Albany Times Union (Sunday)

They’re high on their very own supply

- MAUREEN DOWD ▶ Maureen Dowd is a New York Times columnist.

I’ve been waiting for this moment. The moment when some on the left would react indignantl­y to journalist­s doing their job.

It was so enthrallin­g and gratifying to assail Donald Trump as a liar and misogynist that it was bound to be jarring when the beast slouched out of town and liberals had to relearn the lesson that reporters don’t — or shouldn’t — suit up for the blue team.

The moment came Wednesday in the Capitol basement when Seung Min Kim, a respected Washington Post reporter, asked Lisa Murkowski, a Republican senator from Alaska, if she had seen a 2017 Neera Tanden tweet about her.

She hadn’t. So Kim showed it to her. Tanden was responding to a Murkowski tweet about lowering the corporate tax rate, calling the senator high on her own supply and dismissing her argument as “garbage.”

“High on my own supply?” Murkowski said, reading the tweet on Kim’s phone. “That’s interestin­g.”

Murkowski’s reaction to the tweet was relevant because her vote on the Tanden nomination to be President Joe Biden’s budget director could sink or save Tanden. And Tanden’s tetchy Twitter fingers counted among the reasons that Joe Manchin and Susan Collins announced their intention to vote against her, given Biden’s preaching that it was time to leave Trump’s toxic atmosphere behind.

After Huffpost’s Igor Bobic posted a picture and summary of the exchange between Kim and Murkowski, Kim’s email and social media feeds were inundated with racist and sexist comments. One person labeled Kim a “snitch” for supposedly messing up “another POC nomination on behalf of whites.” Another wrote, “That is not her job and that’s extremely inappropri­ate.”

Actually, yes, that is her job. The truth is, many on the left don’t understand what a reporter is.

They loathe Fox News but assume that the mainstream media are basically on their side, the same way Fox commentato­rs are on Trump’s, laying the groundwork for him to start his second coming at CPAC this weekend.

For the left, over the past four years, a reporter has been an ally and a superhero comrade in the epic mission of destroying Donald Trump. Liberals lionized any cable hosts and runaway Republican­s who blasted Trump, even if they had previously been on the GOP payroll, selling the Iraq War and Sarah Palin.

When I went to the Vanity Fair Oscar party with A.G. Sulzberger in 2017, movie stars rushed up to thank him for fighting Trump. Over and over again, he explained that it was not the mission of The New York Times to be part of the resistance. Rather, he said, the paper would be straight and combat lies with the truth.

As the Trump years went on and the outrages piled up, with the renegade president making it clear that he would not be bound by decency or legality, the left declared it a national emergency and acted as though all journalist­ic objectivit­y should be suspended.

Many reporters offered sharp opinions, the kind not seen before in covering a president. The tango between Trump and the media — his most passionate relationsh­ip — was as poisonous as it was profitable. For reporters, who hadn’t been this chic since Ben Bradlee battled Richard Nixon, fat cable, book and movie contracts flooded in. CNN was on “Breaking News” for four years straight, thanks to Trump’s dark genius at topping himself with outlandish narratives.

Some of the new assertiven­ess was good and should continue. After many years when I had to comb the thesaurus to find a synonym for “liar” to use about Dick Cheney, the Times finally allowed us to call highrankin­g politician­s who lied, liars.

But the media will have a tough adjustment. A whole generation of journalist­s was reared in the caldera that was Trump’s briefing room.

Some Washington reporters have been worried about this for some time, that the left would “work the refs,” as one put it, and turn on the media and attack if they dared to report something that could endanger the Republic.

But the role of the press in a functionin­g democracy is as watchdog, not partisan attack dog. Politician­s have plenty of people spinning for them. They don’t need the press doing that, too.

Believe me, you want us on that wall.

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