Showtime, and Penguin all cut ties almost simultaneously. The speed tells you something. These institutions had not been deceived about Halperin’s character. They had held a convenient belief that the benefits of his coalition membership outweighed the costs of whatever they knew or suspected. When the #MeToo moment changed the cost structure, the convenient belief became inconvenient overnight.
Convenient beliefs are not held because they are true. They are held because the profit from holding them exceeds the profit from abandoning them. When that calculation shifts, the belief shifts. The institutions that abandoned Halperin in 2017 were not experiencing a sudden moral awakening. They were updating a cost-benefit analysis. The belief that his value to the coalition justified his protection became, in a single news cycle, a belief that his presence was a liability. The uniformity of the abandonment reflects the uniformity of the underlying calculation, not the independence of moral judgment.
The comeback, which runs from Newsmax through Substack through 2WAY to MK Media, represents the construction of a new coalition with a different set of convenient beliefs. Halperin no longer needs the belief, held by NBC and Bloomberg and Penguin, that mainstream institutional validation is what makes political analysis valuable. He now needs a different belief: that the mainstream has captured and corrupted political journalism, that the independent voice outside institutional structures is more honest than the credentialed insider, and that the audience willing to pay directly for political analysis is the audience worth serving.
This belief is convenient for him in exactly Turner’s sense. It legitimizes his position outside mainstream institutions, converts his exile into independence, and frames his loss of institutional backing as evidence of his authenticity rather than his disgrace. It also happens to be a belief that the coalition he now operates in, the Megyn Kelly audience, the Newsmax viewer, the Substack subscriber skeptical of legacy media, finds congenial. The convenient belief circulates through the new coalition just as the old convenient belief circulated through the Gang of 500.
There is a deeper irony that Turner’s framework surfaces. Halperin’s career was built on the convenient belief that access to the inside story produces authoritative knowledge. He is now building his comeback on the convenient belief that the inside story was always corrupted by institutional interests, and that honest analysis requires distance from the institutions that once made him valuable. Both beliefs are convenient. Both have some truth in them. And in both cases, the belief that is convenient happens to be the belief that places Halperin at the center of the relevant information system.
Turner does not say that convenient beliefs are false. He says that going beyond them is mostly unprofitable, and that this unprofitability does most of the work in sustaining them. Halperin’s career shows what that looks like across a lifetime in political media. The beliefs he held were the beliefs that made him valuable to whatever coalition he inhabited at the time. When the coalition changed, the beliefs updated accordingly. The horse-race epistemology, the insider authority, the definition of seriousness, and now the critique of institutional capture: each was genuinely held, each contained real insight, and each was structurally convenient for the person holding it. That combination, real insight packaged inside structural convenience, is precisely what makes convenient beliefs so durable and so hard to see from inside them.
Ideas Matter?
Mark Halperin says ideas matter when you run for president. The Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton paper Strange Bedfellows reframes what the word “matter” does in that sentence. Ideas do not matter in presidential campaigns the way Halperin’s profession needs them to matter. They matter as coalition technology, not as propositions competing on merit.
The paper’s central claim inverts the standard model of political belief. Coalitions form first, through similarity, transitivity, interdependence, and historical accident. Principles get articulated afterward as vocabulary the coalition needs to defend its configuration of allies and rivals. What looks like philosophical coherence is the patchwork narrative a coalition produces so members can coordinate without agreeing on first principles. Three tools travel with the argument. Double standards: each coalition applies moral rules only to its allies. Propagandistic biases: perpetrator, victim, and attributional distortions favoring the in-group. The misunderstanding move: the coalition intellectual casts his allies as clear-sighted and his rivals as self-deceived.
Run Halperin’s claim through this frame and the word “ideas” does different work than he thinks. When a candidate stakes out a position on trade, immigration, abortion, Israel, China, or the administrative state, he is not submitting a proposition for voter evaluation. He is marking a coalition. Voters do not score policy papers. They read signals. A position tells them which coalition the candidate will fight for and which he will fight against. The specific content matters less than the alliance configuration the position encodes. This is why candidates can reverse positions with minimal cost when the coalition permits the reversal, and why candidates cannot hold positions the coalition forbids even when the arguments for those positions are strong.
Reagan’s 1980 campaign illustrates the point. The standard telling treats Reagan as a man of ideas who brought supply-side economics, Cold War confrontation, and social conservatism into a philosophical whole. Pinsof suggests a different account. Reagan assembled a coalition of free-market capitalists, anti-Communists, Southern evangelicals, ethnic Catholics in the industrial Midwest, and suburban homeowners frightened by inflation and crime. The “ideas” of the Reagan campaign were the vocabulary that let these groups coordinate without agreeing on much. Supply-side economics gave the capitalists a frame. Peace through strength gave the Cold Warriors a frame. Family values gave the evangelicals a frame. Law and order gave the suburbanites a frame. Each group heard what it needed to hear. The philosophical unity scholars reconstruct afterward is the coalition narrative, not the coalition’s source.
Obama in 2008 ran the same machinery with different content. Hope and change served as coalition vocabulary broad enough to unite Black voters, college-educated Whites, young professionals, and anti-war liberals. The content of hope and change was thin. The coalition signal was sharp. Obama’s subsequent governance revealed the thinness. His actual policy positions tracked Clinton-era Democratic orthodoxy with modifications his coalition demanded. The ideas did not drive the coalition. The coalition drove which ideas got articulated and which got dropped.
Trump in 2016 broke the Republican coalition’s prior configuration by articulating ideas that crossed established alliance lines. Economic nationalism, restrictionist immigration, skepticism of foreign intervention, and contempt for the professional-managerial caste were not new ideas. Pat Buchanan had run on most of them in 1992 and 1996. The difference in 2016 was that a media environment and voter coalition existed that could receive those ideas as recruitment signals. The ideas mattered in Halperin’s sense only because a coalition was available to mobilize around them. Without the coalition, Trump’s positions would have read as the eccentric convictions of a New York real-estate developer. With the coalition, they read as the manifesto of a movement.
The double standards tool clarifies something Halperin’s frame obscures. The same idea, articulated by different candidates, produces different coalition responses. Single-payer healthcare is a signal of reformist seriousness when Sanders articulates it and a signal of radical unseriousness when Trump mentions it. Tariffs are economic illiteracy when Trump imposes them and strategic industrial policy when Biden maintains them. The propositional content is identical. The coalition evaluation differs because the coalition evaluation was never about the propositional content. It was about the alliance configuration the speaker represents.
Propagandistic biases run through every presidential cycle with machine regularity. Each coalition treats its candidate’s errors as strategic adjustments, tactical retreats, or media distortions. Each coalition treats the opposing candidate’s identical errors as disqualifying, revelatory, or malevolent. Hunter Biden’s laptop and the Trump children’s business arrangements are judged by identical voters with opposite standards because the voters are not judging business arrangements. They are defending coalitions. The Pinsof paper documents this symmetry empirically across political orientations and finds no evidence that either side is more principled than the other. The asymmetry claims each coalition makes about the other are themselves coalition technology.
The misunderstanding move appears in every presidential campaign as the theory of the opposing voter. Democrats explain Republican voters as confused, manipulated by Fox News, voting against their economic interests, or gripped by cultural resentments they do not understand. Republicans explain Democratic voters as indoctrinated by the academy and the media, propagandized by NPR, or trapped in identity categories that occlude their real interests. Each side’s explanation of the other rests on the premise that the other side’s coalition does not exist as a coalition, only as a failure of perception. Pinsof’s framework predicts this move because it is what coalition intellectuals do to rationalize why rivals do not switch sides when exposed to the right information. The information will never switch them because the disagreement was never about information.
Transitivity structures which ideas a presidential candidate can articulate. A candidate cannot assemble a coalition by selecting allies independently. Each ally brings in allies and enemies. The evangelical endorsement costs the candidate certain urban professionals. The union endorsement costs the candidate certain suburban independents. The Wall Street donor base costs the candidate certain populists. Each coalition a candidate courts pre-structures which other coalitions he cannot court. The ideas a candidate articulates map onto this pre-structured alliance terrain. A candidate cannot simply hold the positions he finds most defensible. He can hold only the positions his coalition configuration permits. The Sanders campaign hit this wall in 2016 and 2020. Sanders could not court the institutional Democratic donor class and hold his existing positions. The positions and the coalition configuration were inseparable.
What the paper adds to Halperin’s claim sits in the word “matter.” Ideas matter in presidential campaigns, but they matter as signals, boundary markers, recruitment tools, and coordination devices, not as propositions voters weigh. The campaign that treats ideas as propositions to be argued loses to the campaign that treats ideas as coalition technology to be deployed. Hillary Clinton in 2016 ran an ideas-as-propositions campaign against Trump’s ideas-as-coalition-signals campaign. The propositional campaign had better white papers. The signaling campaign had a winning coalition. This is not a story about the decline of seriousness. It is a story about what presidential campaigns always were, which Halperin’s profession has reasons to obscure.
Halperin’s stake in the ideas-matter frame is itself predicted by the paper. Political journalists occupy a professional niche that requires ideas to matter in the propositional sense. If campaigns are coalition contests where ideas function as signals, the political journalist produces little the market will pay for. His analysis of policy positions, his parsing of debate performances, his handicapping of primary contests on substance, all rest on the premise that the substance drives the outcome. If coalition formation drives the outcome and substance follows, the journalist’s product loses its claim to insight. Halperin has spent his career inside the ideas-matter frame. Abandoning it costs him his standing. He will not abandon it. The paper predicts he cannot abandon it without abandoning his coalition, which includes other political journalists, the campaigns that grant them access, and the audiences that pay to hear campaigns described as contests of ideas.
Apply the frame to 2024 and 2028. The Harris campaign in 2024 failed partly because it could not articulate ideas that served as coalition signals. Harris tried to run on the threat Trump posed to democracy, on reproductive rights, and on economic policies described in technocratic vocabulary. The first two served existing coalition members. Neither recruited swing voters. The third worked as neither signal nor recruitment tool. Harris had ideas in Halperin’s sense. She did not have ideas that performed coalition work. The Trump campaign articulated ideas that functioned as coalition technology across a wider range of voters than in 2016 or 2020, including Black and Latino men, young men generally, and portions of the union rank and file. Whether those ideas were correct in a propositional sense is not what the election turned on. Whether they sorted voters into coalitions is what the election turned on.
For 2028, Alliance Theory predicts that the winning candidate will be whoever articulates ideas that let the largest workable coalition coordinate against its rivals. The ideas do not need to be coherent. They need to be operable. The policy content can contradict itself across constituencies as long as each constituency hears a signal it recognizes. The losing candidate will be whoever runs the Halperin strategy, treating ideas as propositions to be defended on merit before an electorate imagined as open-minded evaluators. That electorate does not exist. It has never existed. Halperin’s claim that ideas matter is true in his sense for a small sliver of voters who resemble him. For the electorate as it is, ideas matter in the sense the Strange Bedfellows paper describes, which is a sense Halperin’s profession cannot afford to name.
Halperin’s profession cannot name the coalition frame because naming it destroys the product the profession sells.
The political journalist sells a specific service to a specific audience. The service is insider interpretation of campaign events, debate performances, policy rollouts, gaffes, surges, and collapses. The audience is educated professionals, donors, operatives, other journalists, and a sliver of highly engaged voters who consume politics as a spectator sport. The service rests on the premise that campaigns turn on things the journalist can observe and explain: candidate quality, message discipline, strategic choices, tactical errors, shifts in the electorate’s reception of arguments. If campaigns turn instead on coalition configurations that pre-date the campaign and operate through signals voters process without conscious deliberation, the journalist’s observations become decorative. He is narrating surface turbulence while the deep currents run unobserved.
Halperin in particular built his brand on granular tactical analysis. The Note at ABC, Game Change with John Heilemann, the Mark Halperin model of campaign coverage, all depend on treating the daily events of a campaign as causally consequential. If the coalition frame is correct, most of what Halperin covers is noise. The debate moment that “shifted the race” did not shift the race. The race was already shaped by alliance structures the debate moment registered rather than caused. Halperin cannot say this because he has spent forty years saying the opposite. His professional identity is staked on the claim that campaigns are contests decided by the things campaigns do.
The access economy reinforces the frame. Political journalists get their material from campaign operatives, candidates, and party officials. These sources grant access in exchange for coverage that treats their work as consequential. A campaign manager will not spend time with a journalist who argues that campaign management does not matter much. An operative will not leak to a reporter whose analytical frame treats operatives as epiphenomenal. The access economy selects for journalists who accept the ideas-matter, tactics-matter, messaging-matters frame. Journalists who reject the frame lose access, lose sources, lose the material that fills their columns and podcasts. The professional incentive runs hard against naming what Pinsof names.
The audience has its own stake. The educated professional who follows politics closely wants to believe his attention is rewarded with superior understanding. If coalition configurations drive outcomes and the configurations are visible to anyone who looks, the educated professional’s close attention produces no advantage over the casual voter’s intuitive read. His New York Times subscription, his podcast queue, his Twitter following of campaign reporters, all lose their claim to epistemic value. The political journalism industry exists partly because a large audience wants to believe that consuming political journalism makes them better informed citizens. The coalition frame implies the audience has been informed about the wrong variables all along.
The profession’s self-image compounds the problem. Political journalists understand themselves as the watchdogs of democratic process. They believe they hold candidates accountable by surfacing inconsistencies, contradictions, and evasions. The coalition frame suggests this work is ornamental. Voters do not punish inconsistencies their coalition permits and do not forgive inconsistencies their coalition forbids. The watchdog role presupposes an electorate that evaluates candidates on the standards the watchdog enforces. That electorate is a professional fantasy. Relinquishing it means relinquishing the civic purpose that makes political journalism feel like a calling rather than a spectator service for political hobbyists.
The bipartisan professional class that consumes and produces political journalism shares a coalition position. Educated, credentialed, urban, interested in procedural legitimacy, invested in the institutions that grant their credentials value. Naming coalition politics as the driver of elections threatens this class’s self-understanding as evaluators standing outside coalitions. The professional class imagines itself as the neutral ground on which coalitions compete. The professional class is itself a coalition, with its own moral vocabulary, its own double standards, its own propagandistic biases, and its own misunderstanding move against rivals. The professional class cannot adopt a framework that dissolves its claim to neutrality. Doing so would require acknowledging that its own political judgments are coalition products rather than objective assessments.
There is also the question of what political journalism would look like if it named the coalition frame honestly. The coverage would shift from tactical analysis to sociology of alliance structures. The reporter would trace which donors fund which networks, which media properties signal to which constituencies, which endorsements move which voters, and which ideological formations serve as coordination devices for which coalitions. This work exists. It gets done in academic sociology, in some heterodox journalism, in parts of the financial press that cover politics as market behavior. It does not dominate the profession because it does not flatter its audience, does not feed the access economy, and does not produce the daily narrative rhythm that cable news and political podcasts require. The coalition frame produces long-form structural analysis at quarterly or annual cadence. The profession needs daily copy.
Halperin’s specific position makes the problem acute. After his MeToo exile and his return through Megyn Kelly’s network and his own paid newsletter, his product is pure access commentary. He sells his read on what insiders are thinking, which operatives are maneuvering, which candidates are rising. Adopting the coalition frame would convert his product into something indistinguishable from the product Pinsof and his academic colleagues produce, which earns a professor’s salary rather than Halperin’s subscription revenue. Halperin’s livelihood depends on ideas mattering in the sense his subscribers want them to matter. He will assert that ideas matter whenever he addresses the question, because the assertion is his coalition’s moral vocabulary, and his coalition includes his subscribers, his employers, his sources, and the wider class of political professionals whose self-worth depends on the frame holding.
Political journalists function as coalition intellectuals for the professional-managerial class. Their coverage is not neutral description of campaigns. It is coalition-maintenance work that articulates which candidates are serious, which ideas are respectable, which behaviors are disqualifying, and which norms govern the contest. The frame that ideas matter is the moral vocabulary of this coalition, because it asserts that contests should be decided on the terms the coalition’s members are equipped to evaluate. Naming coalition politics would require the profession to recognize itself as what it is, which is not a neutral observer of American democracy but one of its louder participants, with interests and biases it cannot see because the frame that lets it see them is the frame it cannot adopt.
Political news reporting in the Strange Bedfellows frame would look less like sports commentary and more like epidemiology, sociology, and market analysis combined. The unit of analysis shifts from the candidate and his tactics to the coalition and its signaling infrastructure. The questions change, the sources change, the rhythm changes, and the reporter’s self-understanding changes.
The central question of any political story becomes which coalitions are forming, which are fracturing, and which signals are doing the coordination work. A campaign rally is not covered as a performance the candidate delivered well or poorly. It is covered as a signaling event in which specific vocabulary activated specific constituencies and alienated others. The reporter tracks which phrases generated which responses from which voter segments. When Trump says the quiet part out loud about tariffs at a Michigan rally, the story is not whether Trump was disciplined on message. The story is that the tariff frame recruited a specific coalition of Rust Belt manufacturing workers, skeptical suburban independents worried about supply chains, and economic nationalists among the professional class, while repelling a different coalition of free-trade Republicans, export-dependent farmers, and coastal professionals. The rally is a coalition census, not a candidate audition.
Primary coverage shifts radically. The current model treats primaries as candidates competing for voter support through superior messaging and retail politics. The coalition frame treats primaries as the contest to determine which alliance configuration the party’s nominee will represent. The reporter covers the donor networks, the endorsement chains, the affiliated media properties, and the activist groups that make up the party’s internal factions. The Trump-DeSantis primary in 2024 becomes a story about whether the MAGA coalition would remain united behind Trump or split toward DeSantis’s slightly different alliance configuration. DeSantis’s collapse is covered as a failure of coalition recruitment, not as a failure of candidate charisma. The reporter traces which donors stayed with Trump, which evangelical networks declined to split their endorsements, and which state party machines kept their organization loyal. Charisma, debate performance, and rally size are indicators, not causes.
Policy coverage changes profoundly. The current model treats policy positions as propositions candidates argue for or against. The coalition frame treats policy positions as signals that mark coalition membership. When a candidate announces a position on immigration, the story is not whether the position is good policy or bad policy. The story is which coalition the position signals membership in, which allies the position secures, and which rivals the position defines. Kamala Harris announcing a border enforcement position in 2024 is covered as an attempt to signal credibility to a voter segment the Democratic coalition was losing, while risking alienation from the segment of the coalition that views such signals as betrayal. The policy’s substantive merits are secondary to its coalition function. Reporters who want to cover substantive merits do so in a separate register, clearly labeled as policy analysis rather than political journalism.
Debate coverage looks unrecognizable. Current debate coverage focuses on moments, gaffes, zingers, body language, and perceptions of who won. The coalition frame treats debates as coordination events where candidates perform coalition signals for live audiences composed of different coalitions simultaneously. The reporter covers which signals each candidate delivered, which coalitions received each signal as intended, which misfired, and which got picked up by unintended audiences. Biden’s 2024 debate collapse is not a story about whether Biden showed his age. It is a story about the Democratic coalition’s structural dependency on a candidate who could no longer perform the signals required to hold the coalition together, and the emergency repair work the coalition had to undertake afterward. The repair work becomes the main story: the donor meetings, the party committee consultations, the senator endorsements, the decision about Harris. The debate itself was a triggering event, not the causally decisive moment it got framed as.
Endorsements get treated as load-bearing rather than ornamental. The current model notes endorsements as signals of establishment support or grassroots momentum but does not analyze them structurally. The coalition frame treats endorsements as contracts in which the endorser pledges his network’s loyalty to the candidate in exchange for coalition influence. The reporter traces the endorsement network: who endorsed whom, in which order, at which moments, and in exchange for what commitments. The 2020 South Carolina primary becomes a story about Clyburn’s decision to back Biden, which coalition that decision represented, which alternative coalitions it shut down, and what Biden owed Clyburn afterward. The substance of the commitments matters because it determines what the nominee can and cannot do in office.
Polling coverage becomes coalition coverage. Current polling reports horse-race numbers and demographic cross-tabs as if they were neutral measurements of public opinion. The coalition frame reads polling as a map of coalition boundaries. The reporter asks which coalitions a candidate has locked in, which he is contesting, and which he has lost. Cross-tabs become coalition diagrams. The shift of Hispanic men toward Trump in 2024 is not a data point about demographic change. It is evidence of a coalition migration with a specific history, traceable to specific signals, institutional failures, and alliance shifts. The reporter investigates what moved the coalition, which actors brokered the movement, and which counter-signals the losing side tried and failed to deploy.
Media coverage becomes part of the story rather than the vantage point on the story. The coalition frame treats media properties as coalition infrastructure. Fox News is not a neutral conservative outlet that occasionally tilts Republican. It is a coalition-maintenance institution whose coverage choices reflect the priorities of a specific Republican alliance configuration. When Fox declines to cover a Trump scandal or amplifies a Biden one, the reporter treats this as coalition behavior with analyzable incentives, not as bias to be scolded. The same frame applies to MSNBC, the New York Times, the Atlantic, and every other media property. Coverage choices reveal coalition boundaries. The reporter’s own outlet is included in the analysis. A Washington Post political reporter writing in the coalition frame acknowledges that the Post is a coalition property, that its readership skews to a specific coalition, that its editorial standards reflect that coalition’s moral vocabulary, and that its coverage decisions cannot be understood outside this context. This self-reflexivity is not currently possible in political journalism because the frame that permits it is the frame the profession cannot adopt.
Fundraising coverage becomes more important than candidate coverage. Under the coalition frame, following the money is not a scandal hunt but the primary method for mapping alliance structures. The reporter tracks donor networks, bundlers, super PAC formations, dark money flows, and the ideological foundations that fund think tanks and advocacy groups. The coalition behind a candidate is visible in his donor list. The coalition behind a movement is visible in its foundation support. The shifts in a coalition are visible in donor migration patterns. Peter Thiel’s funding of JD Vance, Marc Andreessen’s move toward Trump, Reid Hoffman’s role in Democratic coalition management, all become central beats rather than occasional profiles. The reporter covers the donors as coalition brokers whose decisions shape which candidates get viable and which do not.
Voter psychology reporting shifts from polling-driven demographic analysis to coalition ethnography. Current voter reporting treats voters as individuals who hold opinions, respond to messages, and make decisions in voting booths. The coalition frame treats voters as participants in coalitions who signal membership and respond to coalition coordination cues. The reporter spends time with voters in their coalition contexts: church congregations, union halls, online communities, professional networks, gun ranges, yoga studios, graduate seminars. The reporting documents which signals the coalition values, which transgressions the coalition punishes, and which accommodations the coalition permits. This work resembles anthropology more than journalism as currently practiced. The New Yorker occasionally produces something in this register. Under the coalition frame, every political outlet would do this work constantly.
Scandal coverage changes character entirely. Current scandal coverage treats scandals as tests of candidate character and voter judgment. The coalition frame treats scandals as coalition-coordination events whose meaning depends on the coalition’s pre-existing disposition. A scandal that would destroy a candidate in a hostile coalition environment has no effect on the same candidate in a friendly coalition environment. The reporter covers scandals by mapping which coalitions absorb them and which coalitions weaponize them, rather than predicting electoral effects as if scandals had uniform impact. Trump’s indictments become a case study in coalition immunity: the MAGA coalition treated each indictment as confirmation of the coalition’s grievance frame, while the opposing coalition treated each as confirmation of Trump’s unfitness. The indictments did not change minds. They activated existing coalition memberships more intensely. The reporter’s job is to describe this activation precisely, not to wonder whether the indictments will finally be the ones that break the coalition.
The rhythm of political journalism slows. Current political journalism operates on a daily or hourly cycle because the tactical frame requires constant updating. Every new statement, every polling movement, every debate moment generates copy. The coalition frame operates on a longer cycle because coalition movements happen over months and years, not hours. Daily copy becomes harder to sustain. The beat reporter files fewer stories, each more substantial. The podcast circuit shrinks because daily punditry has less to discuss. The cable news commentary model contracts because its product is the minute-by-minute tactical read the coalition frame renders obsolete. Some reporters adapt. Many do not. The profession contracts to roughly its scale in the mid-twentieth century, when political coverage was more structural and less tactical.
The reporter’s self-understanding changes from watchdog to analyst. The watchdog role assumes an electorate that evaluates candidates by standards the watchdog enforces. The analyst role assumes an electorate that votes its coalition and asks the reporter to explain why. The analyst does not scold. He describes. He does not expect candidates to be consistent. He notes when inconsistency costs a candidate coalition support and when it does not. He does not expect voters to be informed in the watchdog’s sense. He documents what information actually circulates in each coalition and how. His product is understanding, not accountability. Accountability remains a function of elections, prosecutors, courts, legislative oversight, and coalition-internal discipline. The journalist’s task is to make the contest legible, not to umpire it.
Partisan framing dissolves. Current political journalism constantly frames stories as Republican versus Democrat, conservative versus liberal. The coalition frame treats these categories as shorthand for alliance configurations that can shift, splinter, and recombine. The reporter describes coalitions by their actual composition rather than by their party labels. The Trump coalition in 2024 is not the Republican Party. It overlaps significantly but includes constituencies the Republican Party has not previously held and excludes constituencies the party traditionally held. The Harris coalition is not the Democratic Party. The reporter’s job is to name these actual coalitions rather than defaulting to the party labels that increasingly mislead. This requires the reporter to develop taxonomic precision about coalition composition, which requires serious engagement with demographics, geography, industry, religion, and class.
The reporter develops sources outside the campaign. The current model depends on campaign operatives, party officials, and political consultants as sources because the tactical frame treats these people as the actors whose decisions matter. The coalition frame requires sources who understand coalition composition: donor network brokers, religious leaders, labor organizers, foundation program officers, industry trade association heads, regional political scientists, historians of particular constituencies, pollsters who do coalition-focused rather than horse-race work. The source network becomes wider, less Washington-centric, and less dependent on the access economy. This frees the reporter from the coverage constraints the access economy imposes but costs him the tactical color that currently sells stories.
The coverage distinguishes between electoral politics and governance in a way current coverage does not. The current model treats campaigns as continuous with governance, as if a candidate’s policy positions during a campaign predicted his governance choices afterward. The coalition frame recognizes that coalition-maintenance work during a campaign and coalition-maintenance work during governance are different tasks with different signal requirements. A candidate must signal to the coalition that assembled to elect him. A president must signal to a partially different coalition that includes governing partners, institutional counterparties, and foreign allies. The coverage traces how the governing coalition forms after the election, which campaign promises survive the transition and which do not, and why. Biden’s 2021-2024 coverage becomes a story about how the governing coalition he assembled differed from the electoral coalition that chose him, why certain campaign commitments to the progressive wing got abandoned, and how the tension between governing and electoral coalitions shaped his eventual political collapse.
The foreign-policy coverage integrates with the domestic coalition frame. Current political journalism treats foreign policy as a separate beat covered by specialists. The coalition frame treats foreign-policy positions as coalition signals that interact with domestic coalition configurations. A candidate’s position on Israel is not just a foreign-policy position. It is a signal to specific domestic coalition segments, including Jewish Democratic donors, evangelical Republicans, Arab-American voters in Michigan, and various activist networks. The reporter covers foreign policy through the lens of which domestic coalitions benefit from which positions, which candidates can hold which positions without paying prohibitive coalition costs, and how foreign events reshape domestic coalition configurations. This integration is taboo in current political journalism because it implies foreign policy is decided partly on domestic coalition grounds rather than on strategic merit. The coalition frame accepts this implication as true and makes it analyzable.
The writing style becomes less narrative and more structural. Current political journalism prizes narrative: the campaign as drama, the candidate as protagonist, the voters as chorus. The coalition frame requires analytical prose that describes configurations, signals, and movements without imposing dramatic structure. The reader gets fewer profiles of candidates and more maps of coalitions. The prose resembles sociology more than literature. Some readers prefer this. Many do not. The profession loses a portion of its general audience and gains a portion that wants rigorous structural analysis. The net effect on readership is uncertain.
The coverage acknowledges its own coalition position. The reporter working in the Strange Bedfellows frame names his own coalition membership because the frame requires it. He cannot pretend to neutrality while arguing that neutrality is impossible. He discloses his outlet’s coalition affiliations, his audience’s coalition composition, and the coalition vocabularies his own coverage deploys. This is uncomfortable. Most reporters will not do it. The few who do produce something valuable that the current profession cannot: honest coverage of American politics as it actually works, by participants who recognize themselves as participants rather than as observers.
What the profession would not be able to provide is the reassurance the current profession provides to its audience, which is that politics is a contest of ideas decided by informed voters whose attention rewards them with epistemic advantage. The coalition frame denies this reassurance. Politics is a contest of coalitions decided by signaling and coordination, and attention does not reward the attentive voter with advantage because the advantage belongs to coalition members whose coordination the attention does not improve. A political press that said this clearly every day would be a smaller, more honest, and less commercially viable profession than the one America currently has. The one America currently has exists because enough of its audience pays to be reassured that their political engagement is what the political press tells them it is. The Strange Bedfellows frame dissolves this reassurance, and with it the commercial foundation of much of the profession. That is why the profession cannot name what Pinsof names. Naming it collapses the enterprise.
The Strange Bedfellows method of reporting, as described, does not have a large cohort of pure practitioners because the profession’s incentives run against it. But several figures have produced work that approaches the coalition frame from different angles, often without naming Pinsof. They fall into rough categories.
The classical American sociologists of politics did this work before political journalism professionalized around the tactical frame. Samuel Lubell wrote The Future of American Politics in 1952 and The Hidden Crisis in American Politics in 1970, treating elections as coalition formations traceable through demographic, ethnic, and regional patterns. He walked precincts, talked to voters in their own contexts, and built coalition maps that predicted realignments decades before they happened. Lubell is the patron saint of coalition journalism in America. Kevin Phillips extended this tradition in The Emerging Republican Majority in 1969, mapping the coalition Nixon assembled from Southern Whites, ethnic Catholics, and Sun Belt suburbanites. Phillips’s later work, particularly The Politics of Rich and Poor and American Theocracy, continued the structural analysis even as his own coalition position shifted. Walter Dean Burnham’s academic work on critical elections and electoral realignments provided the scholarly backbone for this mode of analysis.
Michael Barone is the closest living practitioner of the Lubell-Phillips tradition. The Almanac of American Politics, which he has co-edited since 1972, is an encyclopedia of coalition geography organized district by district. Barone’s newspaper and magazine columns consistently read elections as coalition movements rather than as tactical contests. His book Our Country: The Shaping of America from Roosevelt to Reagan narrates American political history as a sequence of coalition formations and collapses. Barone operates within a conservative coalition himself and does not fully apply the frame to his own position, but his structural analysis of opposing coalitions is disciplined and consistent.
Theodore White wrote The Making of the President series starting in 1961, which pioneered the narrative-tactical frame that dominates political journalism today. White is not a Strange Bedfellows practitioner. But his work contains extensive coalition analysis buried inside the narrative, particularly in the early volumes. Richard Ben Cramer’s What It Takes, covering the 1988 campaign, is literary rather than analytical but spends hundreds of pages on the coalition contexts that shaped Bush, Dukakis, Dole, Biden, and Gephardt. These books are transitional. They retain the candidate-as-protagonist frame but provide enough coalition detail that a reader working in the Pinsof frame can extract the structural story.
Thomas Edsall writes a New York Times column that comes closer to coalition journalism than most contemporary political writing. Edsall built his earlier career at the Washington Post covering the interaction between economic class, race, and electoral coalitions, producing books like Chain Reaction with Mary Edsall that traced how the Democratic coalition fragmented over race and taxes. His current columns assemble academic research and polling data to describe coalition shifts, donor network formations, and ideological realignments. Edsall does not write in the tactical register. He writes in a structural register that treats coalitions as the unit of analysis. He remains inside the establishment media coalition and does not fully reflect on his own position, but his work is closer to the Pinsof frame than any other regular political column in American journalism.
Ronald Brownstein at The Atlantic and CNN produces coalition-focused analysis, particularly through his concept of the coalition of the ascendant and the coalition of restoration. His book The Second Civil War argued that American politics had become a contest between two coalitions with minimal overlap, and his ongoing work maps the demographic and geographic composition of each. Brownstein writes from inside the professional-class coalition and does not fully acknowledge this, but his structural analysis is consistent and useful.
David Shor, the Democratic pollster and strategist, has become famous in the past several years for applying rigorous coalition analysis to Democratic political strategy. Shor’s work on education polarization, popularist messaging, and the structural disadvantages Democrats face in the Senate treats coalitions as the primary unit of analysis. Shor is not a journalist but gets quoted extensively in political journalism, and his appearances with Ezra Klein, Matthew Yglesias, and others have introduced coalition thinking to a wider audience. Shor is a coalition operator who analyzes his own coalition’s structural position with unusual frankness, which makes him partially compatible with the Pinsof frame even though he operates within a coalition rather than outside one.
Matthew Yglesias writes the Slow Boring Substack and applies coalition analysis consistently to Democratic and Republican politics. Yglesias treats political positions as signals, coalitions as the basic unit, and messaging as coordination work. He is inside a coalition of left-leaning policy intellectuals but writes honestly about that coalition’s internal conflicts and strategic errors. His work on the education polarization problem, on popularism, and on the structural challenges facing both parties approximates the Pinsof frame without naming it. Yglesias’s commercial success on Substack suggests an audience exists for this mode of analysis, though his subscriber base remains a small fraction of what legacy political journalism reaches.
Nate Silver and the FiveThirtyEight tradition brought quantitative discipline to political journalism and pushed coverage toward demographic and structural analysis. Silver’s work on polling aggregation, forecast modeling, and electoral geography implicitly treats coalitions as the unit of analysis even when he writes in the horse-race register. His Substack has moved further in this direction, and his recent book On the Edge applies coalition thinking to the rift between the Silicon Valley tech elite and the establishment Democratic coalition. Silver operates adjacent to the Pinsof frame without endorsing its deeper implications about the nature of political belief.
Christopher Caldwell at the Claremont Review of Books and formerly at the Weekly Standard writes structural political analysis that treats coalitions, institutions, and ideological formations as the basic units. His book The Age of Entitlement argues that American politics since 1964 has been structured by the conflict between two constitutions, two coalitions, two moral vocabularies. Caldwell writes from a conservative coalition position and applies the structural frame more rigorously to progressive coalitions than to his own, but his work is closer to the Pinsof frame than most conservative commentary. Caldwell’s long essays in the New York Times and Claremont Review apply historical and sociological analysis to contemporary political formations in ways that most political journalism avoids.
Peggy Noonan occasionally produces coalition analysis in her Wall Street Journal columns, particularly when she writes about class in American politics. Her essay on the “protected class” versus the “unprotected class” in 2016 was a coalition analysis that explained Trump’s appeal better than most tactical coverage did. Noonan is a coalition member of the old Republican establishment and writes partly as an elegist for a coalition that has dissolved, but her best work treats coalition fracture as the story.
Mickey Kaus, through his blog Kausfiles and his work on immigration and welfare politics, has practiced coalition analysis for decades. Kaus identifies specific interest coalitions, donor networks, and ideological affinities and traces how they shape policy outcomes. His work is cranky, often partisan in unpredictable directions, but structurally serious in a way that most contemporary political commentary is not.
Academic political scientists produce most of the serious coalition analysis that filters into journalism. Lilliana Mason’s Uncivil Agreement and her subsequent work on political identity and coalition sorting provide much of the theoretical apparatus that makes coalition journalism possible. Eitan Hersh’s work on political hobbyism identified the professional-class audience problem that Pinsof’s frame also implies. Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page’s work on donor influence mapped the elite coalition that dominates policy outcomes regardless of electoral results. Hahrie Han’s work on organizing maps how coalitions recruit and retain members. This scholarship rarely reaches mass audiences directly but flows into the journalism of Edsall, Shor, Yglesias, and others who translate it.
In foreign coverage, the best practitioners of coalition journalism work on American politics from outside it. The Financial Times, particularly through columnists like Edward Luce and Janan Ganesh, produces coalition-focused analysis of American politics with less commitment to the tactical frame than American outlets require. The Economist’s Lexington column often applies structural analysis to American coalitions. Foreign correspondents are freed from the access economy’s constraints because they do not need to maintain sources inside American campaigns, which frees them to describe what American political journalists can see but cannot say.
Joan Didion produced the most literarily accomplished coalition journalism of the late twentieth century. Her essays collected in Political Fictions covered the 1988, 1992, 1996, and 2000 campaigns with sustained attention to the insider-outsider structure of American political coverage itself. Didion named the professional-class coalition that produces political journalism and traced how its interests shape what gets covered. She is the closest literary approximation to a Pinsof-frame political reporter that American journalism has produced. The essays remain the best available demonstration of what coalition journalism can achieve at the highest stylistic register.
The online ecosystem has produced a generation of writers who apply coalition analysis outside mainstream political journalism. Richard Hanania, Rob Henderson, Wesley Yang, Damon Linker, Freddie deBoer, and others work in various corners of Substack and heterodox media producing structural analysis that the legacy profession cannot accommodate. Their work is uneven, often polemical, and coalition-positioned rather than coalition-neutral, but together they constitute something closer to a Pinsof-frame political commentariat than the mainstream profession offers. Their readership is small compared to cable news or the major newspapers. It is growing, and the growth suggests an audience exists for structural rather than tactical coverage when it is available.
The honest answer to the question is that no famous practitioner fully applies the Strange Bedfellows frame to American political reporting, because the frame requires a self-reflexivity about the reporter’s own coalition position that the profession cannot sustain commercially. The partial practitioners listed above each bring some of the tools but stop short of the full application. Lubell, Phillips, Barone, Edsall, Brownstein, Shor, Yglesias, Caldwell, and Didion have each produced work that the Pinsof frame would recognize as serious coalition analysis. None of them would describe his or her work that way. The frame remains available in political science, in parts of sociology, and in scattered heterodox journalism. It has not colonized the political press because the press cannot afford to let it.
14 Podcasts A Week
Mark Halperin hosts ten livestream shows a week plus two recorded Next Up shows and he told Ben Ferguson on his April 23, 2026 Next Up show that he’s adding two more podcasts.
This is an industrial output schedule that reshapes a man’s cognition, his relationships, his source base, his analytical frame, and his product. The effects are predictable and most of them cut against the quality of the work.
The first effect is on Halperin’s thinking. A man who produces fourteen hours or more of original political commentary each week cannot read deeply, sit with difficult material, or let ideas incubate. His cognition shifts from reflection to retrieval. He processes incoming information fast, categorizes it against existing frames, and converts it into takeable positions within minutes of encountering it. The frames harden because revisiting them would slow production. New information gets assimilated to old frames rather than allowed to revise them. This is the structural condition of every high-volume commentator, and it explains why men at this output level rarely change their minds about anything significant. The schedule forbids the slow reconsideration that mind-changing requires.
The second effect is on his source base. Halperin’s brand rests on access to insiders who leak him their read on what is happening. At fourteen productions weekly, he needs fresh material constantly. This creates a dependency on sources who provide quick, usable takes rather than sources who provide complex, slow-developing structural intelligence. The quick-take source becomes the preferred supplier. The slow-intelligence source gets ignored because the schedule cannot accommodate his material. Over time, Halperin’s source network selects for operators who package their intelligence in the form Halperin can use immediately, which means campaign operatives, party strategists, donor intermediaries, and consultants who have developed skill at talking to Halperin specifically. His sources become the political professional class whose interests align with the tactical frame Halperin’s coverage requires. He loses access to sources outside this class because those sources do not know how to feed him material he can use, and he does not have time to cultivate them.
The third effect is on his analytical frame. The Halperin product at this volume must be legible to his audience within the first minute of each production. Subtlety dies. Structural analysis dies. Anything requiring the viewer to hold multiple variables in mind simultaneously dies. The product optimizes for clarity of position, boldness of prediction, and crispness of insider-signaling. Halperin’s coverage becomes a stream of tactical reads delivered with high confidence and minimal hedging, because hedging loses the viewer. The Strange Bedfellows frame would require him to slow down, map coalitions, trace signaling flows, and acknowledge uncertainty about coalition movements that take months to resolve. The fourteen-production schedule makes this impossible. The schedule selects for the tactical frame because the tactical frame is the only frame that generates enough material at the required pace.
The fourth effect is on his relationship to his audience. The high-volume commentator develops a specific audience segment that consumes content at the matching pace. These are political hobbyists, campaign staff, donors, fellow commentators, and a thin slice of highly engaged partisans. This audience wants constant updating, insider framing, and confident prediction. It does not want structural analysis or self-reflection about its own coalition position. Halperin must deliver what this audience wants or lose the audience, and he has structured his career to require the audience’s subscription revenue. The audience’s preferences and Halperin’s output format reinforce each other. The coalition frame, which implies that this audience is itself a coalition whose political consumption is coalition-maintenance work, cannot be adopted without insulting the audience. Halperin will not adopt it.
The fifth effect is on his epistemic standards. A commentator producing fourteen pieces of original material weekly cannot verify claims with anything approaching rigor. He develops a working rule that claims from trusted sources are adequately sourced, that claims from his adversarial coalition require higher scrutiny, and that claims from neutral observers get treated according to whether they confirm or challenge his running narrative. This rule is a coalition filter dressed as journalistic judgment. Halperin operates this filter without acknowledging it, because acknowledging it would undermine the authority his product requires. His epistemic standards degrade in predictable directions: he becomes more confident in his trusted sources than the evidence warrants, more skeptical of his adversarial sources than the evidence warrants, and more certain of his own judgment than anyone at his output level can reasonably be.
The sixth effect is on his body and his stamina. Ten livestreams a week is four to eight hours of live performance weekly depending on stream length, plus the preparation each requires, plus the recorded shows, plus the podcasts. This is a performance schedule that would exhaust most men at Halperin’s age, which is early sixties. The man on camera fourteen times a week is a man who cannot be fully rested, fully prepared, or fully present for any single production. Fatigue shows up as repetition, as shallow framing, as the recurrent use of favorite anecdotes and phrases, as visible irritation when viewers ask questions he has already answered ten times that week. The product’s quality declines even as the quantity rises, and the commentator becomes less able to recognize the decline because he is inside the schedule that produced it.
The seventh effect is on his relationships to peer commentators. The high-volume schedule requires regular guests, regular co-hosts, and regular feed sources. Halperin builds a rotating bench of fellow commentators who appear on his shows in exchange for appearances on theirs. This creates a small mutual-promotion network of political media figures who share audiences, reinforce each other’s frames, and rarely challenge each other’s premises. The network looks like journalistic ecosystem to outsiders. It functions as coalition infrastructure from the Pinsof perspective. The commentators within it become more like each other over time, share more assumptions, and produce coverage that treats the network’s consensus as neutral analysis. Halperin sits near the center of one such network. His bench’s composition tells a coalition story Halperin cannot narrate from inside the bench.
The eighth effect is on his willingness to take positions at odds with his coalition. A commentator producing fourteen pieces weekly cannot afford to lose coalition membership because coalition membership provides the source access, the guest bench, the audience, and the social reinforcement that sustain the schedule. Halperin will take positions that appear contrarian within acceptable limits. He will not take positions that would require him to be excommunicated from the political-media coalition that sustains his work. The limits on his contrarianism are visible in the positions he does not hold and the topics he does not cover. A man running this schedule cannot be the man who breaks from his coalition, because the break would end the schedule.
The ninth effect is on his moral and professional judgment more broadly. High-volume commentary is a specific kind of drug. The man producing it gets regular dopamine from audience response, from insider validation, from the feeling of being at the center of events. The dopamine cycle reinforces the behavior that produces it. Halperin’s output schedule is partly commercial necessity and partly addiction to the cycle. His previous career collapse was caused by professional misconduct. His return is structured around daily validation from an audience that replaces the institutional validation he lost. The schedule that sustains this validation cycle also prevents him from sitting quietly with himself long enough to examine what he is doing and whether he wants to be doing it. The fourteen-production week is a defense against the silence that would force such examination.
The tenth effect is on his product’s predictive accuracy. A man processing political reality at this pace, with the source base the pace selects for, with the epistemic standards the pace permits, will produce tactical predictions that often turn out wrong. Halperin’s track record on predictions has declined over the past decade, and the decline correlates with his increased production volume. He was more accurate when he produced less. He became less accurate as he produced more. This is a general pattern in high-volume political commentary. The pattern holds because the analytical conditions that produce accurate predictions, which are slow thinking, diverse sources, epistemic humility, and willingness to revise frames, are exactly the conditions the high-volume schedule destroys. Halperin cannot be accurate and prolific simultaneously. He has chosen prolific.
The shape of his work under this schedule is therefore predictable. It will be high in confident tactical prediction, rich in insider-signaling language, low in structural analysis, consistent with his coalition’s frame, repetitive across productions, declining in predictive accuracy, and organized around his recurring bench of fellow commentators. It will track the daily news cycle closely. It will not pause for reflection. It will not challenge the political-media coalition’s core assumptions. It will be commercially successful within the specific niche of political hobbyists who consume content at this pace, and commercially irrelevant to the broader electorate.
Halperin is working hard at sixty-something on a schedule most men his age would not attempt. The work is keeping him relevant in the present. It is also preventing him from producing the book, the major essay, or the structural analysis that would constitute his late-career legacy. The commentator producing fourteen pieces weekly does not have time to write the book that might outlast him. He is trading the possibility of enduring contribution for the certainty of continuous present-tense relevance. This is a common trade for political commentators in the late cable era and the early Substack era. The trade has winners and losers. The winners retain an audience and income. The losers fail to build a commercial enterprise at the required pace and get replaced by commentators who will. Halperin is winning on his own terms. On the terms the Strange Bedfellows frame would apply, which ask whether a man’s work contributes to public understanding of how American politics works, the output schedule is a defeat. It keeps him busy. It does not let him think.
What would it take for a man like Halperin to step off this treadmill and produce something that mattered? Probably the one thing he will not do, which is to stop. A three-month pause, a sabbatical, a decision to produce two pieces a week instead of fourteen, would give him the conditions to think again. He will not do this because the schedule is his proof of life, his financial base, and his coalition membership card. Men who have been exiled and returned do not willingly reduce output. The return was purchased with volume. The volume cannot be given back.
The 2017 exile shaped Halperin in specific ways that continue to show up in his work, his relationships, and the schedule he now keeps. Exile of this kind leaves particular marks on a man, and Halperin’s response to it followed a recognizable pattern.
The first effect is on his relationship to risk. A man who has been publicly destroyed and slowly rebuilt becomes cautious in predictable ways. He avoids the topics that destroyed him. He avoids the kinds of professional environments where a second exile could originate. He develops a sensitivity to the early warning signs of coalition withdrawal that a man who has never been exiled does not possess. Halperin’s coverage since his return has tracked these caution patterns. He does not cover gender politics, sexual misconduct scandals, or workplace culture issues with anything resembling the engagement he brings to campaign tactics. When these topics arise, he passes them quickly or treats them at a distance. The topics are his personal live wire, and he has learned not to touch it.
The second effect is on his coalition position. Before the exile, Halperin operated inside the legacy media establishment with full institutional protection. ABC News, Time, Bloomberg, MSNBC all granted him the platform and the credentials that came with mainstream membership. The exile revoked that membership. His return came through alternative channels: Newsmax, Megyn Kelly’s network, 2WAY, and his own subscription product. These channels operate outside or adjacent to the legacy media coalition that expelled him. A man who has been expelled from one coalition and rebuilt through another does not return to the original coalition in the same way even if invited back. He understands that the original coalition will not defend him if a second crisis arises. He therefore cannot give the original coalition the loyalty he once gave it. Halperin’s current product reflects this. He covers the media establishment more critically than he did before, treats its conventional wisdom with more skepticism, and aligns himself more openly with audiences that distrust it. This is not a change of principles. It is an adjustment to a changed coalition situation.
The third effect is on his relationship to his peers. The men and women who were his colleagues before the exile divided themselves into three groups during his crisis. Some defended him publicly, some attacked him publicly, and most said nothing publicly while distancing themselves privately. A man going through this experience learns who behaved how. The knowledge does not leave him. John Heilemann, his co-author and longtime partner, maintained some distance during the exile and has continued with his own career at MSNBC. Halperin and Heilemann have not reunited for a major project. The silence on this front suggests Halperin noticed what he noticed and has not forgiven what there is to forgive. Other relationships have similar textures. Halperin’s current bench of regular collaborators includes fewer of his pre-exile peers and more figures who came into his circle during or after the crisis. The coalition he works inside now is not the coalition he worked inside before. It is smaller, more transactional, and more defensive.
The fourth effect is on his bargaining position with audiences and employers. Before the exile, Halperin’s reputation commanded premium fees and elite access. After the exile, he returned at lower status. He had to accept terms he would not have accepted before. The subscription model he has built at 2WAY and his personal Substack reflects this reduced bargaining position. He cannot demand a salaried position at a legacy outlet at the compensation he once received. He has to build his own audience directly and monetize them through subscription fees that require constant content production. The fourteen-production weekly schedule is partly a consequence of this reduced bargaining position. A man with full institutional protection could produce less and earn more. A man without institutional protection must produce constantly to earn enough. The exile converted him from a salaried insider into a subscription-dependent entrepreneur, and the entrepreneur model demands the volume that the insider model did not.
The fifth effect is on his sense of his own invulnerability. The pre-exile Halperin had built a career assuming that his insider access, his relationships with sources, and his institutional standing would protect him against the kinds of exposure that destroyed lesser figures. The exile proved this assumption false. The experience of being proven wrong about one’s own protection is corrosive to a man’s confidence in his general judgment. A man who was catastrophically wrong about his personal situation begins to wonder what else he might be catastrophically wrong about. Halperin shows signs of this epistemological shadow. His current commentary includes more frequent admissions of uncertainty than his pre-exile work did. He hedges more on predictions. He acknowledges more openly when he does not know what is happening inside a campaign. The hedging is partly commercial, because his audience now includes skeptics of mainstream media who reward visible humility, but it is also personal. The man who was wrong about himself is less certain that he is right about others.
The sixth effect is on his political positioning. Before the exile, Halperin operated as a centrist professional with no visible partisan commitment. The exile was executed through the mechanisms of progressive accountability culture, and Halperin emerged from it with a sharpened awareness of how those mechanisms work. He has not become a conservative, but he has moved toward coverage that takes conservative concerns seriously and treats progressive assumptions with more skepticism. He regularly appears on Megyn Kelly’s show. His audience includes many viewers who came to him through right-of-center channels. The political repositioning is partly strategic and partly reflective. A man processed through a progressive-led exile learns that progressive moral claims are not neutral descriptions of reality. They are coalition moves that can be deployed against him personally. Having learned this, he cannot go back to treating them as neutral descriptions. The Pinsof frame would say that the exile converted him from a man inside the professional-class coalition to a man with direct personal knowledge that the professional-class coalition’s moral vocabulary is a coalition weapon, which is the exact knowledge the coalition cannot tolerate in its members.
The seventh effect is on his family and private life. Halperin is married to Karen Avrich, who stood by him through the exile. The reports at the time suggested the marriage was under significant strain. Men who survive public scandal with their marriages intact emerge with a heightened sense of what they owe their wives and a reduced tolerance for anyone in their professional lives who threatens the family. This shapes his professional judgments in ways he might not fully recognize. He takes fewer risks that could generate scandal. He cultivates a professional image that emphasizes steadiness and reliability rather than swagger. The post-exile Halperin is more domestically oriented in his self-presentation than the pre-exile Halperin. The marriage survived, and the survival is part of his daily motivation for the discipline his current schedule requires.
The eighth effect is on his capacity for reflection on his own conduct. The public reporting at the time of the exile included allegations from multiple women about behavior during his Bloomberg and ABC years. Halperin apologized. He did not contest the core allegations. A man in this position has two possible responses: genuine moral reckoning that processes what he did, why he did it, and what it reveals about him, or strategic acknowledgment that says what needs to be said without doing the deeper work. The evidence from his public output since 2017 suggests he has done the strategic acknowledgment without the deeper reckoning. He rarely discusses the exile. He does not write about it. He does not use his platform to reflect publicly on power, workplace conduct, or the specific patterns of behavior that produced the allegations. This absence is noticeable for a man whose profession is to comment on power. The absence suggests that the private reckoning, if it happened, remains private and has not produced public understanding. It also suggests that the subject remains too painful or too commercially dangerous to touch.
The ninth effect is on his audience’s attitude toward him. The exile created two audiences for Halperin. The first is the audience of viewers who believe he was treated unjustly or that his work merits attention regardless of his conduct. This audience is his base. It rewards his return with loyalty and subscription dollars. The second is the audience of viewers who followed him before the exile and have not returned, because they cannot separate the work from the man. The second audience is larger than the first but harder to reach. Halperin’s commercial position depends on maximizing the first audience and accepting the loss of the second. This shapes his product. He produces content that serves the loyalty-based audience, which tends to be politically engaged, media-skeptical, and willing to pay for insider access. He cannot produce content that would re-engage the lost audience because the lost audience requires public reckoning he has not provided.
The tenth effect is on his understanding of American political culture. A man processed through a public accountability event learns things about American culture that a man untouched by such events does not know. He learns how fast coalition support can evaporate. He learns how thin the institutional protections around credentialed professionals are. He learns how quickly former allies will distance themselves. He learns how the media ecosystem he once worked inside functions from the outside. This knowledge is valuable for political coverage, and Halperin deploys it, usually implicitly. His coverage of Trump’s survival through multiple scandals is informed by his own understanding of what accountability moments do and do not accomplish. He understands from personal experience that scandals do not necessarily destroy their targets, that coalitions can defend their members against accountability pressure, and that the media’s predictive confidence about scandal outcomes is often wrong. This understanding is coalition knowledge that he earned through his own suffering. He uses it in his work without naming its source. The Strange Bedfellows frame would say that Halperin is a man with specific coalition expertise about how accountability coalitions operate, gained through being the target of one. He deploys this expertise in his coverage of other figures caught in similar machines, and he knows things about the process that uninitiated journalists cannot know.
The eleventh effect is on his long-term trajectory. Men who survive major public scandals often spend the rest of their careers managing the scandal’s aftermath rather than advancing beyond it. The exile becomes the defining event of the career regardless of what comes next. Halperin’s post-exile work is all, in some sense, commentary on the exile. The volume of his production is his answer to the exile. His audience base is his post-exile constituency. His topics are chosen partly by what the exile permits him to cover. His collaborators are the men and women who would work with him after the exile. The exile organized the second half of his career. It will continue to organize it. He cannot now write the book, take the position, or undertake the project that transcends the exile, because the exile has become the frame within which all of his subsequent work is legible. He will retire from the profession in due course as a man defined by what happened to him in 2017 and by what he did afterward. The defining event will not be his best pre-exile reporting or his most accurate prediction. It will be the crisis and the recovery. This is the shape of a career organized by scandal, and Halperin’s career now has this shape whether he accepts it or not.
The final effect is on his sense of time. Men who have been exiled and returned operate with a heightened awareness that careers end and reputations can collapse. This produces a specific urgency about current work, a reluctance to postpone, a drive to maximize present output. Halperin is sixty-one and producing content at a rate that suggests he does not believe he has another career left if this one fails. The schedule is partly about financial security, partly about coalition maintenance, and partly about the knowledge that a man who has been destroyed once cannot assume he will be rebuilt a second time. The urgency reads on camera. He produces as if the window were closing. The window is closing for everyone eventually, but for Halperin the exile demonstrated that the window can close faster than expected and through mechanisms the victim does not control. This knowledge is in everything he produces now. It explains the volume, the discipline, the reluctance to pause, the refusal to slow down. The man who has been erased once does not risk going quiet, because going quiet might mean staying quiet, and staying quiet is a form of the erasure he already survived and cannot face again.
Halperin’s on-camera composure is a professional skill developed over forty years of live television, refined through specific training, and maintained by specific habits. Several layers produce the effect.
The first layer is raw experience. Halperin has been on live television since the early 1990s. He worked as political director at ABC News for a decade, appeared on Good Morning America and Nightline regularly, produced The Note as a daily political briefing consumed by the entire Washington press corps, and cycled through Time, Bloomberg, MSNBC, and now his own platforms. By conservative estimate, he has done several thousand live appearances over his career. The nervous system adapts to repeated exposure. What would spike a civilian’s heart rate registers as baseline for him. The camera does not read as threat because the camera has been his daily environment for three decades. This is the same process that makes experienced surgeons steady under pressure and experienced pilots calm during turbulence. The autonomic response habituates to conditions that once produced stress.
The second layer is preparation. Halperin prepares for his shows with the same intensity he brought to The Note in his ABC years. He reads extensively each morning, processes a large volume of political material, talks to sources throughout the day, and arrives on camera with a clear sense of what he wants to say and what his audience needs to hear. Preparation eliminates the anxiety that comes from uncertainty. The host who does not know what he thinks about the day’s stories will sweat under questioning. The host who has already worked out his positions during preparation hours will speak those positions fluently under any questioning. Halperin’s fluency on air is the output of preparation time that viewers do not see. The calm is manufactured before the stream starts.
The third layer is physiological. Halperin trained himself over the years in the specific breath control, posture, and vocal placement that television demands. Men who appear on camera regularly learn to sit in a particular way, to breathe from the diaphragm rather than the chest, to deliver words on exhalation rather than through tension, and to keep the face and hands still enough to read as composed without appearing frozen. These are learnable skills taught at major news organizations and refined through coaching. Halperin received this coaching at ABC and at every subsequent outlet. The body on camera is a trained body. It does not sweat because it has been taught not to release the stress response that produces sweating.
The fourth layer is pharmacological and medical, in the ordinary sense. Men in high-volume television appearances commonly use beta-blockers to suppress the physiological stress response before performance. Beta-blockers such as propranolol block the effects of adrenaline on the cardiovascular system, eliminating the racing heart, the trembling hands, and the sweating that public speaking produces. They are widely used by musicians, public speakers, executives giving major presentations, and television personalities. The practice is not publicly discussed but is routine at the professional level. Whether Halperin uses them specifically is not publicly known, but the pattern of his on-camera presentation is consistent with their use. His skin remains dry, his hands do not shake, his voice does not waver regardless of the subject matter or the stakes of the moment. Studios also maintain temperatures in the low sixties Fahrenheit, which physically prevents sweating regardless of the performer’s stress level. The calm the viewer sees is partly a climate-controlled environment and partly whatever chemical or behavioral supports the performer uses to maintain it.
The fifth layer is studio craft. The composure the viewer sees is partly the result of a production apparatus designed to display composure regardless of what Halperin might be feeling underneath.
The sixth layer is the specific psychology of the host who has survived professional destruction and returned. A man who has already lost everything publicly has already endured the worst the profession can do to him. The ordinary stresses of live commentary, the difficult question, the hostile caller, the unexpected breaking news, the disagreement with a co-host, are trivial compared to the experience of being publicly destroyed by multiple women’s allegations, losing his book deal, losing his television contracts, and rebuilding from zero. The man who has survived that cannot be rattled by a tough interview. His threshold for what counts as stressful has been reset by experience. Most of what would make a less tested commentator nervous does not register for him as threat. The exile inoculated him against the ordinary pressures of live television. What remains is the specific category of threat that could produce a second exile, which he avoids structurally by not covering the topics that could produce one.
The seventh layer is coalition security. A host who believes his coalition will defend him against any likely attack can perform with confidence. A host who suspects his coalition will abandon him at the first sign of trouble cannot. Halperin has built his current operation inside a coalition that has already demonstrated its willingness to protect him. The Newsmax appearances, the Megyn Kelly relationship, the 2WAY partnership, the subscription base that paid to support his return, all constitute a coalition that has chosen him and will continue choosing him as long as he continues delivering what they want. He knows this. His composure on camera reflects the confidence of a man who is not auditioning for his coalition’s approval in real time. The approval has been secured. The performance maintains the relationship but does not determine it. This is different from the anxious composure of a rising host trying to earn a coalition’s favor. Halperin has already earned the favor he needs. He is performing from security.
The eighth layer is what the performance accomplishes for him personally. The calm host is the host whose authority viewers accept. Confidence is itself the product. A visibly nervous Halperin would undermine the insider-access premise his brand depends on. If he appears uncertain about what Washington insiders are thinking, the audience stops paying for his read on what Washington insiders are thinking. The composure is therefore commercially load-bearing. He cannot afford to sweat because sweating would dissolve the authority his subscription model requires. He has strong incentive to maintain composure regardless of what he actually feels. The incentive produces discipline. The discipline produces the calm surface the audience buys.
The ninth layer is the particular way he handles uncertainty on air. A less experienced host reveals uncertainty through hedging language, through the visible search for the right word, through the pause that signals he is figuring out his position in real time. Halperin almost never does this. He has developed the habit of speaking with consistent cadence and tonal confidence even when the content of what he is saying is qualified or speculative. He uses phrases like “my read is” and “what I’m hearing is” and “the smart money says” that signal source-based authority while remaining unfalsifiable. These phrases permit him to say almost anything with apparent confidence. The delivery does not betray uncertainty because the phrases accommodate uncertainty within a confident frame. This is a specific rhetorical skill, learned over years, that most political commentators do not master.
The tenth layer is the structural advantage of the format he has chosen. Livestreams and podcasts with friendly co-hosts do not put him under the kind of hostile questioning that would test his composure. The 2WAY format is a conversation among sympathetic collaborators. Megyn Kelly’s show treats him as a respected guest. Newsmax deploys him against opponents who are not in the room. His current productions have been structured to minimize the conditions under which his composure would be tested. A Halperin doing live interviews with adversarial guests several times a day would show more strain.
The eleventh layer is the biographical matter of what kind of man he is underneath the performance. By all accounts, Halperin was calm, controlled, and disciplined even before the exile. The traits that made him successful at The Note, the early-morning precision, the organizational discipline, the willingness to process massive information at speed, the refusal to be flustered by the daily political drama, are the same traits that now produce his on-camera composure. He is temperamentally a low-reactivity man. His baseline autonomic arousal is lower than most. This is partly genetic, partly cultivated, and partly the consequence of the obsessive-compulsive discipline that he brings to his work. The composure is not a performance pasted over an anxious man. It is an extension of how he operates in general. The performance is easy because the underlying personality is already composed.
The twelfth layer is what he conceals through the composure. A performer who never sweats is not necessarily a man who never feels pressure. He may be a man who has learned not to let pressure show. The absence of visible strain does not mean the absence of actual strain. Halperin’s composure is almost certainly concealing things he does not want the audience to see. The fatigue from fourteen productions weekly must be substantial. The ongoing psychological weight of the exile must still register internally even if it does not register externally. The anxiety about whether his coalition will continue supporting him, whether his subscription numbers will hold, whether his competitive position against younger Substack commentators will erode, must exist beneath the surface. The composure is a mask that serves him commercially and personally. The mask does not mean the face underneath is blank. It means the face underneath is not being shown.
Halperin’s on-camera calm has been engineered, rehearsed, medicated perhaps, produced, and performed for decades by a man whose livelihood depends on it and whose temperament supports it. The calm is real in the sense that the viewer sees it accurately. It is manufactured in the sense that the calm is the product of specific choices, specific habits, and specific commercial incentives rather than the spontaneous expression of a man at peace with his circumstances. A man performing fourteen hours of live political commentary weekly at age sixty-one with a recent history of public destruction is not a man at peace. He is a man who has become expert at appearing to be at peace, because appearing at peace is his job. The appearance is the product. The reality underneath belongs to him alone, and he does not show it.
Hybrid Vigor
Mark Halperin offers the inverse case to Baker. Where Baker shows what the selection pressures produce when an organism’s traits match its niche, Halperin shows what happens when the niche collapses and the organism must re-colonize. Both men came out of the same breeding population, trained in the same pipelines, absorbed the same coalition premises, and built careers on the same kind of access journalism. The difference lies in what happened when their individual traits intersected with the coalition’s changing immune calibrations. Baker got to keep performing. Halperin got classified as a pathogen and expelled.
Start with inbreeding depression, because Halperin displays it in a more visible form than Baker does. “Game Change,” his 2010 book with John Heilemann, stands as the purest product that the professional managerial class of elite political journalism has ever extruded. Campaigns as personality drama. Politics as palace intrigue. Voters as backdrop. Policy as a rumor somebody heard once. The book could not have been produced by anyone outside the narrow coalition that produced it. It could not have been imagined as valuable by anyone outside the same coalition. Its enormous commercial and critical success within that coalition, and the HBO film adaptation that followed, demonstrated exactly the inbreeding depression the essay describes: a closed breeding population generating a product that gets celebrated as brilliant inside the niche while being functionally useless for understanding the political reality the niche claims to cover. The same coalition that produced Halperin produced the appetite for Halperin’s book, and both the producer and the consumer were the same organism feeding itself.
“The Note,” which Halperin created at ABC, had done the same work earlier in the morning brief format. The Note treated the previous day’s political events as an insider briefing for other insiders, calibrated to the assumption that the reader already worked in the coalition and needed only the daily update on coalition status. That format turned out to be transferable. Politico Playbook, Axios AM, every morning newsletter that now saturates elite political media: all of them are direct descendants of what Halperin pioneered. The coalition’s morning ritual got built to his template. That is niche construction. The environment modifies itself in ways that favor the organism’s genotype. For fifteen years the environment Halperin had modified returned the favor, making his traits adaptive and his judgments authoritative.
His value to ABC, to Time, to Bloomberg, to publishers who paid him advances, was not that he understood politics but that he knew the operatives. He could produce quotes no one else could produce because the operatives trusted him enough to talk. The trust was built through long relationships, mutual favors, and the understanding that what got said to Halperin would get handled the way the operatives wanted it handled. This describes the endosymbiotic relationship the essay identifies between the press corps and the political class. Halperin specialized in the mutualistic phase of that relationship more intensely than Baker did. He became one of the organisms most thoroughly incorporated into the host.
In October 2017, after the Weinstein allegations reset the coalition’s threshold for tolerating sexual harassment, multiple women reported that Halperin had behaved abusively toward subordinates during his ABC years. The behavior had been known within the coalition for decades. It had not mattered to the coalition’s treatment of him because the coalition’s threshold had been calibrated differently. What changed in 2017 was not Halperin but the calibration. The coalition’s immune system recalibrated rapidly, and the same traits that had previously registered as coalition-tolerated now registered as pathogen. NBC fired him. Penguin canceled his book. HBO canceled the project in development. The PMC’s homeostatic response expelled him from the niche within weeks.
The homeostasis frame clarifies what the expulsion did and did not do. The coalition’s set point had been challenged by public attention to its sexual culture. The homeostatic response did not revise the set point at any deep level. It expelled the most visibly offending specimens and preserved the coalition’s underlying structure. Halperin functioned as the sacrifice that allowed the coalition to continue with minimal structural change. The reporters who had known about his behavior for years and said nothing did not face consequences, because forcing them to face consequences would have required restructuring the coalition. The symbolic expulsion maintained the system’s integrity against the perturbation. What looks from outside like accountability looks from the biological map like the organism shedding a limb to preserve the trunk.
Antagonistic pleiotropy identifies what Halperin shares with Baker and what differentiates them. The traits that made Halperin dominant early in his career, aggressive cultivation of sources, willingness to push boundaries in pursuit of access, comfort with operating outside the constraints that bound less successful reporters, are the same traits that produced the behavior that ended his mainstream career. The same alleles expressed beneficially in early adulthood expressed destructively later. Baker’s analogous traits, measured prose and preservation of sources, did not carry the same antagonistic expression because they operated in different registers. Both men optimized for access. Baker optimized through decorum. Halperin optimized through aggression. The coalition rewarded both approaches during the phase when access mattered most and the coalition’s costs of tolerating either were low. The environment changed faster for the aggression pathway than for the decorum pathway.
The re-colonization phase is where Halperin’s case becomes most useful for the framework. Expelled from the mainstream niche, he had to find a new one. The first attempt was outright outbreeding: Newsmax in 2020, the right-wing cable network then making moves toward legitimacy. This produced the outbreeding depression. Halperin’s establishment-journalism traits did not co-adapt with Newsmax’s conservative-activist genetic background. He was not conservative enough for the Newsmax audience and his presence there stained him further with his former coalition. Neither parent population’s co-adaptations worked in the hybrid, and the cross produced lower fitness than either parent would have produced on its own.
The second attempt worked better, or worked differently, because it addressed the niche problem from a different angle. Substack and his “2Way” platform constructed a niche that did not require outbreeding. It required instead a direct-to-audience relationship that bypassed the gatekeeping coalitions entirely. The frequency-dependent selection frame captures the logic. In the current environment, a disgraced former insider who still has operational knowledge and source relationships, and who now produces daily commentary outside the mainstream channels, occupies a rare niche. The rarity is the selection pressure. Audiences who want the kind of insider access journalism the mainstream has either abandoned or tainted will pay for it from somewhere, and the number of organisms that can produce that product from outside the mainstream is small. Halperin fits the niche because he retained the operational capacity when he lost the institutional position.
This is where the life history shift becomes visible. Halperin was slow life history at ABC and Time: long book projects, network television contracts, multi-year relationship investments. He had to become fast life history to survive the post-2017 environment. Daily Substack posts. Real-time election-night streams. Rapid-response video content. High-frequency output. The shift was not chosen. The environment forced it. The slow life history strategy only works when the institutional substrate exists to support long horizons. When that substrate collapses for you individually, either you shift to fast strategies or you exit the ecosystem. Halperin shifted.
The Red Queen race he runs now looks different from the one Baker runs. Baker races against other slow-life-history establishment chroniclers to hold his share of the prestige hierarchy. Halperin races against other post-establishment independents, former mainstream operators now on Substack, new-breed political influencers, cable commentators who moonlight on YouTube, for the attention of the audience that distrusts the mainstream but still wants political analysis from people who seem to know things. The race is faster, the rewards are lower per unit of output, and the stability is minimal, but the race is available to him when the mainstream race is not.
The crypsis question returns at the end, because what Halperin now does requires its own form of countershading adapted to a different environment. He cannot present as the mainstream neutral arbiter anymore. That coloration no longer works because the detection systems of both his former coalition and the audiences he now serves would read it as fraudulent. He has developed a new surface: operational chronicler who describes political reality without strong ideological valence, who reports what operatives tell him without filtering it through a progressive lens, who treats the Trump phenomenon as a political fact to be understood rather than a norm-violation to be flagged. This coloration matches the new niche. It appears flat to the audience he now serves because the audience’s detection systems are calibrated against the previous register. Whether any underlying ideological position sits beneath the new surface is the question the crypsis framework refuses to resolve from outside. Halperin may be a post-partisan operational analyst. He may be a man who has learned to match the coloration of the environment that pays him. The crypsis evolved specifically to defeat the detection, so the detection cannot tell.
In many social mammals, losing group membership is a survival crisis. The exiled wolf, the expelled chimpanzee, the pushed-out baboon male, and the outcast elephant all face dramatically reduced survival odds in the short term. Predation risk rises, food access drops, temperature regulation gets harder, and the animal’s entire behavioral repertoire has to reorient around solo existence or around finding a new group. The physiological signature of this state has been studied extensively. Cortisol spikes, immune function drops, reproductive hormones decline, and the animal enters what ethologists call a subordinate stress profile. The body prepares for chronic threat. The brain biases attention toward danger signals. The animal becomes hypervigilant, conservative in its movements, and reluctant to approach conspecifics without clear invitation.
Robert Sapolsky spent decades documenting this in baboons. Animals near the bottom of the hierarchy, and especially animals who have fallen from higher positions, show chronic elevated glucocorticoid levels that damage cardiovascular health, suppress immune function, and shorten lifespan. The fall hurts more than the low position. Animals born at the bottom adapt better than animals knocked down from the middle. The exile effect is not just about current status. It is about the transition from membership to non-membership, which the body registers as a sustained emergency.
The signals an exiled animal sends are worth examining. Submissive displays intensify. The animal offers appeasement gestures more frequently and more dramatically than before the expulsion. In primates, this means submissive presentation, averted gaze when observed by dominant animals, exaggerated grooming offers when contact is permitted, and carefully reduced body posture. The signals say: I am not a threat, I remember my place, I will accept subordinate terms for any readmission the group will grant. Halperin’s post-exile presentation has analogs to this. His visible contrition during the immediate aftermath, his careful avoidance of topics that could signal lack of appropriate shame, his repeated acknowledgment that his former colleagues have the right to distance themselves, all function as human versions of submissive display. The man exiled from the coalition signals continuously that he understands the coalition’s power over him and accepts terms he would not have accepted before.
Ostracism research in humans and primates has documented a specific pattern that ethologists call the reintegration dance. The exiled animal cannot simply return. It must be readmitted through a process that involves the dominant members of the group signaling conditional acceptance, the exile performing appropriate submission, and the group as a whole reaching some threshold of acknowledgment that the exile has served its purpose. Kipling Williams’s work on ostracism in humans maps this carefully. The ostracized person first experiences pain in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex that neurally resembles physical pain. This phase is acute and unbearable. The second phase is coping, where the ostracized person tries various strategies to restore connection or to find alternative connections. The third phase is resignation, where if reconnection fails, the person withdraws into depression, hostility, or alternative community. The pattern repeats across species.
The concept of coalition permeability matters here. Some animal groups are highly permeable, admitting new members and readmitting former members with moderate difficulty. Others are closed, treating exile as effectively permanent. Human coalitions vary in the same way. The legacy media coalition that expelled Halperin in 2017 has proven to be moderately permeable in the sense that some of its alumni have returned, but the terms of return are significantly reduced status. Harvey Weinstein cannot return. Louis C.K. has returned partially through alternative channels. Halperin has returned through alternative coalitions rather than through the original one. The permeability of a coalition determines which exile trajectories are available. Halperin could not have rebuilt inside MSNBC or The New York Times because the coalition that expelled him does not permit full reintegration on acceptable terms. He rebuilt inside coalitions that were willing to admit him on terms he could accept.
The biology of alternative group formation is directly relevant. When an exile cannot return to the original group, the adaptive response is often to join or to form a new coalition. In primates, expelled males sometimes form all-male bands called bachelor groups, which provide reduced but real protection and resources. In wolves, expelled individuals sometimes join other packs or form new packs with other loners. The new group has different membership rules than the original. It often accepts animals the original group rejected. Its internal standards are shaped by the shared experience of exclusion. Human parallel: the heterodox media ecosystem that has absorbed Halperin, Heather Mac Donald’s Manhattan Institute context, Glenn Greenwald’s Substack network, Matt Taibbi’s Racket, and others forms something like a bachelor band for exiles from mainstream credentialing institutions. The new group’s internal culture reflects the founders’ shared experience of expulsion. It is skeptical of credentialing institutions, hostile to the moral vocabularies those institutions deploy, and more willing to extend trust to people the mainstream has rejected.
An exiled animal that succeeds in building an alternative existence often does so by modifying its environment in ways that favor its survival. The exile does not simply adapt to the conditions of exclusion. He reshapes the environment around himself to make his existence viable. Halperin’s 2WAY operation, his Substack subscription base, and his bench of collaborators constitute niche construction. He has built a local environment in which his continued existence and flourishing are possible despite his exclusion from the broader environment that once contained him. The niche he has built selects for certain collaborators, certain audience members, and certain topics. The niche also reshapes him. Men who build alternative niches come to resemble their niches over time. Halperin after eight years of niche construction is becoming increasingly shaped by the niche he built.
In baboons and chimpanzees, animals that have been expelled sometimes maintain visual contact with the original group from a distance. They do not approach, but they signal their continued existence and occasionally their continued submissive acknowledgment of the group’s authority. This behavior has been interpreted as a long-range reintegration attempt, as mourning, and as threat monitoring. Halperin’s post-exile behavior toward his former institutional context has elements of all three. He maintains visibility in the general political commentary space that his former colleagues inhabit, he occasionally acknowledges the institutions that expelled him, and he watches for signals about whether his current coalition is stable or whether he might need to maintain monitoring for further threat. The distance is maintained. The contact is not severed completely.
The concept of vigilance displacement from predation biology applies. Animals that have suffered major threats develop persistent vigilance patterns that outlast the original threat. The animal that survived a predator attack watches for predators more vigilantly for the rest of its life. The vigilance becomes costly because it consumes attention and energy that could be directed elsewhere, but the organism cannot shut it off. Halperin’s current production discipline has this quality. The schedule he maintains is partly necessary and partly a vigilance response to a threat that has already passed. He produces at this volume partly because he cannot afford to stop, because stopping would trigger the coalition-withdrawal anxiety that the exile created. The vigilance is adaptive in one sense and costly in another. It keeps him safe from a repetition of the original threat and it drains him of resources that could be used for other things.
Chimpanzees and other primates remember the behavior of specific group members for years. They track who was aggressive, who was cooperative, who was reliable, and who broke trust. Animals that broke trust at high status do not recover the trust quickly. The social memory is persistent. Human social memory works similarly, with the added feature that human reputational information can be stored in media, documents, and institutional records indefinitely. Halperin’s 2017 scandal is permanent in a way that an exiled chimpanzee’s original transgression is not. The Google search on his name will always return the scandal. Every new collaborator, every new employer, every new business partner encounters the reputational record before they encounter Halperin personally. The permanence of the record shapes his ongoing relationships in ways that no animal parallel fully captures. Primates have to reconstruct their reputations through ongoing behavior. Humans have to reconstruct their reputations against a permanent record that never updates itself.
When an exile tries to rejoin a group, or tries to build a new group, he often does so by performing costly signals that demonstrate his commitment. The signals are costly precisely because they could not be performed by someone who was not seriously committed. In primates, this includes accepting subordinate positions for extended periods, performing grooming and provisioning beyond what is immediately reciprocated, and enduring aggression without retaliation. Halperin’s fourteen-production weekly schedule is arguably a costly signal to his new coalition and to his subscribers. The effort demonstrates that he is serious about the return, that he is not coasting, and that he accepts the terms of rebuilding rather than demanding the compensation his pre-exile status would have commanded. The costliness is the signal’s value. A less costly version of the return would be less credible.
There is also a specific literature on what happens when animals are permanently denied reintegration. The resignation phase Kipling Williams identified in human ostracism research has parallels in primate ethology. Animals that cannot find alternative groups and cannot return to the original group show progressive behavioral withdrawal, reduced exploration, reduced reproductive effort, and shortened lifespans. The organism’s motivational system collapses when reconnection becomes impossible. The body appears to conclude that further effort is not worth the metabolic cost. This is the biological substrate of human despair in long-term social exclusion. Halperin has avoided this outcome by finding alternative coalitions willing to receive him. The biology suggests that if those coalitions withdrew, the collapse would come fast and hard. The alternative niche is not optional for his continued functioning. It is life support.
Shame is the emotion that primates experience when their standing in a group drops significantly. It is physiologically distinct from guilt, which is about specific actions, and closer to the general status-loss response. The shame response involves reduced eye contact, reduced vocal volume, postural contraction, and withdrawal from contested social space. The function of shame appears to be to communicate acceptance of demoted status, which reduces the likelihood of further aggression from dominant group members. Halperin went through a major shame episode publicly in 2017 and his subsequent behavior shows the physiological adaptations that shame produces. The reduced willingness to make strong claims about the topics that triggered the exile, the careful modulation of his return, the visible caution in situations where his status could be challenged, all reflect the persistent shame response that the original status loss installed in his nervous system. Shame of this magnitude does not resolve in years. It leaves a permanent tone in the organism.
The pattern is coherent across species. An organism expelled from its group experiences physiological crisis, performs submissive signals, attempts reintegration, builds alternative niches if reintegration fails, maintains vigilance against further threat, and carries the status-loss signature for the rest of its life regardless of how successful the rebuild becomes. The specific human layers of permanent reputation records and media-enabled alternative coalitions add complications, but the underlying biology is continuous with what ethologists observe in other social mammals. Halperin’s trajectory reads as a human instance of a pattern that predates human culture by tens of millions of years. The pattern is legible because the underlying nervous system that produces it is the same nervous system other mammals carry. What looks like a uniquely modern media story is a mammalian social biology story running on modern media infrastructure.
Halperin Under Hugo Mercier and John M. Doris
Mark Halperin has built a career as a chronicler of American presidential campaigns. From his years running ABC News’s political operation, through the daily tipsheet The Note, through the Game Change books with John Heilemann, through the 2017 career collapse and the rebuild at 2Way, Halperin has operated across multiple modes. A Mercier-Doris reading needs to distinguish them because the frameworks evaluate each mode differently. One of them survives the critique well and deserves credit the earlier analysis did not give it. Another fails the critique in the specific ways the frameworks predict. A third operates in a mixed zone where the evaluation depends on which dimension one attends to.
Start with the mode that survives best. Halperin is a transmitter of information from high-stakes vigilance systems to audiences whose alternative is information from lower-stakes systems. The 2024 campaign illustrated this work at its clearest. For most of the campaign year, Halperin conveyed private polling from campaign sources that showed Trump ahead in the battleground states. The private polls tracked what the election actually produced. The public polling ecosystem and the mainstream commentary based on it did not. Halperin’s transmission gave his audience accurate information about the race that most of the media environment was not providing.
Mercier’s framework explains why this asymmetry existed. Campaigns that pay for private polls have stakes in accuracy that activate rigorous vigilance on their pollsters. Resource allocation decisions depend on the polls. A pollster who misses gets fired. A candidate who allocates based on wrong information loses. The vigilance is operational in the Mercier sense, calibrated to vital interests, and produces accuracy because the alternative is failure at tasks that matter. Public polling operates under different stakes. The pollster who produces polls for media consumption serves audiences whose engagement tracks narrative rather than accuracy. Being wrong carries weaker consequences than producing boring accurate polls. Vigilance on accuracy runs weaker than vigilance on compelling coverage. The result is a polling ecosystem in which the poll that gets commissioned and reported is the poll that produces coverage, not the poll that produces accurate information.
Halperin’s position gave him access to the first system. His career relationships built over decades, his willingness to operate outside mainstream media gatekeeping after 2017, his subscription model that rewarded accuracy because his audience had paid for it, all aligned his work with the stakes of the insider system rather than with the narrative incentives of public polling coverage. His audience got the benefit. They had a running picture of the race that tracked reality while the rest of the coverage was producing a different picture.
Doris specifies why the rest of the mainstream media did not do this work. Individual mainstream journalists were not uniformly ignorant of what private polls showed. Many of them had access to similar information through similar networks. What they did not do was transmit the information because their situations made transmission costly. Editor expectations, peer reactions, source relationships with official campaign spokespeople who were producing the preferred public narrative, career considerations in outlets whose audiences wanted a different story. The journalists’ behavior tracked the situations they occupied. Halperin, having been excommunicated from those situations after 2017 and having rebuilt in a different situation, was operating under different incentives. His situation rewarded accuracy. Theirs rewarded narrative. Both groups produced what their situations rewarded.
This work is real, and it extends beyond polling to a broader category of insider reporting that Halperin does well. Candidates’ actual states of mind that differ from their public presentations. Campaign manager debates about strategy that get concealed in official messaging. Donor conversations that reveal what the operational class actually thinks about the race. Resource allocation decisions that contradict public claims of strength. All of this is information from high-stakes vigilance systems that Halperin transmits to audiences who otherwise would not have access. The transmission is a service, and it is the part of Halperin’s work the Mercier-Doris framework credits most clearly.
The mode that fails the critique is different. Halperin’s interpretive framework for why elections move treats campaign decisions, cycle wins, debate moments, and candidate performances as causally decisive. This is the news cycle frame examined at length in the earlier analysis. The framework overestimates what campaigns accomplish at the level of persuading persuadable voters. Mercier’s evidence shows that populations with stakes run vigilance that resists persuasion against prior commitment, and populations without stakes form reflective beliefs that do not drive behavior. The persuadable voters Halperin’s framework treats as the target of campaign effects are either high-stakes voters whose vigilance resists the campaigns or low-stakes voters whose preferences form through situational factors the campaigns do not control. Doris’s evidence shows that actual voting behavior tracks situational features, peer networks, employment conditions, local organization, the ground-level architecture of election day, more tightly than it tracks the campaign messaging that wins daily cycles.
The interpretive framework fails because it credits campaign inputs with effects the evidence does not support. It remains stable because the population that rewards it, campaign professionals, political journalists, engaged partisans, operates within stakes that make the framework plausible to them. The general electorate produces outcomes the framework does not predict well, as 2016 and 2024 both illustrated. Halperin continues deploying the framework because his audience continues to reward the deployment. The situation generates the interpretation the situation pays for.
The mixed zone concerns Halperin’s daily cycle coverage during active campaigns. This coverage combines the transmission work and the interpretive framework in ways that are hard to separate in practice. Halperin conveys accurate information about what campaigns are doing, what sources are saying, what the internal polling shows. He then interprets the information through the cycle wins frame that overstates campaign causal power. The accurate transmission and the inflated interpretation run together. The audience that benefits from the transmission also absorbs the interpretation. Whether the net value is positive depends on which dimension the audience takes away.
For an audience that can distinguish the two, the transmission work is valuable and the interpretation is separable. You can listen to Halperin daily for the private polling and the insider information while holding the cycle wins frame at arm’s length. The earlier analysis missed this possibility by treating the two dimensions as inseparable. They are separable if the listener knows to separate them. Your own use of Halperin during 2024 illustrates this. You got the battleground polling that tracked reality. You did not need to buy the causal framework to benefit from the factual transmission.
For an audience that does not separate the dimensions, the interpretive frame contaminates the factual reporting. Listeners absorb the claim that specific campaign decisions produced specific polling movements when the polling movements were tracking fundamentals the campaigns did not control. The audience comes away with accurate information about the race and an inaccurate framework for why the race moved as it did. The information is useful. The framework is misleading. Whether this matters depends on what the listener does with it. For most listeners, the framework is reflective belief that does not drive their own behavior, so the inaccuracy is inert. For listeners who make decisions based on the framework, operatives, consultants, donors, the inaccuracy produces costs.
The 2024 campaign surfaced this distinction with unusual clarity because the gap between what campaigns were doing and what was moving the election was large. Trump’s campaign violated most of the conventional rules of campaign craft. He skipped debates. He gave rambling speeches. He ran against his own party’s establishment. He received coordinated elite opposition from institutions that usually determine coverage agendas. The cycle wins framework predicted this produced cumulative damage that would be decisive. The private polling Halperin was transmitting showed otherwise. The fundamentals, inflation, immigration, incumbent fatigue, regional realignment, were moving the race in Trump’s favor regardless of what the cycle wins framework said should be happening. Halperin’s transmission work tracked the fundamentals. His interpretive framework continued to treat campaign decisions as causally decisive. Both ran in parallel. The transmission proved accurate on election day. The interpretation required post-hoc revision to explain why the factors it had emphasized did not produce the outcomes it predicted.
This pattern generalizes. Halperin’s transmission work is better than the interpretive framework he wraps it in because the two activities operate under different stakes. The transmission depends on his sources, whose stakes force accuracy. The interpretation depends on his audience, whose stakes reward the cycle wins framework. The sources produce accurate factual information that Halperin conveys. The audience produces market demand for an interpretive framework that does not track what actually moves elections. Halperin provides both because his career situation rewards providing both. The combination serves his audience’s dual desires for accurate information and compelling narrative.
Mercier’s framework explains why this combination is stable. The audience’s stakes in accurate factual information about the race are real, and those stakes activate vigilance that would punish Halperin for transmitting inaccurate information. The audience’s stakes in the cycle wins framework are different. They care about the framework because it makes the campaign interesting and gives them a language for discussing it with each other. They do not care whether the framework accurately describes causation because they are not making resource allocation decisions based on it. Vigilance on the factual information runs hard. Vigilance on the interpretive framework runs weakly. Halperin’s output reflects both patterns. The factual reporting is accurate because the audience’s vigilance requires it. The interpretive framework is inflated because the audience’s vigilance does not require accuracy and actively rewards compelling narrative.
Doris adds that Halperin’s career situation at 2Way selects for the specific combination his audience wants. The subscription model means he must produce content his audience is willing to pay for over time. The audience pays for insider access and narrative coherence together. Halperin cannot offer only one without losing half the subscription value. The situation therefore produces the combination regardless of whether the interpretive framework is accurate, because the business model requires the combination. A Halperin placed in a different situation, perhaps a pure research role at a political science institute, would produce different outputs. His work is the equilibrium of the specific subscription-based insider commentary situation, and the specific combination of accurate transmission and inflated interpretation that equilibrium produces.
The 2017 collapse and the rebuild illustrate how situations shape the work itself. Pre-2017 Halperin operated in mainstream media institutions whose stakes required alignment with the Democratic coalition’s preferred narratives during campaigns. The transmission work was partially present but filtered through editorial expectations that softened information that cut against the preferred frame. Post-2017 Halperin operates independently of those institutions. The transmission work is more direct because the filters are gone. The cycle wins interpretive framework persists because it serves audience demand rather than institutional editorial expectations. The rebuild clarified rather than changed what Halperin was fundamentally doing. He had always been a transmitter of insider information wrapped in a cycle wins frame. The mainstream institutional period softened the transmission and intensified the narrative alignment. The independent period hardens the transmission and loosens the narrative alignment. The interpretive framework remains, but its specific content now serves a different audience with different stakes.
One implication of this analysis is that Halperin’s value is higher for sophisticated listeners who can extract the transmission work from the interpretive wrapping. The listener who can take Halperin’s private polling reports seriously while holding the cycle wins framework lightly gets most of the value with minimal cost. The listener who absorbs both as authoritative gets the accurate information at the cost of acquiring an inflated framework. The first listener uses Halperin well. The second listener is absorbing what his situation produces without distinguishing what the situation incentivizes accurately from what it incentivizes inflatedly.
A second implication concerns the comparative assessment of Halperin against the mainstream media environment he operates alongside. The earlier analysis flattened Halperin into the general critique of campaign coverage, which understates his specific contribution. The accurate framing is that most mainstream campaign coverage suffers from both the transmission problem and the interpretive problem. It transmits less accurate information because its sources and institutional filters impose narrative alignment costs, and it deploys the cycle wins framework in ways that are similarly inflated. Halperin, in his current mode, substantially solves the transmission problem while continuing to deploy the cycle wins framework. He is better than most of the mainstream on the dimension that matters most for information consumers, while remaining comparable to the mainstream on the dimension where both fail.
Commentators whose stakes align with insider sources’ stakes produce more accurate transmission work than commentators whose stakes align with institutional narrative. Commentators whose audience pays directly for information tend to produce more accurate transmission than commentators whose audience is delivered to advertisers through narrative engagement. Subscription models reward accuracy more than advertising models because the subscriber’s stakes are in getting what he paid for, while the advertiser’s stakes are in audience engagement that narrative often produces better than accuracy.
Halperin’s independent subscription operation illustrates this pattern. His audience pays to know what is actually happening. Accurate transmission is what they pay for. He produces it because the business model depends on it. The mainstream media competitors operate under different incentives that consistently produce less accurate transmission of the same underlying information. Halperin’s 2024 performance was not a one-time achievement. It was the structural consequence of his specific post-2017 business model meeting a campaign year in which the gap between accurate information and mainstream narrative was unusually large.
What survives the combined critique is a Halperin with two distinct contributions. The first is the transmission work, which serves his audience well and cuts through the narrative alignment problems that afflict most mainstream campaign coverage. This work is valuable, was particularly visible in 2024, and is what the Mercier-Doris framework credits most directly. The second is a smaller Halperin who produces interpretive content about why campaigns produce the outcomes they produce. This work remains vulnerable to the Mercier-Doris critique in the specific ways the earlier analysis laid out. The interpretive framework overstates campaign causal power. The audience rewards the overstatement. The situation generates the output the audience pays for.
For a daily listener who wants accurate information about presidential campaigns, Halperin is a valuable source precisely because his situation rewards the transmission accuracy that his mainstream competitors’ situations do not reward. For the same listener who wants to understand why elections move as they do, Halperin is less valuable because his interpretive framework carries the cycle wins inflation that the evidence does not support. Both dimensions can be taken from his work by a listener who distinguishes them. The listener who distinguishes gets most of the value at minimal cost. This is the accurate summary of what Halperin offers, and the earlier analysis was wrong to collapse the two dimensions into a single negative assessment. Halperin’s transmission work deserves specific credit, and the Mercier-Doris framework produces that credit cleanly once the two dimensions are separated as the evidence requires.
Why is Mark Halperin the only journalist who shares the private polls?
Private polling flows through specific channels that are gatekept tightly. Campaigns pay pollsters substantial money for information the campaigns want for their own use. Sharing the polls externally can burn the pollster, damage the campaign’s strategic position, and betray donor confidence for donors who want their investment information protected. The people with access to private polls are campaign managers, senior strategists, major donors, the pollsters themselves, and a small number of trusted journalists who have built decade-long relationships with these actors. The number of journalists with genuine access at this level is probably somewhere between twenty and fifty across the entire political media environment. Halperin is in that group. Most reporters are not.
But access alone does not explain the asymmetry. Plenty of reporters in that group of twenty to fifty know what the private polls show. They do not report it.
The journalists with access operate in institutional situations that impose costs on transmitting information that cuts against the preferred institutional narrative. The New York Times political reporter who knows what Democratic private polls show about the battleground states in September 2024 faces specific situational pressures. His editors have an editorial line that favors coverage emphasizing Harris’s strength and Trump’s weaknesses. His colleagues have been producing coverage consistent with that line for months. His sources in the Democratic campaign have shared the private polling with him on condition that he protect their operational security. His professional peer network treats reporting that helps Trump as evidence of either poor judgment or bad politics. His career path within mainstream journalism depends on remaining in good standing with editors, colleagues, and sources who all point in the same direction.
The situation therefore imposes costs on transmission that override his personal stakes in accuracy. He knows the information. He does not report it. The non-reporting is not cowardice in any dramatic sense. It is what his situation rewards. Behavior tracks situation. The reporter’s behavior tracks the situation his career places him in. The same reporter in a different situation would behave differently without having different beliefs.
Halperin operates outside these situations. The 2017 collapse removed him from mainstream institutional employment. His rebuild at 2Way put him in a subscription business whose audience pays for accurate information. His source relationships are now direct rather than mediated through editors. His professional peer network is a different peer network that rewards accuracy over narrative alignment. His career path does not require standing with mainstream editorial expectations because mainstream outlets are not employing him.
Halperin transmits what his sources tell him because his situation rewards transmission. The reporters at mainstream outlets do not transmit because their situations reward non-transmission. Both groups have similar access to the underlying information. The transmission differs because the situations differ.
Mercier’s framework adds a point about why nobody comments on this. The populations that would have stakes in calling attention to the asymmetry have reasons not to.
Mainstream journalists are not going to publicly identify that their peers and colleagues are sitting on accurate information for institutional reasons. Doing so would break ranks with their professional community and expose them to retaliation. Their situation rewards pretending the asymmetry does not exist or explaining it away as Halperin’s idiosyncrasy rather than systemic suppression.
Academics who study political communication have similar incentives. The academic study of political journalism is largely staffed by scholars whose situations resemble the mainstream journalists’ situations. Their peer networks, their editorial expectations for journal publication, their career paths all reward treating mainstream media as authoritative and dissident transmitters as outliers. The academic study of the 2024 coverage failures is beginning to emerge but it is being framed carefully in ways that preserve mainstream journalistic reputation rather than identifying the systematic failure Halperin’s performance documented.
The alternative media ecosystem that would have the stakes to notice is focused on different things. Conservative media notices that mainstream media produced a misleading picture of 2024 but frames this as liberal bias rather than as a structural failure of the private-to-public polling transmission. The framing that conservative media produces is compatible with its audience’s prior commitments about liberal bias but does not capture the specific mechanism the Mercier-Doris framework identifies. Independent journalists who operate outside both mainstream and conservative ecosystems rarely have the insider access that would let them verify Halperin’s transmission work. They note Halperin is doing something unusual but cannot independently confirm what the private polls actually show.
Halperin himself does not comment on the asymmetry extensively because doing so would damage his source relationships. If he publicly identified that mainstream reporters are sitting on the same information he is transmitting, the sources that share information with him would worry he might publicly identify what they share. His value to his sources depends on his discretion about the broader ecosystem. He can transmit specific polling without burning sources. He cannot openly attack the mainstream for not transmitting the same polling without making his sources nervous about what else he might say publicly.
The subscriber audience that benefits from Halperin’s transmission work notices the asymmetry in some sense but does not have platforms to articulate it publicly. The subscribers are political junkies, operatives, donors, engaged observers. They know mainstream coverage has been misleading them. They use Halperin as a corrective. They do not typically produce public commentary about media structure because they are not media critics. They are consumers using a better source when one is available.
The small number of media critics who could articulate this structural point face their own situational pressures. Professional media criticism is concentrated in outlets like the Columbia Journalism Review, Poynter, and academic media studies programs. These institutions are staffed by people whose situations overlap with mainstream journalists’ situations. They can critique specific stories after the fact. They have more difficulty producing systematic analysis of how mainstream media structurally fails at a category of reporting that an outside commentator is doing successfully.
The result is a specific kind of hidden failure. The asymmetry exists. Some participants know it exists. None of the populations that could name it publicly have strong incentives to do so. Halperin’s sources stay hidden. His subscribers benefit privately. The mainstream reporters who sat on the same information face no accountability because no institutional voice calls them to account. The academic study of 2024 coverage is emerging but carefully, and the specific mechanism Mercier and Doris together identify is not the frame being deployed.
Mainstream political coverage systematically underperforms alternative independent coverage on accuracy during campaign cycles where the fundamentals point in a direction the mainstream coalition’s preferred narrative resists. The underperformance is not about individual journalistic quality. It is about the situational architecture that rewards narrative alignment over accuracy. The mainstream journalists are doing what their situations reward. The independent commentators, when their situations reward accuracy, produce better information. The 2024 case is unusually clean because the gap was large and Halperin’s transmission was persistent throughout the cycle. Future cases will be less visible if the gap is smaller or if no independent commentator is systematically transmitting the insider information.
That nobody comments on this is itself data about how the political information ecosystem works. The populations with the stakes to comment are trapped in situations that discourage commenting. The populations that would benefit from the commentary do not have platforms to demand it. The academics who could document the pattern are in career situations that do not reward the documentation. The mechanism persists because all the populations that interact with it have reasons to let it persist.
During an active campaign, calling attention to this structural failure would be politically consequential. The side whose preferred narrative the mainstream coverage was promoting would be harmed if the accurate information reached more voters. The professionals whose careers depend on mainstream access would be harmed if they broke ranks. The incentives against public discussion peak precisely when the discussion would matter most. After the election, the incentives shift but the opportunity to change behavior has passed. The post-election analysis can identify that coverage was off but cannot change what happened. So the systematic pattern becomes visible only when it has stopped mattering for the specific race.
Halperin was the visible exception during the 2024 campaign because his situation was exceptional. The situation was exceptional because his 2017 collapse had removed him from the institutional architecture that produces the systematic failure and his rebuild had placed him in a subscription business that rewards the behavior the institutional architecture punishes. Without the 2017 collapse, there likely would have been no visible transmission of private polls in 2024. The collapse, which at the time looked like career destruction, produced the situational conditions under which Halperin could do the work that he did. The fact that his career trajectory had to pass through public disgrace in order for him to end up in a situation that rewarded accuracy is itself evidence about how the mainstream institutional architecture normally works against accuracy.
The insider network that knows what private polls show is a real thing, and access to it is a form of social capital built over decades. Halperin had built this access before 2017. The access persisted through his career collapse because the sources knew him personally and did not share the mainstream institutions’ reasons for ostracizing him. The rebuild could draw on the access because the sources were willing to continue providing information to someone they trusted individually. A journalist who had never built such access could not replicate Halperin’s work by simply setting up a subscription service. A journalist who had built such access but had not experienced a 2017-style situational rupture would likely still be operating within the institutional architecture that suppresses transmission. The combination Halperin represents, deep insider access plus situational placement outside the architecture that suppresses transmission, is rare and not easily replicated.
Halperin is transmitting what he is transmitting because of a specific biographical trajectory that produced a specific situational equilibrium. When his career ends, there may not be a successor. Building the access takes decades. Getting situated outside the mainstream institutional architecture typically requires career disruption that most journalists are trying to avoid. The conjunction is unusual. The next campaign cycle may not have a Halperin, and the systematic failure may therefore be less visible because no independent commentator is doing the transmission work.
Mainstream institutional situations systematically suppress accurate transmission when the accurate information cuts against preferred narrative, is what Mercier and Doris together predict and what the 2024 coverage illustrated with unusual clarity. The silence about this pattern is itself part of what the pattern produces. Everyone with stakes to speak has reasons not to. The pattern therefore persists, Halperin remains the exception, and the people benefiting from his work mostly absorb it privately without articulating the structural implications.
Hero System
Halperin’s hero system is access journalism, the secular faith that proximity to power equals proximity to truth. The hero of this faith is the insider who gets the callback, sits in the room, knows which aide said what to which principal on the plane, and transcribes the private story that explains the public one. Game Change codified the liturgy. The reader enters the tent, hears the curse words, learns who cried. The journalist earns his standing by making himself indispensable to the story of how power operates.
The system has its sacraments. The scoop is the eucharist. The tick-tock is the sermon. The Sunday show appearance confirms ordination. The morning memo, which Halperin institutionalized at ABC as The Note, functions as the breviary for political operatives who want to know what the insider class thinks that day. Halperin built his authority by producing these documents before most others did them that way.
The god served is the principal. You earn his trust by proving you will not burn sources, will not take sides in public, will not write anything that costs someone reelection unless the story is solid enough that the cost is worth it. You lose the trust when principals read you as partisan, or sloppy, or out of the loop. The reward is the callback. The callback is proof that you still matter.
The formation has family roots. Morton Halperin worked for Kissinger, got wiretapped by him, moved through the think tanks and Open Society. Mark grew up in a household where nearness to power was the medium of significance. The hero system he inherited was cosmopolitan Washington proximity, the belief that a man’s life matters to the degree that the principals take his call.
The insider’s authority rests on his own testimony that he is in the loop. When readers stop believing this, the structure collapses. The system demands a performed neutrality that works only if both parties want the journalist in their briefings. When one party decides insider journalists are enemies, the access model contracts. The currency is intangible, reputation and trust and proximity, which means a single shock might zero out decades of accumulated capital.
The 2017 allegations did that. Halperin lost his MSNBC contract, his book deal, his Bloomberg position. The priesthood revoked his orders. The exile tested whether the system could be reentered.
His path back shows what the hero system demands. He took the Newsmax slot because it gave him a camera and an audience that did not care about the 2017 allegations. He built 2WAY as a subscription platform where he runs long interviews with operators and principals. The product is access journalism delivered to an audience that wants to feel inside the room, the same content with new packaging.
The four coalition questions map onto him cleanly. He relies for status and income on operators who grant interviews, subscribers who pay for proximity, and a right-leaning audience that rewards him for treating Republican principals with respect rather than contempt. He must attract and retain operators on both sides, because his brand requires at least the appearance of bipartisan access, though the mix has shifted rightward since Newsmax. Membership in his coalition shows in the insider cadence, the operator shorthand, the refusal to moralize about candidates, the willingness to take seriously what party professionals worry about. If he moves toward open partisanship, the other side stops returning calls and the access model breaks. If he moves toward outsider critique of political media, his old allies stop inviting him on and his claim to insider standing dissolves.
The hero system is the immortality project. Halperin’s project is to be remembered as the chronicler of a political era, the man who knew what happened inside the rooms of 2008 and 2012 and 2016 and 2024. Exile from the priesthood threatens the significance of the life, not just the income of the career.
Betrayals: The Unpredictability of Human Relations by Gabriella Turnaturi
Start with the Razumov axiom. “All a man can betray is his conscience.” Halperin had decades of mutual bond with mainstream political journalism. Father in DC policy world. Harvard. ABC News. The Note as the daily insider tipsheet. Game Change as a bestseller. Bloomberg, MSNBC, Time, NBC. By Conrad’s strict test, the bond was real, voluntary, mutually acknowledged across roughly three decades. Either party could betray the other.
The question is what the bond was contingent on. Journalism’s stated terms included professional conduct, which in formal documents included treatment of colleagues regardless of sex. Halperin’s alleged conduct (sexual harassment of subordinates and colleagues over years at ABC) violated the stated terms. By that reading, he betrayed first. The 2017 expulsion was consequence, not counter-betrayal. The Razumov axiom gives him no foothold here. He did not keep faith with the bond.
But the operative norms of elite political journalism circa 2000 did not enforce the stated terms in the way they came to be enforced after 2017. Conduct of the kind alleged was tolerated, joked about, survivable, sometimes career-enhancing. The gap between stated and operative norms was wide. Halperin was free-riding on the gap. So another reading says he was held in 2017 to norms that had not been operative when the conduct occurred. The community changed its rules and applied the new rules retroactively. By this reading, the community produced the rupture by its norm-shift, not he by his conduct.
Halperin did not change. The community changed around him.
Change is perceived as betrayal when the changing party hides the change. Did the community hide its change? In one sense, no. The #MeToo movement was public, loud, broadcast. In another sense, yes. The community did not formally announce that conduct previously tolerated would now be sanctioned retroactively against named individuals. There was no warning period, no grace clause, no rule that prior conduct under prior norms was protected from revisiting. The change was applied without the kind of involvement-in-the-process Turnaturi requires for change-without-betrayal.
So Halperin can claim, with some structural validity, that the community changed without involving him. He was hit with a norm-shift whose retroactive application he could not have anticipated.
The move has limits. The norms applied in 2017 were not invented in 2017. The stated norms had been the same for decades. The change was in enforcement, not content. So Halperin’s claim is narrower than Wax’s: he can say the community changed its enforcement, not that it changed its rules. The community can answer that he had decades of notice about the stated rules and chose to ignore them under cover of weak enforcement.
Time asymmetry is unusually rich. Halperin experienced the rupture as sudden. October 2017: CNN report, more reports, lost contracts, cancelled book deal, expulsion from NBC News, gone from his network seat. Days, not years. For the women who came forward, the time had been long. Some had been carrying remembered incidents for over a decade. Their professional lives had proceeded while the experiences sat unspoken. The expropriated time runs strongly on their side. They had years of professional time recoded retroactively as time spent enduring conduct that should have been actionable but was not.
For the broader journalism community, the time experience was mixed. Some had heard rumors for years. Some had not. Once the reporting hit, everyone had to decide what they had known, what they should have known, what their non-action across the years had meant. The community’s relationship to its own past changed.
Reinterpretation of the past is sharp. After 2017, Halperin’s earlier work got reread. Game Change in particular came under scrutiny. His treatment of Hillary Clinton. His treatment of women in his books and segments. His sourcing patterns. Were these always problematic, now visible? Or are critics retrofitting a man who is now seen as wrong with crimes he did not commit in his writing? Once betrayal is perceived, all prior evidence gets reinterpreted in its light. Halperin’s body of work got mined for early warnings. Some of the warnings are probably real. Some are probably retroactive narrative construction. Same body of work. Two retrospective narratives.
Turnaturi insists that both parties almost always collaborate in producing betrayal. The political journalism community collaborated with Halperin’s situation for years. People knew. Editors knew. Network executives knew. Female colleagues told their own networks. The community absorbed and contained the knowledge without acting on it. The community’s pre-2017 non-action was a form of collaboration in producing what later became the rupture.
This is uncomfortable for the community. Their post-2017 indignation is structurally complicated by their pre-2017 toleration. They were not innocent victims of his behavior. They had let it ride for reasons (institutional inertia, fear of conflict, complicity, simple disregard of female colleagues’ concerns) that look worse in hindsight than they felt in the moment. The rupture was as much their reversal as his conduct.
Halperin also collaborated. He chose to keep doing what he was doing. He read the room and concluded, correctly for decades, that there were no consequences. He did not adjust his behavior despite the broader culture changing in visible ways through the 2010s. He benefited from the gap between stated and operative norms. He collaborated with the community in keeping the gap open. Both parties built the rupture together over decades.
The shared vocabulary in elite journalism around “professionalism,” “appropriate conduct,” “boundaries” was used for years while meaning different things to different people. Some thought professionalism meant the work and the deliverables. Some thought it included treatment of colleagues. The 2017 reckoning forced the clarification. Once clarified, the previous apparent consensus collapsed. Both sides experienced the collapse as betrayal of the shared We. Turnaturi’s paradox: it is precisely when the words become unambiguous that the loss of common meaning is felt as treachery.
Asylum is partial. Halperin has Substack, podcast partnerships, conservative-leaning platforms, occasional Newsmax, News Nation, Fox News, WSJ, Daily Mail appearances, the bipartisan-curious wing of political junkies, his family and personal network. He does not have mainstream network news, major newspaper columns, bestselling book contracts with major publishers, cable news regular gigs at MSNBC or CNN, the establishment political consultant network. So he stands somewhere, but not in his old room. By Turnaturi’s plural-We logic, the partial asylum lets him preserve some self-image but cannot overwrite the disgraced-pro label produced by the original community. His We’s are not large enough to absorb the verdict.
Halperin’s case has women at the center whose consent and dignity were at stake. The Razumov frame is silent on what they had a claim to. It assumes the actor’s conscience is the seat of moral judgment, but the women’s claims are not adjudicated by the actor’s conscience. They are adjudicated by something else (their rights, professional norms, basic respect) that Conrad’s frame does not contemplate.
So Halperin can say “I kept faith with my conscience” only if his conscience reach were narrow enough to exclude the moral claims of the women.
Halperin had a deep bond with mainstream political journalism. The bond was contingent on professional conduct that included treatment of colleagues. He violated those terms over years. The community tolerated the violations through what Turnaturi calls collaboration. In 2017 the tolerance collapsed and the community expelled him. The expulsion was experienced by him as sudden and partly retroactive. By Turnaturi’s structural test, he has a foothold for a betrayal claim based on the community’s enforcement-shift, but the foothold is weak because the violated terms were always part of the stated bond. The community changed how it enforced the bond, not what the bond was.
Both parties built the rupture together over decades.
FAFO (F– Around and Find Out)
Halperin did not knowingly fuck with a public norm. He fucked with a private norm and got caught when the wave came in. He probably assumed the ABC-era behavior was buried, the way most powerful men of his generation assumed similar behavior was buried. The wave changed what could stay buried. So phase one is more “find out” than “fuck around” in the strict sense. He did not choose the moment of exposure. The moment chose him.
The finding out, phase one. Three things became plain at speed. First, the architecture of his career had no foundation. Stars, money, TV, access, books: all of it went in a week. None of it could be defended once the accusers organized. Second, his peer group enforced the sanction quickly and totally. The people who had worked with him for twenty years did not call to check whether the reports were complete. They cut him because cutting him was now the price of their own positions. Third, the apologies he produced did not move the verdict. Mainstream television had decided.
The rebuild. This is the real FAFO phase, and it is the part of the Halperin case that is analytically interesting. He had three options. Disappear, like Matt Lauer. Drift into rehabilitation through some sympathetic outlet a decade later, like Charlie Rose has half-attempted. Or attempt re-entry now, on smaller platforms he controlled or rented, and bet that political access could be rebuilt outside legacy media. He chose option three. That choice is the bet.
The bet ran through several stages. Newsmax in 2019. A Substack newsletter called No Limits. Bookings on smaller political shows. Eventually 2WAY, a video platform he built, where he has hosted serious guests on serious days. He has done election-night coverage. He has had Republican principals on at a rate few legacy hosts can match.
The cost of the rebuild is its dependence on a single coalition. Republican bookings underwrite his comeback. The Right was willing to talk to him for two reasons: he was a Me Too casualty who had been viewed as more sympathetic to Republicans than his MSNBC peers, and the Right does not enforce Me Too sanctions with the same severity as the Democratic-leaning corporate media. The asymmetry made the comeback possible. The same asymmetry shapes what the comeback can be. He cannot bite the hand that books him. So the analysis he produces tilts, structurally, toward the questions and frames his Republican guests will tolerate. The rebuild needs Trump-world access. Trump-world access has a price. The price shapes the product.
Was he naive? About the private behavior staying private, yes. About the speed of the corporate response, yes. About the impossibility of legacy return, no. He understood within a few months that MSNBC was not coming back and built accordingly.
Was he brave? In a limited sense. He chose work over disappearance when many men in his position chose disappearance. He absorbed years of public reminders of the accusations because the alternative was permanent silence. That is the bravery of a man who has lost and decides to start over in public, at a fraction of his old wattage, with the accusations attached to his name in every search.
Did he win? He has a platform, an income, and continued relevance in election analysis. By Lauer or Rose comparison, he is doing well. By his 2016 self, he is diminished. The career is alive and the reputation is not.
Did he lose? The legacy media positions are gone for good. The Heilemann partnership, the franchise, the HBO-attached commercial value, the centrist-establishment seat at the table: all of it gone. He has not been forgiven inside the rooms that mattered most to him. He has built rooms of his own that matter less.
What the FAFO frame extracts. Halperin’s case shows that Me Too sanctions are coalition-specific and that the rebuild reshapes the rebuilder. He found out that his peer group would cut him in a week, that the firm value of his career assets was near zero once the accusations were public, and that re-entry is possible only on terms set by whichever coalition is willing to host him. The terms then shape the work. He came back as a different kind of operator because the coalition willing to take him needed a different kind of operator. He is no longer the centrist-establishment access journalist of the 2010s. He is a Right-coalition-friendly video host who covers the same beat. The fall did not destroy him. It rerouted him.
Turner Against Essentialism
Turner’s critique of essentialism targets the move of treating collective nouns as causal agents with stable inner natures. Society, culture, class. When a writer says “the working class believes X” or “the culture demands Y,” Turner asks what real entity does the believing or demanding. The answer is usually nothing. The collective is a verbal placeholder for an aggregate the writer has just constructed.
Halperin practices political journalism almost entirely through reified collectives. “Trump World.” “The donor class.” “The consultant class.” “Washington.” “The Democrats.” “Suburban women.” Each phrase points to no countable group with a verifiable belief or action. Each gets attributed agency. Trump World thinks the polling is soft. The donor class wants Newsom. Washington panics. The story moves forward by these aggregates doing things.
On Turner’s reading, the work happens in the construction, not the report. Halperin builds the collective by talking to a handful of operatives, fundraisers, and reporters, then projects the consensus among that small set onto a named essence. The essence then operates as a causal force in the narrative. “The donor class is moving away from Biden” sounds like a description. It is closer to a small group of fundraisers Halperin knows shifting their tone in conversations with him, then converted into an entity acting on history.
The horse-race rankings show the same pattern. Halperin’s lists rank candidates by a quality he treats as real: strength, viability, position. Turner’s question. What is this quality, and where does it live? The candidate has poll numbers, donor reports, staff, schedules. None of those add up to “strength” without an aggregator deciding which signals count and how to weight them. The ranking projects the aggregator’s judgment back onto the candidate as an essence the candidate possesses.
Halperin’s brand depends on a personal essentialism too. He sells himself as a man who reads the political world. The reading capacity gets framed as a stable trait, hard-won by years of access. Turner pushes on this. The capacity is a set of practices: returning calls from operatives, watching certain shows, attending certain dinners, asking certain questions. The practices generate predictions. The predictions sometimes hit and sometimes miss. Halperin’s identity rests on the claim that the hits express an essence and the misses are noise. Turner’s critique flips this. The essence is a story told about a track record, not a property that generates the record.
The 2017 exile and the comeback through 2Way and Next Up pressure the essence claim. If “Halperin the insider” were an essence, removal from network television and the network social scene should have erased it. He kept the brand by reconstituting the practice in a new venue with a partly different audience. He speaks to viewers who want Trump-friendly access journalism with the cadences of older Sunday-show analysis. The continuity sits in the moves, not in some perduring quality of the man.
Halperin often speaks of “the country” or “America” wanting something. The country is tired of Biden. America wants strength. These usages convert a population of about 330 million people with wildly different views into a single agent with a wish. Turner calls this the central trick of bad social analysis. The trick produces clean sentences and false confidence. The political journalism Halperin practices runs on this trick almost without break. Take the trick away and the broadcasts go quiet, because the actors the sentences describe stop being available.
The essentialist talk pays Halperin in several currencies.
It inflates his sample. A few calls to operatives and fundraisers become the voice of “Trump World” or “the donor class.” Three sources sound like a movement. The collective hides the small number of mouths.
It removes the risk of correction. Named sources can deny. An essence has no spokesman. If “Washington” is said to panic, no resident of Washington can write in to say he is not panicked. The aggregate floats above contradiction.
It generates content without fresh reporting. The moods of essences shift every day. The donor class is nervous this week. Trump World is confident. Washington is split. The essences supply steady weather without requiring new sources.
It supplies drama. Aggregates have plots. “The establishment closes ranks against Vance” reads as a story. “Three lobbyists and a former senator told me they are uncomfortable with Vance” reads as a footnote. The essence gives the day stakes.
It performs the insider credential. The capacity to speak for the essence is the credential. By telling viewers what “the donor class” thinks, Halperin shows he has the standing to tell them. He demonstrates the standing by exercising it.
It shields him from blowback. Names talk back. Donors and operatives have their own platforms and their own grudges. Essences have no return address. He can say what “Trump World” thinks without any individual in Trump World coming after him.
It travels. After 2017 he had to rebuild without ABC or NBC behind him. The vocabulary of essences came with him. “The donors,” “Washington,” “Trump World,” “the consultant class” carried over to 2Way and Next Up intact. Institutional access is hard to port. A reified noun fits in a backpack.
The costs fall on others.
The real members of the named groups pay first. A handful of loud donors get to speak for a thousand quiet ones. The talkers become “the donor class.” The rest are erased. Operatives Halperin happens to know become “Trump World.” Operatives he does not know are out of the story.
Audiences pay. Viewers think they get a window onto a real political world. They get a small group’s conversation styled as collective wisdom. They walk away feeling informed about an agent that does not exist in the form described.
Politicians outside the favored circuit pay. If “Washington” decides a candidate is weak, the candidate has to fight a phantom built from a few hundred phone calls. Candidates who do not court the small group cannot reach the essence. The essence locks them out.
Voters pay. They get sorted into “suburban women” and “working-class men” and assigned stable inner natures that polling is said to read. The sorting flattens them. Their choices then look like deviations from the type or confirmations of it. The type drives the analysis. The people become a chorus for it.
Honest reporters pay. A man who writes “I spoke to four donors and here is what each said” produces a smaller story than Halperin’s “the donor class is shifting.” The careful reporter loses to the essentialist on volume, drama, and apparent reach. The market rewards the trick.
Public language pays. When the essences pile up, the country loses the habit of asking who said what. The grammar of news shifts toward agents that do not exist. The shift makes shared reasoning harder.
Truth pays last and most. The talk describes a world not there. Decisions get made on the basis of the descriptions. Donors give on the basis of what “the donor class” is doing. Politicians chase what “America wants.” The talk creates the world it claims to report, and the world it creates is thinner than the one it replaces.
Explaining the Normative
Halperin presents 2way as a project to restore civil political conversation. Bring on a Democrat and a Republican, talk things through, model what discourse used to look like, give subscribers something better than cable. The pitch runs in normative register. We have lost something. We ought to recover it.
Turner asks where the norm lives. Halperin cannot produce a written code of civil discourse. He can produce examples. Tim Russert (1950-2008) hosting Meet the Press. Jim Lehrer (1934-2020) moderating a debate. The boys on the bus reporting a campaign together, drinking together, knowing which questions stayed off the record. The norm has no codified form. It lives as a trained disposition, learned through years of proximity to a particular Washington stratum.
This is Turner’s central move on the normative. Norms presented as universal standards usually turn out to be the tacit competence of a particular class, transmitted through apprenticeship, not through articulation. Halperin learned this competence at ABC News in the 1990s and 2000s, on campaign planes, in green rooms, at the Gridiron Dinner. The competence has content. Treat sources of both parties with the same wry skepticism. Signal that you understand the operational realities behind the talking points. Know when to push and when to let a pause carry the meaning. Convey to viewers that the show sits among insiders who know more than they say. When Halperin calls this civility, he names a class dialect as a civic virtue.
Turner’s second cut. Ask who benefits when the norm returns. The answer points to the people whose training matches the norm. Halperin’s interpretive authority rested on his recognized fluency in this dialect. The decline of that authority has many sources, his 2017 scandal among them, but the larger story tracks the collapse of the institutional setting that made the dialect legible to a mass audience. Cable fragmented. Social media bypassed the press corps. Partisans built direct channels to their audiences. The shared green-room world thinned out. Halperin’s tacit capital lost its market. 2way rebuilds a small market for that capital. Subscribers pay to sit close to a man who knows the operatives, who has the cell numbers, who can read a campaign the way a sommelier reads a label. The civility framing markets the product. The product gives access to a competence.
Turner’s third cut. Ask whether the norm can travel without the apprenticeship that produced it. Halperin can perform the moves on camera. He cannot teach the underlying disposition through a livestream. The competence required years of immersion in a setting that no longer exists at the scale it once did. The 2way audience watches the performance. They do not enter the apprenticeship. A handful of younger contributors might absorb some of it through proximity to Halperin, but at small scale, not as a restored public norm. Turner’s framework predicts this. Tacit competence moves person to person, through hours of shared work and observation. It does not scale into a recovered public standard through subscription content.
Turner’s fourth cut. Ask what might falsify the project. Suppose 2way runs for five years and political discourse stays as partisan and brutal as before. Might Halperin conclude that civil conversation cannot be recovered as a norm? Probably not. He might blame the algorithm, the polarization, the audience capture of his competitors, the financial pressures on legacy outlets. The norm floats above any test. Turner identifies this as the standard normativist move. When the world fails to conform, the world is wrong, not the norm.
A more honest description of 2way: a paid space where one man with deep insider fluency hosts conversations that model his trained dispositions, sells access to his read on politics, and gives a small audience the feel of life inside the green room. That description loses the civic uplift. It gains accuracy.
Turner’s framework does not declare the project bad. Tacit knowledge does transmit. Halperin has something to teach about how operatives think, how campaigns move, how Washington works at the table level. The framing errs. It calls this transmission the restoration of a lost public norm. The norm was always the operating code of a class. The class is smaller now. The code travels with the people who know it, not with announcements that civility ought to return.
Seven ways the framing serves Halperin.
First, it converts his trained class dialect into a public good. Selling access to insider competence is a private transaction with a small clientele. Selling the restoration of civil discourse is a civic project. The civic framing recruits subscribers who want to feel part of something important. It also lends the project standing with guests, sponsors, and other outlets.
Second, it rehabilitates him. The path back from 2017 does not run through demonstrating he has changed. It runs through demonstrating that what he offers stands as publicly necessary. If cross-partisan civility is urgent, and few people can model it, the question shifts from whether he should return to whether the public can afford his absence. The norm absorbs the man. His record recedes behind the cause.
Third, it exempts him from results. If 2way is a moral project to recover something lost, then continued existence and audience growth count as virtue. He does not have to show that political discourse has improved. He has to show effort. The norm serves as the destination. The empirical world serves as the obstacle.
Fourth, it gives him authority to police other voices. If civility is the standard, he can call out incivility. He sits as referee, not as a player among players. The referee’s seat carries more value than a player’s seat. He decides which guests count as serious, which framings count as legitimate, which questions count as fair.
Fifth, it recruits guests. Politicians and operatives appear on a show that pitches itself as a civic repair project. They hesitate to appear on a show that pitches itself as insider gossip. The civic frame opens doors that pure entertainment framing keeps shut. Turner’s point about norms applies here. The norm recruits collaborators who themselves benefit from association with the norm. They appear, they get coded as civil, their reputations rise alongside Halperin’s.
Sixth, it pre-loads the rhetorical field against critics. To criticize 2way, you have to oppose civil discourse, or oppose talking across the aisle, or seem to want incivility. Critics start at a disadvantage. The frame routes objections through a hostile filter before they reach an ear.
Seventh, it salvages his interpretive authority. Halperin’s core capital lies in his read on politics. He calls races, he assesses candidates, he reads operatives. That capital took damage in 2016 with the Game Change-era predictive failures and his ABC misjudgments, and again in 2017. The normative framing reasserts that his read does not stand as one read among many. It carries the weight of a trained civic exemplar. The salvage runs deep.
Now who is hurt.
First, journalists and analysts outside the green-room dialect. The civility frame grades discourse by tone, not accuracy. A loud, blunt, accurate analyst loses status to a smooth, well-mannered, mediocre one. Many of the people who saw 2016 coming were online writers, regional reporters, partisan operatives, dissidents. The norm raises their cost of entry into respectable discourse.
Second, the audience. Subscribers who think they pay to repair political discourse pay for insider entertainment. The gap between framing and product hurts them in two ways. They get less than they think. They form a habit of mistaking insider gossip for civic participation. A softer harm, but it accumulates.
Third, partisans on either side who hold positions Halperin’s frame treats as outside the conversation. The civil-discourse frame draws the legitimate political range at the people Halperin can comfortably host. Anyone outside that range gets coded as uncivil by default. The right-wing populist who calls for drastic immigration restriction, the left-wing critic who names American foreign policy imperial, the Christian nationalist, the socialist, the dissident on transgender medicine. The civil frame places them outside the room before they speak. Civility works as a fence as much as a virtue.
Fourth, the women who accused him in 2017. The normative framing makes their accounts harder to raise. To bring them up is to seem to want to relitigate, to undermine a civic project, to confuse the personal with the political. The norm absorbs the man, and the accusers become an awkward intrusion on a public good. Whether one finds his rehabilitation appropriate, the framing does work to displace those claims.
Fifth, independent media projects competing for the same audience without the civic framing. They have to match Halperin’s normative pitch, which most cannot, since most lack his green-room credentials. Or they accept secondary status. The norm raises the entry cost across the field.
Sixth, truth-telling inside 2way. If civility is the standard, guests who might break the spell get filtered out or softened. Halperin has incentives to host the guest who plays the part, not the guest who tells the truth. The norm rewards performance over disclosure. Over time the product centers on the rituals of civility rather than on what an audience might learn.
Seventh, the broader public conversation. To the extent that 2way trains a class of subscribers to treat civility as quality, the public loses a useful distinction. Many accurate political analysts of recent years have been uncivil by green-room standards. The norm conflates form with substance and trains its audience to confuse them.
Turner’s summary point holds. Normative claims usually function as jurisdictional claims. Halperin’s normative framing reasserts the jurisdiction of his class over what counts as serious political talk. He gains the most. The people outside the dialect, the women he allegedly harmed, the subscribers who pay for civic uplift and receive insider chatter, and the truth-telling within the product all give up something to keep the jurisdiction intact.
Interaction Ritual Chains
Randall Collins (b. 1941) treats a life as a chain of interaction rituals. Each ritual needs four ingredients: bodily co-presence, a barrier between insiders and outsiders, mutual focus of attention, and shared mood. When the ingredients combine and intensify through rhythmic entrainment, the ritual produces emotional energy, group solidarity, sacred symbols, and a sense of right and wrong. People become EE-seekers. They move toward the settings that charged them and away from the ones that drained them. A career is a chain. Each ritual either feeds the next or starves it.
Mark Halperin built his career inside the densest ritual circuit American political journalism had to offer. The campaign plane. The morning shows. The ABC political unit. The green rooms at MSNBC. The hotel bars during the conventions. Each setting carried the four ingredients at high intensity. The press corps had hard barriers, sharp focus on the election or the day’s news cycle, and a shared mood that swung between thrill and dread on each poll release.
The Note, the daily memo Halperin ran at ABC, was a sacred object of that circuit. It told the political class what to look at each morning. A man who produces the artifact other rituals orient around becomes a high-EE node in the network. Bookers wanted him. Sources wanted to be in his book. Each successful appearance fed the next. He was a power-giver in Collins’s terms, an order-giver in the bookings game, a man who lifted the EE of the rituals he entered.
Game Change cemented this. The book drew on countless background rituals with sources who gave access because access to Halperin meant a charge of their own. The HBO film, the speaking dates, the cable hits, all followed and fed back. He became the man whose phone call the campaign manager took.
Then came October 2017. CNN reported the harassment allegations. Collins’s framework predicts what happened next. The barriers flipped. The same line that had marked him as an insider now marked him as out. MSNBC dropped him. NBC dropped him. HBO dropped him. Penguin canceled the book contract. The political journalism circuit closed its doors to him on the same day, because ritual circuits work that way. The shared mood becomes disgust. The mutual focus turns on the offender. The barrier hardens, and the man who once gave order-givers their cue is exiled.
What followed makes sense through Collins. A 2021 book sank without the surrounding ritual density that books need to land. A Newsmax stint failed to charge him because the audience was wrong, the production values low, and the symbolic register did not match the rituals that had built him. The old EE could not transfer to a circuit operating on different sacred objects.
2Way, his subscription video operation, is an attempt to build a new ritual chain from scratch. He hosts long live video calls. He brings on the operatives whose phone numbers he still has. Karl Rove (b. 1950), David Axelrod (b. 1955), Stephen Bannon (b. 1953), and others take his calls because the EE of his pre-2017 days lingers in their memory. The model substitutes a small, intense, repeated micro-ritual for the broad ritual access he lost.
This can carry him at a lower voltage. On Collins’s account, a tight subscriber base can produce solidarity, focus, and shared mood. But the headcount is smaller. The barrier is weaker, since anyone with a credit card gets through. The focus is harder to hold across a scattered audience scrolling on their phones. The mood is diluted compared with what a network slot generates when millions tune in at the same hour. The ceiling stays low.
His emotional posture maps onto Collins’s account of EE-seeking. A man returns to the rituals that charged him. Halperin still does the morning call. He still produces daily political commentary. He still books the same operatives he booked twenty years ago. The pattern shows where his EE pull still leads, even when the old circuit no longer offers the old voltage. He cannot stop reaching for the chain that broke.
The path back runs through ritual density, not through argument or apology. Each viral clip, each new subscriber, each booking on a friendly podcast adds a small charge. Nothing he writes or says can replace getting into the rooms again. The rooms make the man.
The Great Delusion
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.
Halperin sells reason. The product is analysis, prediction, the cool read of who wins and why. That is the thing Mearsheimer ranks lowest. So Halperin trades in the cheapest of the three goods, and he has always known it, because his real skill was never analysis. It was access. He sat inside the political tribe and reported its rituals. Game Change works as ethnography, not argument. He knew who rose, who fell, who betrayed whom. Tribal knowledge. Gossip raised to a craft.
Then 2017. More than a dozen women accuse him. NBC drops him, Showtime drops him, the book deal dies. Fast and near unanimous. Read through Mearsheimer, this looks less like a dozen editors each reasoning to the same moral conclusion and more like a tribe guarding its boundary. The press class knew what it had to do to keep its standing. Socialization moved faster than deliberation.
The comeback tests the claim. Halperin’s defense runs on liberal and individualist ground. Judge the work. He served his exile. A man has a right to earn his living. Every one of those appeals assumes the world rewards individual merit. Mearsheimer says it does not. The social order runs on belonging, and the old tribe does not take him back no matter how sharp the analysis. His skill is the least of his problems, because skill is the least of what the tribe weighs.
So Halperin does what a social animal does when one group casts him out. He builds another. 2WAY gathers an audience that defines itself against the establishment, “beyond the cable news echo chamber.” He partners with Megyn Kelly. He brought on Sean Spicer. He collects men who carry their own marks of expulsion and binds them into a counter-tribe of the exiled. His survival comes through membership, not through rehabilitation. He could not rejoin the old press, so he built his own.
Mearsheimer also expects the new group to stay shaky. Spicer and Dan Turrentine walked off the morning show late last year. A counter-tribe forms around grievance and opportunity, and those bonds run thinner than the decades of shared socialization that hold the establishment together. Halperin lost a tribe with deep roots and assembled one with shallow ones.
Halperin built his name as the great lone insider, the man who knew everything. Mearsheimer denies the lone wolf exists. No journalist stands outside his group. Halperin learns this the hard way. The tribe made him, the tribe unmade him, and his talent could not buy him back. The man who read tribes for a living turns out to be one more creature of his own.
The audience question follows. If reason ranks last, Halperin’s customers do not come for analysis. They come for the feeling of being inside, for sentiment, for the sense of standing on the right side against the people who run things. Halperin packages tribal feeling as political insight. He always did. He sells belonging and calls it news.