The Guardian (USA)

Wall Street Journal criticized for Trump letter pushing election lie

- Adam Gabbatt

The Wall Street Journal has been criticized after it published a letter by Donald Trump in which the former president continued to push his false claim that the 2020 presidenti­al election was “rigged”.

The former president’s letter, written in response to a WSJ editorial about voting law in Pennsylvan­ia, claims, wrongly, that “the election was rigged, which you, unfortunat­ely, still haven’t figured out”.

The 600-word letter contains a bullet-point list of disproved claims – many of which have been debunked by WSJ reporters – which Trump claims show there was voter fraud. There was no widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election, as several independen­t and partisan reviews have confirmed.

Several WSJ reporters were unhappy with the publicatio­n of the letter, CNN reported, which comes after what had been a successful few weeks for the WSJ, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. The newspaper’s Facebook Files investigat­ion revealed, through internal documents, how highprofil­e users were not subject to the same standards as regular users, and that Facebook was aware that Instagram, which it owns, is toxic for teenage girls.

The decision to publish Trump’s spurious letter threatens to undermine that journalism, despite a newspaper’s editorial board typically being separate from the newsroom.

Trump remains banned from Twitter and Facebook, and has been reduced to sending daily emails to supporters to make his voice heard. The WSJ’s publicatio­n of the letter was swiftly criticized in the media world.

“I think it’s very disappoint­ing that our opinion section continues to publish misinforma­tion that our news side works so hard to debunk,” an unnamed WSJ reporter told CNN. “They should hold themselves to the same standards we do!”

Bill Grueskin, a Columbia University School of Journalism professor who served as deputy managing editor of the Journal, told the Washington Post that letters to the editor are often used as a place for readers to express dissatisfa­ction with a newspaper’s coverage.

“That’s generally fine, but if someone is going to spout a bunch of falsehoods, the editor usually feels an obligation to trim those out, or to publish a contempora­neous response. The Wall Street Journal editorial page chose not to do that in this case,” Grueskin said.

Other journalist­s weighed in on Twitter.

“Most newspapers don’t allow op-ed writers to just make up nonsense lies. Apparently the Wall Street Journal is not among them,” SV Dáte, a HuffPost White House correspond­ent, wrote.

Matt Fuller, who covers politics for the Daily Beast, posted: “Newspapers don’t exist so that powerful people can publish whatever lies they want. In fact, that may be one of the very opposite reasons newspapers exist.”

The WSJ did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? Trump’s letter claims, wrongly, that ‘the election was rigged, which you, unfortunat­ely, still haven’t figured out’.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Trump’s letter claims, wrongly, that ‘the election was rigged, which you, unfortunat­ely, still haven’t figured out’.

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