Manawatu Standard

Trump’s anti-journalism hit squad

- Leonard Pitts Jr

‘‘The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.’’

So says Dick the Butcher in Shakespear­e’s Henry VI, Part 2. Though often regarded as a Renaissanc­e-era lawyer joke, the line is actually a backhanded compliment to the legal profession.

Dick, a follower of the rebel Jack Cade, knows that before their insurrecti­on can succeed, they have to get rid of the defenders of law and order. We are seeing a disturbing­ly similar strategy unfold in American politics. Except this time, the target is journalist­s.

The 2018 massacre at a newsroom in Annapolis and ongoing violence and threats against reporters make the analogy a rather sensitive one, so let’s emphasise that it is only that – analogy. The people we are talking about aren’t actually out to kill journalist­s, just their credibilit­y.

Tom Wright-piersanti is the latest victim. According to a report in Sunday’s New York Times, Wright-piersanti, a Times editor, was targeted by ‘‘a loose network of conservati­ve operatives allied with the White House’’.

Their aim: Discredit news organisati­ons they consider hostile to United States President Donald Trump. Their strategy: Posting damaging or embarrassi­ng informatio­n about journalist­s.

So last week, after the Times ran two pieces unflatteri­ng to the Trump White House, this group unveiled on Breitbart some racist and anti-semitic tweets Wrightpier­santi wrote 10 years ago.

He has apologised and expressed ‘‘deep shame’’ for ‘‘lame attempts at edgy humour’’ – and also, in essence, for being a millennial.

‘‘For my generation, the generation that came of age in the internet,’’ he said, ‘‘all the youthful mistakes that you made get preserved in digital amber, and no matter how much you change and mature and grow up, it is always out there, waiting to be discovered.’’

The Times said it was looking into what it dubbed ‘‘a clear violation of our standards’’.

One need not condone Wrightpier­santi’s old tweets to note that whatever offensive thing he said, he said it 10 years ago when he was in college. The last offensive thing Trump said was less than 10 days ago and he is in the White House.

But there is far more at stake here than one man’s career.

A president who has branded journalist­s ‘‘enemies of the people’’ and news media ‘‘an evil propaganda machine’’ now has working on his behalf an antijourna­lism hit squad.

Beyond Wright-piersanti, they are also said to have targeted reporters from The Washington Post, Business Insider and CNN.

Like him, most were in their teens or early 20s when they penned the offensive posts.

Arthur Schwartz, a conservati­ve political consultant and friend of Donald Trump Jr, described by The Times as a central figure in the campaign, says it has only just begun.

The group claims to have done deep dives into the digital histories of numerous journalist­s – and their family members. ‘‘Lots more where that came from,’’ he tweeted last week.

To which journalism as an institutio­n must respond: Bring it.

Yes, some people may be embarrasse­d, some careers damaged. But bring it. Because truth itself is facing a hostile takeover. Because the machinery of authoritar­ianism is being assembled before our eyes. Because the people’s right to know is sacred.

And because without an informed electorate, democracy is not possible.

See, this group understand­s what Dick the Butcher did not.

The first thing you do is ‘‘kill’’ not the lawyers, but the reporters.

Then you can do whatever you want to the lawyers and no-one will even know.

‘‘All the youthful mistakes that you made get preserved in digital amber.’’ Journalist Tom Wright-piersanti

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald

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