Lethbridge Herald

RUSSIAN TO JUDGMENT?

MEDIA LEAPS ON SESSIONS-RUSSIA STORY

- David Bauder

Report says Sessions met twice with Russia’s U.S. ambassador prior to election —

Reports about Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ two meetings with Russia’s U.S. ambassador became a textbook illustrati­on of the vastly different shapes a story takes in today’s media world.

The story moved with lightning speed Thursday across the media ecosphere, from the Washington Post’s initial revelation the night before, to hours of political combat, finally to Sessions’ announceme­nt — broadcast live Thursday afternoon on broadcast and cable news networks — that he would remove himself from any investigat­ion into Russian involvemen­t in the 2016 election.

“This is really going to take the temperatur­e down on Capitol Hill,” MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt said following Sessions’ news conference.

Perhaps. The story about Sessions’ meetings with the Russian ambassador, with the backdrop of still unanswered questions about Russian ties to Trump, had enough mystery to make it politicall­y malleable: why did they take place and what was said? Some Democrats called for Sessions’ resignatio­n, while many Trump supporters saw nothing wrong.

Less than 24 hours after the Post story broke, the chyron on CNN’s screen read “Sessions Under Siege.” He was in a “firestorm.” Meanwhile, the Breitbart News website had another take: “Fake news: Media, Democrats distort remarks to target Jeff Session.”

Before Sessions’ news conference, news networks and websites featured two key videos: one showing Sessions answering a question from Minnesota Sen. Al Franken about the meetings in a January hearing, and the other NBC’s brief interview with Sessions on Thursday morning. The attorney general said he would recuse himself from an investigat­ion into the government’s Russian ties, “whenever it’s appropriat­e,” a determinat­ion he made by mid-afternoon.

The conservati­ve website Red State used sarcasm as the story sucked up television time. “Jeff Sessions met with a Russian ambassador and now all hell is breaking loose,” the site headlined.

“I’m sorry, I don’t see the scandal here,” wrote Joe Cunningham. “Yeah, Sessions wasn’t completely forthcomin­g, but if we fired all politician­s for failing to disclose all the facts that may or may not be relevant to an issue, then we would be without politician­s.”

The liberal site Daily Kos linked a clip of the Sessions testimony under the headline, “Here are the 30 seconds that may end Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ career.”

“Ladies and gentlemen, this ends in resignatio­n,” wrote Jen Hayden. “There is no other reasonable outcome. Sessions will be lucky if it doesn’t result in jail time, too.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Thursday. Sessions said he will recuse himself from a federal investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 White House election.
Associated Press photo Attorney General Jeff Sessions speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Thursday. Sessions said he will recuse himself from a federal investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 White House election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada