Weekend open thread: Farewell to Iowa Independent

The CEO of The American Independent News Network announced plans this week to cease publication of most of the network’s state-based sites. That appears to include the Iowa Independent blog, a fixture on the Iowa political blogosphere since early 2007.

Lynda Waddington published this open letter to readers on Thursday:

The Iowa team, which was most recently comprised of Andrew Duffelmeyer and me, learned Wednesday of the shift described by [David] Bennahum. Duffelmeyer, who began his tenure with us only a few weeks ago and I cannot praise enough for being a wonderful co-worker and talented and hard-working journalist, was let go. As I’ve already told him personally, I wish I had more to offer than my condolences.

As for me, I have a decision to make by the close of business on Friday. The decision, as it was explained to me, is not one of will I stay or will I go, but is centered on the timing of my departure. Regardless of my decision, the practical future of The Iowa Independent and the content archive that so many amazing journalists have contributed to for almost the past five years is out of my control. […]

I don’t yet know what my decision will be or, if I’m completely honest, if such a decision will continue to exist once I publish this post.

As has happened before, I have absorbed the emotional devastation that surrounds me, and all I really know is that I need to sit on the curb for a little while and make some sense of it before I can be of any help to anyone else.

Between now and Monday, maybe I’ll figure it out. If so, posts will resume here without another mention from me of what’s happened. If not … well, I want to thank you for taking my calls, answering my emails and, above all else, reading. I will forever be grateful for the journey and the people along the way.

No new stories have been posted on the site since Waddington’s letter appeared. It sounds as if we’ve seen the last original reporting from Iowa Independent. The timing is unfortunate, coming so close to the Iowa caucuses.

Iowa Independent has been one of my daily stops since its inception. My sympathy goes out to Waddington, Duffelmeyer, and the many other reporters who lost their jobs at American Independent-affiliated sites. Having once been “downsized” from a job I loved, at which I worked hard, I know it’s a painful experience.

I hope the Iowa Independent archives will remain accessible. I particularly admired Waddington’s reporting on the 2008 immigration raid in Postville and its aftermath. Other highlights from the blog include reports from presidential candidate events in 2007 and 2011, many detailed stories about coal ash disposal, and solid coverage of the 2010 egg recall. The occasional campaign finance-related stories were informative too. For instance, Waddington discussed here how owners of the company at the center of the 2010 salmonella outbreak financed election campaigns against tougher egg production regulations. This Jason Hancock piece on Tom Latham’s PAC spending was a classic too.

Share your own thoughts about Iowa Independent here, or anything else on your mind this weekend. This is an open thread.

P.S. Anyone go to the Iowa Democratic Party’s Jefferson-Jackson Dinner on Saturday night? I skipped the event this year because I didn’t feel like spending money to hear a keynote speaker (Rahm Emanuel) who has contempt for Democrats like me. I saw that the state party denied former State Representative Ed Fallon press credentials to cover the event for his radio talk show, Fallon Forum. Fallon has never been popular with party leaders, especially since he challenged Representative Leonard Boswell in the 2008 Democratic primary to represent Iowa’s third Congressional district.

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desmoinesdem

  • what a shame

    The original II of 2007-08 was not only a blogging supergroup, it was a model for journalism of the future. Yes, we leaned a bit, but we played our journalism straight and fair. It’s a damn shame that the business side of things broke up the band.

    The state’s conservatives have figured it out: TheIowaRepublican is not even close to what the original IowaIndy was, but it’s a great one-stop shop for GOP news, clearly conservative but not necessarily party line. And there’s clearly some money coming from somewhere. The Democrats know this but haven’t followed up.

    One of the best things I’ve read about writing in ages comefrom, of all places, Cracked http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-…


    if you’re making money online, it’s because you kept at it for zero reward until that happened. Some people want to quit their jobs because they hate them and go write instead, which is the exact wrong attitude for a writer. You write because you love it. You write on top of your regular work, because words might be the true expression of your soul, but your unique spirit doesn’t pay the rent.

    Some people get hired straight into writing because they were smart enough to do the “find out what you really want to do and work at it utterly” thing in college, which is what college is for. The rest of us simply work two jobs, where the second is unpaid for a long time.

    This means that you’re pouring all your free time into writing, work that matters to you, instead of spending it in an endless parade of distractions to forget the next day’s early start.

    I missed JJ (and the GOP events yesterday) because I was working at my second job. When my second job was Iowa Independent, I was able to go to more stuff like that. I get a little money from the Register. But it’s a lot harder to justify the time off paid work and the tank of gas when it’s a hobby and not a job.

    I wish Lynda and the rest all the best; any news organization in the state would be smart to sign her up ASAP.

  • 404

    As of 7 AM Monday

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