The Mercury News

Trump campaign lawsuit targets Washington Post over opinion pieces

- By Jonathan Stempel Reuters

NEW YORK » President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign sued the Washington Post for libel Tuesday over two opinion pieces that it said suggested improper ties between the campaign and Russia, North Korea or both.

The campaign filed its lawsuit six days after filing a separate libel lawsuit against The New York Times, over an opinion piece it said falsely suggested a quid pro quo between Russian officials and Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Both lawsuits escalate the Republican president’s longrunnin­g battle with news media he believes demonstrat­e bias against him, a list also including CNN and MSNBC and which he frequently brands “fake news.”

Trump’s campaign is seeking millions in damages in both lawsuits.

The Post did not respond to requests for comment. Its owner is Amazon.com Inc’s billionair­e founder, Jeff Bezos.

Tuesday’s complaint focused on alleged false and defamatory statements contained in opinions published June 13 by Greg Sargent and June 20 by Paul Waldman, who both write for the Post’s Plum Line blog.

The campaign objected to what it called Sargent’s statement that former special counsel Robert Mueller, in his probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election, concluded that Trump’s campaign “tried to conspire with” a “sweeping and systemic” attack by Russia against that election.

It said Mueller’s report, released April 18, actually concluded that there was “no conspiracy” between the campaign and the Russian government, and that no U.S. person intentiona­lly coordinate­d with Russian efforts to interfere with the election.

The campaign also objected to Waldman’s statement “who knows what sort of aid Russia and North Korea will give to the Trump campaign, now that he has invited them to offer their assistance.”

It said no one associated with the campaign or the White House ever invited those countries to help the campaign in 2019 or 2020, and no one has reported any contact between the campaign and North Korea concerning any U.S. election.

The campaign said the Post was “well aware” the challenged statements were untrue when published, and said the pieces were part of its “systematic pattern of bias” against the campaign, and designed to ultimately cause its failure.

The lawsuit against the Times was filed in a New York state court in Manhattan over a piece by Max Frankel, that paper’s executive editor from 1986 to 1994.

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