Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Some fair press

- CALLUM BORCHERS

President Donald Trump spoke for about seven minutes during a joint news conference with Polish President Andrzej Duda in Warsaw on Thursday before an interprete­r opened the session to questions from journalist­s. Without hesitation, Trump called on the Daily Mail’s David Martosko, who was a candidate to become White House press secretary before withdrawin­g from considerat­ion two weeks ago.

“I have to ask about this,” Martosko said, after starting on the subject of North Korean nuclear deterrence. “Since you started the whole wrestling thing, what are your thoughts about what has happened since then? I mean, CNN went after you and has threatened to expose the identity of a person they said was responsibl­e for it. I’d like your thoughts on that.”

“Yeah, I think what CNN did was unfortunat­e for them,” Trump replied. “As you know, now they have some pretty serious problems. They have been fake news for a long time. They’ve been covering me in a very, uh, very dishonest way.”

“Do you have that also, by the way, Mr. President?” Trump said, turning to Duda.

He continued: “But CNN and others—and others; I mean NBC is equally as bad, despite the fact that I made them a fortune with The Apprentice, but they forgot that. But I will say that CNN has really taken it too seriously, and I think they’ve hurt themselves very badly, very, very badly. And what we want to see in the United States is honest, beautiful, free—but honest— press. We want to see fair press. I think it’s a very important thing. We don’t want fake news.

“And by the way, not everybody is fake news. But we don’t want fake news. Bad thing. Very bad for our country.”

What a scene: The president of the United States, on foreign soil, awarding a reporter he considered hiring the first of only two questions available to American journalist­s at a joint news conference—then using the occasion to bash other media outlets.

Trump said he wants “fair press” but made clear that his definition of “fair” is favorable when he suggested that NBC’s news division should treat him better because he made money for its entertainm­ent business as a reality TV star. CNN President Jeff Zucker led NBC during Trump’s run on The Apprentice, which helps explain the president’s frustratio­n with CNN.

Trump’s message to the world on Thursday was that the U.S. president’s idea of a free press is one based on favors: Cozy up to the White House and the president will let you ask questions. Fail to deliver positive coverage as a reward for previous business relationsh­ips, and you will be labeled “fake news.”

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