The Day

Trump’s troubling anti-media threats

- The Washington Post

A sap residentia­l candidate, Donald Trump vowed to change the libel laws to make it easier to win big lawsuits against news organizati­ons. It never happened.

After the election, he pressured the FBI director to consider sending reporters to jail for publishing classified informatio­n. That was another non-starter.

And just last week, he suggested that a TV network have its broadcast license revoked because he objected to a news report. That isn’t even possible under FCC rules, which licenses individual stations, not networks.

Trump keeps ranting about the dishonest news media. And reporters and editors keep doing their jobs, undaunted.

So there’s no problem and First Amendment champions should just calm down, right?

Stop overreacti­ng to Trump’s tweet-threats, counseled Jack Shafer of Politico last week, suggesting that, while not ignoring them, “we discount their value in the political marketplac­e down to the junk level.”

As many have noted, Trump is actually more accessible than his predecesso­r — often answering reporters’ questions in informal settings, calling them on the phone and giving plenty of interviews (though mostly to his friends at Fox News).

What’s more, his Twitter feed means that we have a real-time understand­ing of the president’s thinking, such as it is. (Peter Baker of the New York Times, speaking last week at George Washington University, termed this “the most transparen­t presidency we have had in our lifetime,” and added, half-joking, that Trump’s tweets are “like the Nixon tapes, if they were played every night on the CBS News.”)

Anything but harmless

Still, it would be a mistake to see Trump’s anti-media threats as harmless. They’re anything but.

Consider a Turkish court’s conviction last week of Wall Street Journal reporter Ayla Albayrak. It sentenced her to more than two years in prison, determinin­g that she had engaged in terrorist propaganda by writing a news story. “This was an unfounded criminal charge and wildly inappropri­ate conviction that wrongly singled out a balanced Wall Street Journal report,” charged Journal Editor in Chief Gerard Baker. The article’s purpose was “to provide objective and independen­t reporting on events in Turkey, and it succeeded.”

The State Department issued a strong rebuke to Turkey: Freedom of expression, including for speech and the media, strengthen­s democracy and needs to be protected, it said.

Notably, it said, that includes “even speech which some find controvers­ial or uncomforta­ble.”

Meanwhile, the executive-branch boss was lashing out at American news organizati­ons for reporting that he found uncomforta­ble — or, as he prefers to put it, “fake.”

“It is frankly disgusting the way the press is able to write whatever they want to write. And people should look into it,” Trump stormed. Brandishin­g a copy of the U.S. Constituti­on, Jake Tapper of CNN retorted that he’d done the investigat­ion and found the answers. (The president later backed off a bit, saying he didn’t really want to limit the media; he just wants journalist­s to be what he considers honest.)

Trump’s constant press attacks carry a worldwide price — they hurt America’s ability to stand for democratic freedoms around the world.

“When the president consistent­ly speaks that way, there’s a loss of U.S. influence and credibilit­y on matters of press freedom,” Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, told me.

As Simon sees it, the American government needs to be able to exert influence — and maintain the moral high ground — in all kinds of case involving the news media.

American officials lean on a strong democratic reputation when they raise concerns about the treatment of the U.S. media around the globe, he said, “whether it’s the Chinese government’s withholdin­g visas, or the Turkish authoritie­s expelling Wall Street Journal reporter Dion Nissenbaum last December, or the ban on CNN en Espanol imposed in Venezuela.”

Turkey, nominally a democracy, has a disturbing record of human rights offenses — including throwing many journalist­s in jail. But Trump keeps lavishing praise on President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, calling him a great friend and (as with Vladimir Putin) awarding high marks for strong leadership. (Behind the scenes, Turkey and the U.S. have been in a bitter disagreeme­nt about the arrest of an employee of the American consulate in Istanbul.)

It may be tempting to shrug off Trump’s threats as nothing but venting — or to see them as a big slab of red meat to feed his base.

And it may also be tempting to say his fighting words don’t matter much because the worst threats haven’t come to fruition.

But even if Trump can’t really get a network’s broadcast license revoked or libel laws changed, he still can — and does — undermine American values, both here and abroad, when he attacks the press.

And no amount of transparen­cy-by-tweet or backslappi­ng access for reporters can make up for that.

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