The Atlantic

The Astonishing Transformation of Julian Assange

Views of the WikiLeaks founder have shifted as American partisans project their own priorities onto him.
Source: Peter Nicholls / Reuters

It’s not that unusual for a public figure to go from hero to villain. But going from villainy to heroism? That’s a tougher road to traverse.

Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder and central figure, has managed to do both over the last few months, culminating in a remarkable embrace by the president-elect two longtime critics on the American right, Sean Hannity and Sarah Palin. Over the same time, some of Assange’s erstwhile champions on the American left have drifted away, disillusioned by the way WikiLeaks attacked Hillary Clinton during the presidential election. Has Assange changed, or is his rehabilitation on the right, and his loss of esteem on the left, simply a factor of political exigencies within the United States? The answer is a little bit of both.

Six years ago, when WikiLeaks burst on the scene with its massive release of American documents, Donald Trump was.

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