Koch Brothers Interested In Buying Tribune Co. Papers: NYT

Koch Bros. Looking To Buy Tribune Co. Papers
Billionaire David Koch, chairman of the board of the conservative Americans for Prosperity (AFP) advocacy group, attends a 'Cut Spending Now' rally at AFP's 'Defending the American Dream Summit' in Washington on November 5, 2011. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)
Billionaire David Koch, chairman of the board of the conservative Americans for Prosperity (AFP) advocacy group, attends a 'Cut Spending Now' rally at AFP's 'Defending the American Dream Summit' in Washington on November 5, 2011. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)

Move over, Rupert Murdoch -- there are some more conservative billionaires who want to buy the Los Angeles Times.

The media mogul has, by all accounts, made his desire for the Times--which, despite many cutbacks, is still one of the biggest newspapers in the country--clear.

But, as the New York Times reported Sunday, the Koch brothers--friend of oil companies, scourge of liberals, sworn enemies of the Obama administration--are very interested too. What's more, the paper's Amy Chozick wrote, the Kochs would be happy to buy all eight of the Tribune Company's big regional titles, including the Baltimore Sun, Chicago Tribune and Orlando Sentinel.

Tribune is shedding the newspapers in an attempt to right its financial ship.

It's easy to see why a pair of movement conservatives with cash to burn would set their eyes on the Tribune titles. The Times, for instance, is still a very powerful voice in Southern California. The Tribune is still the most influential paper in the Midwest. They may not be the most financially viable investments, but the Kochs have the vast wealth needed to run them as vanity titles.

Naturally, liberal sites like Daily Kos have been up in arms about the prospect. Thousands have signed a petition demanding that Tribune not sell to the Kochs.

Unfortunately for them, Chozick wrote that, so far, the Kochs appear to be in the lead:

At this early stage, the thinking inside the Tribune Company, the people close to the deal said, is that Koch Industries could prove the most appealing buyer. Others interested, including a group of wealthy Los Angeles residents led by the billionaire Eli Broad and Ronald W. Burkle, both prominent Democratic donors, and Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, would prefer to buy only The Los Angeles Times.

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