Chattanooga Times Free Press

Retracted CNN story a boon for president at war with media

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — For a president seemingly at perpetual war with “fake news,” the resignatio­n of three CNN journalist­s over a retracted story about a Donald Trump Russian connection is a gift from the political gods at a time the struggling effort to repeal Obamacare dominates the headlines.

Trump quickly took advantage with a series of tweets Tuesday, and conservati­ve provocateu­r James O’Keefe piled on by releasing a video with a CNN producer caught on camera talking about the network’s Russia coverage being ratings-driven.

The network Monday accepted the resignatio­ns of journalist­s Thomas Frank, Eric Lichtblau and Lex Haris over last week’s web story about Trump aide Anthony Scaramucci’s pre-inaugural meeting with the head of a Russian investment fund. CNN retracted the story a day later, saying it had not met its standards, and apologized to Scaramucci.

Trump has been unhappy with CNN since he was a candidate last year and hasn’t granted the network an interview since he’s been president. He’s been particular­ly annoyed by its reporting on connection­s with Russia. The misstep on a relatively minor story — it was never mentioned on any of CNN’s television networks — left some White House staff members jubilant, believing it has handed them a new talking point to use as a cudgel against mainstream media organizati­ons they feel are largely biased against them.

Trump tweeted that “they caught Fake News CNN cold.” He lumped ABC, CBS, NBC, The New York Times and The Washington Post together in the same “fake news” category. He said “CNN is looking at big management changes now that they got caught falsely pushing their phony Russian stories. Ratings way down!”

A spokeswoma­n for CNN chief Jeff Zucker didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Tuesday. CNN’s public relations staff refuted Trump’s notion the network is hurting, saying it is completing the mostwatche­d second quarter in the network’s history.

The president was livid at CNN’s story but also felt vindicated because it seemed to confirm his belief the cable network was trying to undermine his presidency, according to one staffer who demanded anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

The White House was considerin­g unleashing its surrogates on the network, planning to hit the mistakes hard in order to change the subject for what has been a stretch for the presidency, with questions about the Russia probe swirling and the Republican health care bill in dire straits. Aides also believe highlighti­ng media mistakes could be a useful way of questionin­g the credibilit­y of much of the reporting on the scandals surroundin­g the White House to convince supporters Trump was the victim of a witch hunt.

Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., suggested in an interview with Breitbart News that “maybe Jeff Zucker should do an on-camera briefing about CNN’s fake news scandal before the White House does any more of them.”

John Podhoretz, a conservati­ve columnist for The New York Post and editor of Commentary magazine, tweeted that “CNN published a bad story, pulled it, apologized. 3 journalist­s quit. That’s impressive and decisive action. Yelling ‘fake news’ is unfair.”

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