The Day

Trump continues bashing media

New York Times publisher urges president to show restraint, fearing attacks on journalist­s

- By DARLENE SUPERVILLE

Bridgewate­r, N.J. — The publisher of The New York Times said Sunday he “implored” President Donald Trump at a private White House meeting this month to reconsider his broad attacks on journalist­s, calling the president’s anti-press rhetoric “not just divisive but increasing­ly dangerous.”

In a statement, A.G. Sulzberger said he decided to comment publicly after Trump revealed their off-therecord meeting to his more than 53 million Twitter followers on Sunday. Trump’s aides had requested that the July 20 meeting not be made public, Sulzberger said.

“Had a very good and interestin­g meeting at the White House with A.G. Sulzberger, Publisher of the New York Times. Spent much time talking about the vast amounts of Fake News being put out by the media & how that Fake News has morphed into phrase, “Enemy of the People.” Sad!” Trump wrote.

Hours after that exchange, Trump resumed his broadside against the media in a series of tweets that included a pledge not to let the country “be sold out by anti-Trump haters in the ... dying newspaper industry.”

Sulzberger, who succeeded his father as publisher on Jan. 1, said his main purpose for accepting the meeting was to “raise concerns about the president’s deeply troubling anti-press rhetoric.”

Hartford — President Donald Trump’s agenda has emerged as a focal point in the race for attorney general in Connecticu­t, where even the Republican candidates agree some of his policies should be challenged in court.

The current attorney general, George Jepsen, a Democrat who is not seeking re-election, has filed or joined other states in filing nearly two dozen lawsuits against the Trump administra­tion on issues ranging from taxation to pollution to the 2020 census.

Three Democrats and two Republican­s are running for attorney general, who unlike other state attorneys general deals only with civil legal issues and has no authority over criminal matters. The party primaries are Aug. 14, followed by the general election Nov. 6.

Democrats William Tong, Chris Mattei and Paul Doyle agree with Jepsen’s actions against the Trump administra­tion. Republican­s Sue Hatfield and John Shaban say Jepsen and the Democratic candidates’ focus is too partisan, but they too would challenge federal policies that harm state residents.

Among the lawsuits Jepsen has filed is one with New York, New Jersey and Maryland alleging the tax overhaul law passed last year and championed by the Republican president unfairly singles out hightax blue states. The lawsuit says many homeowners will see big increases in their federal tax bills because the law caps a deduction for state and local taxes at $10,000.

Connecticu­t also has joined other states in suing the federal government for failing to curb air pollution that blows into the states from the west, cutting Affordable Care Act subsidies, planning to ease emissions standards and adding a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census form.

Tong, a state representa­tive from Stamford and the party’s endorsed candidate, put Trump front and center in a campaign TV ad, saying the president is “attacking families like ours.”

“I think that the AG’s job is to run a major state agency and to do all that he or she can to protect and defend our way of life and families in this state,” Tong told The Associated Press.

Mattei, a former federal prosecutor who lives in Hartford, said he would fight what he calls “overreach and abuse” by the Trump administra­tion. Echoing his fellow Democrats, he said the legal fights by Democratic attorneys general are fueled by law violations, not politics.

“What this comes down to is a president and a Republican majority that is tearing down norms and modern policies and institutio­ns,” he said. “To me, it’s very simple. The responsibi­lity of the attorney general is to protect the people of Connecticu­t from the threats that they face.”

Doyle, a state senator from Wethersfie­ld, said he is not as consumed by Trump as his opponents but would continue to push back against the administra­tion.

“I believe it’s the appropriat­e role of the attorney general to challenge policies that harm the people,” he said. “My opponents seem to focus on fighting Donald Trump, and I will do that, but there’s more to the job than fighting Donald Trump.”

Hatfield, a state prosecutor from Pomfret and a Trump delegate at the 2016 Republican National Convention, said she doesn’t agree with the president all the time. She said she agrees with Jepsen’s challenge of the tax overhaul, but she wasn’t so sure about other fights, including the one over air pollution, saying she needs to see all the evidence.

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