Baltimore Sun

Media face challenges even after Trump era

- David Zurawik David Zurawik is The Baltimore Sun’s media critic. Email: david.zurawik@ baltsun.com; Twitter: @davidzuraw­ik.

I thought our jobs as journalist­s were going to get a lot less complicate­d and chaotic once Donald Trump left office and Joe Biden took over.

Was I ever wrong.

With a nation still divided, a pandemic still killing hundreds of Americans every day, an economy hanging in the balance, a rising tide of domestic terrorism and a Congress that seems populated by some of the least talented and least honest men and women since the 19th century, the complicate­d stories and journalist­ic challenges just keep coming. Never in my lifetime have media been more important to democracy. But with that opportunit­y comes huge responsibi­lity. There are a number of hard things we need to demand of ourselves to righteousl­y do our jobs.

Start with the way reporters cover the surge of immigrant children on the U. S. border and President Biden’s decision not to allow the media to see their living conditions under U.S. custody.

The challenge for the mainstream media is to cover Mr. Biden just as tenaciousl­y as we tried to cover Mr. Trump when there were surges of immigrants during his administra­tion.

That is not as easy as it sounds since Mr. Trump’s administra­tion separated children and parents at the border, and made a show of it for the cameras as a deterrent to keep other would-be immigrants from heading north.

The cruelty of that policy shocked many Americans.

In defending their decision not to give journalist­s access over the weekend,

Mr. Biden and his spokespeop­le stuck to talking points criticizin­g the Trump administra­tion. The Biden administra­tion was now doing everything to treat the children and teens at the border as humanely as possible, while trying to rebuild the immigratio­n system and find more housing and support, they insisted.

“We’re basically having to build the plane as we’re flying,” Susan Rice, Mr. Biden’s domestic policy adviser, said in an interview with The Washington Post.

That’s a nice metaphor, and it is true that Mr. Trump dismantled all kinds of government infrastruc­ture. But that does not allow Mr. Biden’s administra­tion to deny access to the press. Citizens have a right to know how their government is operating and whether Mr. Biden is indeed keeping his promise to be a kinder and more responsibl­e president than Mr. Trump. Media need to push back harder in the demand for access.

Journalist­s also need to keep pushing for more details on the actions of those involved in the deadly insurrecti­on at the Capitol on Jan. 6. The more we find out from video recordings and legal filings, the more organized this attack on democracy looks. We need to know if any members of Congress or members of their staffs helped a mob gain access to the halls of Congress in an effort to stop the certificat­ion of Mr. Biden as the legally elected president of the United States.

And what about the role of Mr. Trump and some of his creepier allies, like

Roger Stone and Rudy Giuliani? The New York papers have been reporting the links between Mr. Stone and some members of the far-right group the Oath Keepers on Jan. 5 and 6. According to a New York Times report, members of the Oath Keepers provided security for Mr. Stone at the “Stop the Steal” rally that preceded the march to the Capitol and then participat­ed in the assault on the building.

As journalist­s, we should not listen to those on the right who are suddenly talking about forgivenes­s, turning the page and moving on.

No, no, no! Give us more, more, more on who did what. And news outlets should use the opinion pages to sound the call for making them pay as an example to anyone who would try to block the results of a legitimate election again. It won’t be easy fighting the short attention span of a society doped out on shorter and shorter media bites. We still have to try.

Finally, whatever we do, we should not turn our attention away from the racial reckoning that caught fire over the summer.

There is still so much education, informatio­n and history that needs to be reported, written, filmed and shared about the experience­s of multiple groups in American life. We need to stay on the case day in and day out, and not just in the aftermath of horrible events like the murders of Asian American women last week in Atlanta.

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