In tweeted video, Trump knocks down, beats up CNN
US PRESIDENT Donald Trump launched a fresh attack on the news media on Sunday by tweeting a video – bizarre even by his standards – showing him knocking down and beating a professional wrestling “villain” whose face had been replaced by a CNN logo.
The 10-year-old video, hailing back to Trump’s days as a guest celebrity at pro-wrestling events, came after a week in which his unrestrained Twitter attacks on two MSNBC talk show hosts drew widespread condemnation from members of both political parties.
The latest tweet was immediately condemned by journalists, who said Trump seemed to be promoting physical violence against the media, while a Repub- lican lawmaker said the president was trying to “weaponise distrust” through his postings.
But administration officials insisted Trump has a right to respond to critical coverage.
In the 28-second video,Trump, in a suit and tie, is seen knocking down another man in a suit who is standing next to a wrestling ring. Trump repeatedly pummels the fallen man, whose face is covered by a superimposed CNN logo. A fake CNN logo then appears on the screen reading “FNN: Fraud News Network”.
A longer version of the video online shows that the man being beaten was World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) ownerpromoter Vince McMahon, a friend of Trump’s. In that version, Trump also gets in the ring to shave McMahon’s head as part of the “The Battle of the Billionaires” at the WrestleMania 23 event.
McMahon was present at the White House in February to pose smilingly with the president when his wife, Linda McMahon, – a former WWE executive – was sworn in as Trump’s Small Business Administration chief.
Trump has recently stepped up his attacks on the news media. Besides the crude attack on MSNBC co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski – he called her “low IQ” and said he had seen her bleeding after a facelift – he has specifically bashed outlets including CNN, NBC, the Washington Post and the New York Times.
“It is a sad day when the president of the United States encourages violence against reporters,” CNN said in a statement. “Clearly, Sarah Huckabee Sanders lied when she said the president had never done so.”
CNN suggested Trump should instead be focusing on issues like health care, tensions with North Korea and his upcoming meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Hamburg, Germany.
A journalists’ group, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, roundly denounced the video. “We condemn the president’s threat of physical violence against journalists,” said a statement from the group’s Executive Director, Bruce Brown. “This tweet is beneath the office of the presidency. Sadly, it is not beneath this president.”
AWhite House official, Homeland Security adviser Thomas Bossert, defended Trump’s video and said it demonstrated the president’s “genuine ability to communicate to the people”.
“I think that no one would perceive that as a threat,” he said on ABC. “I hope they don’t. I do think that he’s beaten up in a way on cable platforms that he has a right to respond.”
But Republican Senator Ben Sasse rejected that argument, saying on CNN that there is a difference between complaining about bad coverage and “trying to weaponise distrust”.
Meanwhile, several journalists said they feared Trump was stirring up anti-media violence.
Dean Baquet, executive editor of the NewYork Times, said it was “unseemly” that Trump would “encourage such anger at the media”.
And Annie Lowrey, a journalist with the Atlantic magazine, tweeted: “In seriousness, I am terrified that a journalist . . . is going to end up dead.”