Los Angeles Times

Trump accuses CNN of fake news

The network comes under fire despite its retraction of article.

- By Stephen Battaglio and David Ng

Despite the retraction of an article and the resignatio­n of three veteran journalist­s, CNN is finding itself exactly where it doesn’t want to be: a rallying cry in President Trump’s campaign against fake news.

The cable news network took swift action to remove an article from its website Friday connecting Trump ally and Wall Street financier Anthony Scaramucci to the $10-billion Russian Direct Investment Fund.

And three journalist­s — Thomas Frank, Eric Lichtblau and Lex Haris — resigned Monday night after being told by management that an internal review of the story found that they had breached CNN’s standards for stories that rely on a single anonymous source.

According to people familiar with the incident who were not authorized to discuss it publicly, the CNN lawyers who vet investigat­ive pieces were “surprised” to see the article online.

Some insiders believed that accepting the journalist­s’ resignatio­n was harsh punishment. But the heightened scrutiny amid a White House at war with the press has reduced the margin for error.

“It is rare that you have three people shown the door over one story,” said a former CNN executive who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “I think they have a low tolerance for feeding the fake news beast.”

On Tuesday morning, CNN President Jeff Zucker called in from London to address CNN staffers. People who heard the call said Zucker remained upbeat and encouraged staff members to continue their ag-

gressive reporting. But he emphasized that procedures need to be followed in the heightened partisan environmen­t.

The Scaramucci story was the first to be retracted since Zucker took over in 2013.

Gabriel Kahn, a professor at the USC Annenberg School for Communicat­ion and Journalism, said that any failure in the reporting process becomes ammunition for Trump and his supporters, who see the media as an enemy — even when the news outlet acts responsibl­y to fix problems.

“What might have been an error of judgment and reporting — albeit an egregious one — in another era becomes part of this onslaught against the legitimacy of the press,” Kahn said. “[CNN’s] investigat­ive reporting, with this important exception, has been strong. And, like all responsibl­e news organizati­ons, when they make a mistake they cop to it, which is what they did here.”

News of Monday night’s resignatio­ns drew a quick response from Trump. The president’s relationsh­ip with CNN has become more fraught since January, when the network reported on an intelligen­ce dossier that said Russian operatives had compromisi­ng personal and financial informatio­n about Trump.

“So they caught Fake News CNN cold, but what about NBC, CBS & ABC? What about the failing @nytimes & @washington­post? They are all Fake News!” he tweeted early Tuesday.

Trump also tweeted that CNN was looking at “big management changes now that they got caught falsely pushing their phony Russia stories. Ratings are way down.”

No executive changes are expected in response to the retracted story, according to people at the network familiar with the matter. CNN’s ratings are pacing ahead of last year; last month the network had an average audience of 822,000 viewers, up 40% over May 2016. Zucker said this year that CNN is on track for record profit of more than $1 billion in 2017.

Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders attacked CNN during the daily White House briefing Tuesday, noting that “the constant barrage of fake news directed at this president” has garnered Trump’s frustratio­n.

Sanders directed reporters to view an undercover video that purports to show a CNN producer calling into question the network’s pursuit of the Trump-Russia collusion story, saying that much of the coverage is ratings-driven.

“I would encourage everyone in this room, and, frankly, everyone across the country, to take a look at it,” she said. “I think if it is accurate, I think it’s a disgrace to all of media, to all of journalism.”

The video was released by Project Veritas, the conservati­ve activist group that has built a reputation for producing selectivel­y edited videos and audio recordings designed to smear liberal and left-leaning groups. The organizati­on has been criticized for deceptive editing and sketchy reporting methods that have gotten founder James O’Keefe convicted of phone tampering.

“More people are starting to have suspicions about the media,” O’Keefe told The Times.

CNN producer John Bonifield, who is seen on the latest video, works on health stories out of the network’s Atlanta office and has no involvemen­t in the network’s political coverage, according to an executive at the network not authorized to comment publicly on the matter.

A spokespers­on said the network is standing by Bonifield: “Diversity of personal opinion is what makes CNN strong, we welcome it & embrace it.”

CNN has become a point of obsession among many conservati­ve activists who see the network as their prime ideologica­l foe for its coverage of Trump. They regard the recent retraction and the Project Veritas video as evidence of an antiTrump agenda.

Under pressure from activists, CNN recently fired hosts Kathy Griffin and Reza Aslan for expressing anti-Trump sentiments.

“We see their credibilit­y as on the line here,” said Brian Maloney, co-founder of the Media Equality Project, a conservati­ve group that has targeted CNN advertiser­s through social media campaigns. “I think CNN brought a lot of this on themselves by going overboard on the Russia story.”

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