The Arizona Republic

Fake-news honors:

Media critic-in-chief jabs at his usual suspects

- Gregory Korte

The president gives out “awards” to six news organizati­ons.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump gave out fake-news “awards” to six news organizati­ons Wednesday night, capping a much-hyped social media spectacle that matched Trump’s penchant for showmanshi­p with his disdain for the news media covering it.

None of the recipients of Trump’s backhanded laurels was surprising: They’ve been frequent targets of the president’s scorn for much of his first year in office. Among the news organizati­ons cited: CNN, the New York Times, the Washington Post, ABC News, Newsweek and Time magazine.

Most of the stories cited were verifiably false: ABC News retracted its report about former national-security adviser Michael Flynn’s testimony in the Russian collusion probe, and suspended correspond­ent Brian Ross. A report from a Time reporter about a missing Martin Luther King Jr. bust in the Oval Office on Inaugurati­on Day was quickly corrected. And CNN admitted an error in dates that caused it to report that Donald Trump Jr. had access to leaked Democratic emails before they were posted on the website Wikileaks.

But the top example of “fake news” was actually an opinion piece from New

York Times columnist Paul Krugman predicting stock-market losses after Trump’s election victory. Instead, the markets have boomed.

The media critic-in-chief also cited coverage of the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, which has focused on whether the Trump campaign colluded with agents of the Russian government.

“Russian collusion is perhaps the greatest hoax perpetrate­d on the American people,” Trump said.

But a special counsel investigat­ion led by former FBI Director Robert Mueller has already led to indictment­s or conviction­s of at least four people, including Flynn. There’s been no publicly released evidence that Trump knew about his campaign’s contacts with the Russians.

The very term “fake news” came out of Russian attempts to interfere with the election by — among other tactics — planting false stories on social media. But Trump quickly co-opted the term “Russian collusion is perhaps the greatest hoax perpetrate­d on the American people.” President Trump “fake news” to refer to stories that portrayed him in a negative light. But unlike the original meaning of fake news, the stories cited by Trump Wednesday weren’t deliberate­ly falsified — even if the reporting relied on false informatio­n.

The rollout of the awards didn’t go smoothly. The awards were delayed nine days because, Trump said, “the interest in, and importance of, these awards is far greater than anyone could have anticipate­d!”

They were expected to come at 3 p.m. Arizona time on Thursday, but Trump posted a link to the awards on Twitter three hours later.

Then a series of website errors, presumably from high traffic volume, prevented most people from seeing the post until nearly half an hour later.

They were hosted not on the White House website but the Republican National Committee’s. Ethics experts had expressed doubts about whether it was appropriat­e to use taxpayer resources to promote the awards.

As Trump hyped the event, a growing number of bipartisan lawmakers, First Amendment groups and others rebuked the president.

“When a figure in power reflexivel­y calls any press that doesn’t suit him ‘fake news,’ it is that person who should be the figure of suspicion, not the press,” Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., said in a speech on the Senate floor Wednesday.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., wrote in an op-ed for the Washington Post that Trump’s anti-press rhetoric was giving cover to repressive regimes around the world.

“The phrase ‘fake news’ — granted legitimacy by an American president — is being used by autocrats to silence reporters, undermine political opponents, stave off media scrutiny and mislead citizens,” McCain said.

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