CBS News correspondent accuses Bari Weiss of ‘political’ move in pulling β60 Minutes’ piece
A β60 Minutesβ story on the Trump administrationβs imprisonment of hundreds of deported Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador was pulled by CBS News Editor-In-Chief Bari Weiss shortly before it was scheduled to air Sunday night.
The unusual decision drew a sharp rebuke from Sharyn Alfonsi, the correspondent for the piece.
Alfonsi said the decision was motivated by politics, according to an email she circulated to colleagues and viewed by the Times. Alfonsi noted that the story was ready for air after being vetted by the networkβs attorneys and the standards and practices department.
βIt is factually correct,β Alfonsi wrote. βIn my view, pulling it now β after every rigorous internal check has been met is not an editorial decision, it is a political one.β
According to the CBS News press departmentβs description of the segment, Alfonsi spoke to released deportees who described βthe brutal and torturous conditions they endured inside CECOT,β one of El Salvadorβs harshest prisons.
In a statement, a representative for CBS News said the report called βInside CECOTβ will air in a future β60 Minutesβ broadcast. βWe determined it needed additional reporting,β the representative said.
Weiss viewed the segment late Thursday, according to people familiar with the matter who were not authorized to comment publicly. She had a number of issues with story and asked for additional reporting, which could not be completed in time for airing on Sunday. A press release promoting the story went out Friday.
Weiss reportedly wanted the story to have an interview with an official in President Trumpβs administration.
But Alonsi said in her email the program βrequested responses to questions and/or interviewsβ with the the Department of Homeland Security, the White House and the State Department.
βGovernment silence is a statement, not a VETO,β Alfonsi wrote. βTheir refusal to be interviewed is a tactical maneuver designed to kill the story.β
Alfonsiβs email said she learned the story was pulled on Saturday and that she had not discussed the matter with Weiss.
Even if Weissβ concerns might be valid, the sudden postponement of a β60 Minutesβ piece after it has been promoted on air, on social media and through listings on TV grids is a major snafu for the network.
For Weiss, itβs perilous situation as her every move as a digital media entrepreneur with no experience in television is being closely scrutinized.
As the founder of the conservative-friendly digital news site who was personally recruited by Paramount Chief Executive David Ellison, journalists at CBS News and media industry observers are watching to see if Weissβ actions are tilting its editorial content to the right.
Before it was acquired by Skydance Media, Paramount agreed to pay $16 million to settle a Trump lawsuit making the dubious claim that a β60 Minutesβ interview with Kamala Harris was deceptively edited to aid her 2024 presidential election campaign against him.
Trump recently said β60 Minutesβ is βworseβ under Paramountβs new ownership following an interview with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, in which she was highly critical of the president and his administration.
Paramount acquired the Free Press for $150 million as part of the deal to bring Weiss over. Her first major move was to air a highly sympathetic town hall with Erika Kirk, the widow of slain right-wing activist Charlie Kirk. Erika Kirk has taken over as head of Turning Point USA, the political organization her husband founded.