The Palm Beach Post

It might be tempting for the media to imitate Trump

- He writes for the New York Times.

Ross Douthat

There are two common views among journalist­s about the fate of our profession under the presidency of Donald Trump. The first is that ours is an age of maximal danger for the freedom of the press, that Trump’s war on newspapers and networks will escalate from tweets to Erdoganian crackdowns, that truly independen­t journalism will be marginaliz­ed while the White House breeds a lapdog press.

The second is that this will be a golden age for the media, offering reporters a chance to shake free from access journalism and source-greasing and actually do their job in full, while finding in a Trump-fearing country the audience for serious investigat­ive journalism that many believed had vanished with the internet.

As the press eases into covering President Trump, however, I have a different worry. Mainstream journalism in this strange era may be freer than the fearful anticipate, but not actually better as the optimists expect. Instead, the press may be tempted toward — and richly rewarded for — a kind of hysterical opposition­alism, a mirroring of Trump’s own tabloid style and disregard for truth.

This mirroring is a broad danger, applying to more institutio­ns than the press. Everyone will be tempted to join the carnival — to escalate when he escalates, to radicalize whenever he turns authoritar­ian.

But the coverage of the Trump transition has made me particular­ly concerned for how the media will evolve. A certain amount of hysteria is normal whenever Republican­s take power.

In places where Trump is clearly abnormal, however, the media has become abnormally credulous as well. There is no question, for instance, that Trump’s racist forays and racist supporters deserve attention; from the start this has been one of the most troubling aspects of the Trump phenomenon. But since November there has been a kind of service journalism for alarmism on this issue, in which lavish attention for far-fringe white nationalis­ts who wear button-down shirts and host D.C. news conference­s is paired with reports on a Trump-fueled hate crime wave whose scope may be overstated and whose most vivid illustrati­ons have a way of being less than true.

Then there are Trumpworld’s possible ties to Russia and the possible Russian attempts to exert influence on his behalf. This is an incredibly serious business, but it has not produced incredibly serious journalism.

There is a large and frightened readership looking for confirmati­on of its darkest fears in every “unpreceden­ted” (but often, not really) move that Trump and his administra­tion make. These readers trust liberal-leaning mainstream outlets to deliver them the truth. But their clicks and shares will reward those outlets when they make rumor seem like certainty, or make the truth more alarming than it is.

The danger for the establishe­d press, then, is the same danger facing other institutio­ns in our republic: that while believing themselves to be nobly resisting Trump, they end up imitating him.

It’s more likely to polarize than to persuade, which means it often does a demagogue’s work for him.

Fellow journalist­s, don’t do it.

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