Jeffrey Goldberg joins Ashley Parker to discuss breaking the Signal story, the fallout, and more. Don’t miss this ...
The administration has downplayed the importance of the text messages inadvertently sent to The Atlantic’s editor in chief.
How The Atlantic’s editor in chief found himself in a group chat with Trump-administration officials who were planning an ...
The Trump administration tried to paint the Atlantic editor as a liar, so he felt compelled to prove them wrong -- and he had ...
This week's fallout from the Signal group chat marks the latest chapter in the longtime feud between The Atlantic editor and ...
An inadvertent invitation to a group chat thrust The Atlantic's editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg into the center of an ...
The president is privately upset with the sloppiness of his advisers. Publicly, he’s focused on attacking the press.
It is instead reserved mainly for the journalist: The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg. The response to the scandal reveals a disjuncture between the seriousness with which MAGA ...
“Had that information fallen into the hands of a U.S. adversary that had been in the group, or had [Goldberg] been a less ...
Today on Radio Atlantic, a much higher-stakes texting error: The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, received a connection request on Signal from a “Michael Waltz,” which is the ...
President Donald Trump defended his national security team and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, in particular, on Wednesday ...
This week, The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, reported that the Trump administration inadvertently added him to a discussion of a military strike on Houthi militias in Yemen ...