Trump tweet ramps up feud with CNN
DONALD TRUMP TWEETS VIDEO OF HIMSELF APPEARING TO PUMMEL WRESTLER WITH CNN LOGO FOR A HEAD
Aday after defending his use of social media as befitting a “modern-day” president, Donald Trump appeared to promote violence against CNN.
Trump, who is on vacation at his Bedminster, N.J., golf resort, posted on Twitter an old video clip of him performing in a WWE professional wrestling match, but with a CNN logo superimposed on the head of his opponent. In the clip, Trump is shown slamming the CNN avatar to the ground and pounding it with punches and elbows to the head. Trump added the hashtags #FraudNewsCNN and #FNN, for “fraud news network.”
The video clip apparently had been posted days earlier on Reddit, a popular socialmedia message board. The president’s tweet was the latest escalation in his beef with CNN over its coverage of him and his administration.
A White House spokeswoman with the travelling press corps in Bridgewater, N.J., a few kilometres from Trump’s golf club, declined to immediately address questions about the tweet. Trump had no public events planned for Sunday; his schedule listed phone calls Sunday night with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. He was scheduled to return to Washington Monday evening and participate in an Independence Day event Tuesday at the White House.
On ABC’s This Week, Homeland Security adviser Tom Bossert dismissed the idea that the tweet might be a threat, while he praised the president for “genuine” communication.
“No one would perceive that as a threat; I hope they don’t,” Bossert said, referring to the tweet.
In a statement, CNN called it a “sad day when the president of the United States encourages violence against reporters.” The network cited Trump’s “juvenile behaviour far below the dignity of his office. We will keep doing our jobs. He should start doing his.”
The company’s communications department Twitter account responded to Trump’s tweet by quoting White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders during a briefing last week when she said: “The president in no way form or fashion has ever promoted or encouraged violence. If anything, quite the contrary.”
In the statement, CNN said: “Clearly, Sarah Huckabee Sanders lied when she said the president had never done so.”
Trump’s ire at CNN has increased since CNN retracted a story last week that said the Senate was investigating connections between one of his transition aides and the head of a Russian bank; the network fired three journalists over the report, but the White House has continued to denounce the story.
On Saturday, Trump called CNN “fake news” and “garbage journalism.” He also implied that his critics are wrong to suggest it is beneath the office of the presidency to attack rivals on Twitter. He said he was compelled to weaponize the medium to defeat “fake news” organizations:
“.... the 2016 election with interviews, speeches and social media. I had to beat #FakeNews, and did. We will continue to WIN!”
“My use of social media is not Presidential - it’s MODERN DAY PRESIDENTIAL. Make America Great Again!”
Trump also spent a chunk of a speech at the Celebrate Freedom rally for veterans and religious freedom at the Kennedy Center Saturday denouncing the media.
“The fake media is trying to silence us, but we will not let them. The people know the truth,” Trump said. “The fake media tried to stop us from going to the White House, but I’m president and they’re not.”
The video clip appears to be from a WWE appearance in which Trump body-slams WWE chairman Vince McMahon as part of the “Battle of the Billionaires.”
Trump has had a long association with the WWE and was inducted into its Hall of Fame in 2013. At the ceremony, WWE chairman Vince McMahon referred to Trump as a “WrestleMania institution” and recalled this episode, which culminated with Trump participating in shaving McMahon’s head in the ring.
Bossert echoed a line of defence that other Trump surrogates have employed in recent days: that when Trump’s policies are attacked in the media, he has a right to counterpunch — in this case physically.
“He’s beaten up, in a way, on the cable platforms — he has a right to respond,” Bossert said.
Bossert argued the tweet might actually a good thing because “whatever the content of that tweet or any particular tweet, he’s generated a genuine ability to communicate directly” with the American people.
When host Martha Raddatz pressed him to weigh in on the appropriateness of the tweet, Bossert accused the media of harping on it instead of focusing on more substantive issues.
“It’s a good example of you or the media producers here deciding what we talk about and what we don’t talk about,” he said.