The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

President feeling sting of a free press in a free country

- Dana Milbank Columnist

The president has the greatest self-pity. The best! “No politician in history, and I say this with great surety, has been treated worse or more unfairly,” Donald Trump said.

Thus did our assured head of state, equal parts narcissist­ic and uninformed, rank his treatment worse than that of Benito Mussolini (executed corpse beaten and hung upside down in public square), Oliver Cromwell (body disinterre­d, drawn and quartered, hanged and head hung on spike), Leon Trotsky (exiled and killed with icepick to the skull), and the headless Louis XVI, Mary Queen of Scots and Charles I.

Trump hasn’t been treated badly. He has been treated exactly as he deserved. He took on the institutio­n of a free press — and it fought back.

Trump came to office after intimidati­ng publishers, barring journalist­s from covering him and threatenin­g to rewrite press laws, and he has sought to discredit the “fake news” media at every chance. Instead, he wound up inspiring a new golden age in American journalism.

Trump provoked the extraordin­ary work of reporters who blew wide open the Russia election scandal, the contacts between Russia and top Trump officials, and interferen­ce by Trump in the FBI investigat­ion. This week’s appointmen­t of a special prosecutor is a direct result of their work.

The rivals New York Times and The Washington Post combined have produced one breathtaki­ng scoop after another, including:

The Post’s Feb. 9 report that national security adviser Michael Flynn, contrary to the Trump administra­tion’s claims, talked with the Russian ambassador about U.S. sanctions before Trump took office. Flynn was out soon thereafter.

The Post’s March 1 report that Jeff Sessions also spoke with the Russian ambassador but did not disclose the contacts when asked about possible contacts during his confirmati­on as attorney general. He was forced to recuse himself from the Russia investigat­ion.

The Post’s March 28 report that the Trump administra­tion tried to block former acting attorney general Sally Yates from testifying on the Trump campaign’s possible Russia ties.

The Times’ March 30 report that two White House officials helped provide Devin Nunes, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, with intelligen­ce that Nunes made public. Nunes was forced to recuse himself from the committee’s probe.

The Post’s report this week that Trump shared highly classified intelligen­ce with Russian officials, jeopardizi­ng the cooperatio­n of allies.

And the final blow: The Times’ report this week that Trump asked FBI Director James B. Comey to shut down the FBI’s Flynn investigat­ion, according to a contempora­neous memo Comey wrote before Trump fired him.

On one day this week, the United States awoke to a report from Reuters that the Trump campaign had at least 18 undisclose­d contacts with Russians; a McClatchy report that Flynn, who had been paid as a Turkish representa­tive, stopped a military plan that Turkey opposed; a Times report that the Trump team knew Flynn was under investigat­ion before he started work at the White House; and a Post report that the House majority leader told colleagues last year that he thought Russian President Vladimir Putin was paying Trump.

This journalist­ic triumph, made possible by nameless government officials who risked their jobs and their freedom to get the truth out, is all the more satisfying because it came as a corrective after one of the sorriest episodes in modern journalism: the uncritical, unfiltered and unending coverage of Trump — particular­ly by cable news — that propelled him to the presidency.

Trump may feel as if he’s been drawn and quartered, but what he’s experience­d is the power of a free press in a free country. That is entirely fair, and fitting.

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