... the fact that either you've stopped endorsing Debian, or you've become more vocal about it.
I have never endorsed Debian, because ever since it became mature enough to be technically suitable, it had the problem of recommending and including non-free packages. Of course, the other alternatives have generally been worse. So I have not endorsed any GNU/Linux distribution in recent years, except, briefly, GNU/LinEx. I've said this many times over the years in responses to questions at speeches. ("What GNU/Linux distribution do you recommend" is a common question.) The reason I mentioned the issue in that interview is that I thought I had found a distribution I really could recommend. That was good news and I wanted to talk about it. The FSF has not endorsed any GNU/Linux distribution in recent years, and perhaps never, but my memory is not certain. I believe Debian is seriously interested in all that. As far as I can tell, though, Debian already produces a distribution that the FSF should recommend, it's called Debian GNU/Linux and contains no non-free software. While nominally Debian GNU/Linux does not include the non-free software, the non-free software is distributed from the same server. We cannot recommend one without effectively recommending the other. Further, the distribution itself surely contains references to that server, so putting a copy on a different server would not solve the problem. The change that I asked Debian developers to make, some years ago, was to separate the two, such that we could refer people to Debian GNU/Linux without in the same act referring them also to the non-free software. This would make it possible for us to refer the public to Debian GNU/Linux. If in the future Debian GNU/Linux does not include the GNU manuals, this reference could not be wholeheartedly positive, but we could still make the reference.