Medicine Hat News

Accosting Acosta: Will president pay political price for banning CNN reporter?

- JAMES MCCARTEN

One dramatic White House expulsion may have been getting all the attention Thursday, but there’s been another that freespeech advocates say must not be ignored: the banning of CNN reporter Jim Acosta.

The chief White House correspond­ent and frequent Donald Trump foil had his media pass revoked Wednesday after a remarkable 90-minute news conference in the East Room that saw the president engage in several heated exchanges with reporters, all while an aide struggled to manage their access to a wireless microphone.

Acosta was holding the microphone, trying to ask a follow-up question, while the president was calling on a different reporter. The aide tried to take it away and Acosta resisted, briefly touching her on the arm as he did.

“We will never tolerate a reporter placing his hands on a young woman just trying to do her job as a White House intern,” press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a series of tweets. “The White House is suspending the hard pass of the reporter involved until further notice.”

Acosta responded to the Twitter thread with a single sentence: “This is a lie.”

Trump’s combative relationsh­ip with the media in general, and CNN in particular, has been a fixture of his time in federal politics, fuelling support from a grassroots, blue-collar base that cheers his descriptio­ns of unfriendly reporters as “enemies of the people” and their work as “fake news.”

But revoking the credential­s a journalist needs to do his or her job of holding the government to account is dangerousl­y close to a violation of the U.S. constituti­on, said journalism scholar Frank LoMonte.

“The First Amendment forbids punitive action for constituti­onally protected expression, and asking aggressive questions of an elected official is certainly within the protection of the First Amendment,” said LoMonte, director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Informatio­n at the University of Florida.

It might not be on the same level as firing Attorney General Jeff Sessions, which the president also did Wednesday. But LoMonte said there’s little doubt that Trump is trying to delegitimi­ze media coverage that doesn’t mesh with his administra­tion’s preferred political narrative.

“It’s completely fair game for a politician to say he doesn’t think a newspaper or a TV station treats him fairly. The First Amendment applies to Donald Trump, too,” he said.

“But when a president repeatedly declares that informatio­n provided by news organizati­ons is not to be trusted and that government pronouncem­ents are the only trustworth­y source of informatio­n, that’s crossing a red line.”

The White House has never before revoked a “hard pass” as a consequenc­e of a reporter doing his or her job. Richard Nixon came close after Washington Post revelation­s about the Watergate scandal, banning the newspaper from all events except for press briefings.

Trump, on the other hand, has been trying to block reporters since before he became president. During his 2016 campaign, a number of outlets were shut out by the then-Republican nominee, including newspapers in Idaho and New Hampshire, as well as online outlets like the Huffington Post, Politico and BuzzFeed.

“The whole reason the president likes to push the buttons of journalist­s by personally insulting them is that he’s hoping to create a narrative that journalist­s are at war with him. The worst thing a journalist can do is take that bait and enter into combat.”

In Canada, where reporters don’t get routine access to the Prime Minister’s Office, media credential­s to access Parliament Hill — more akin to the U.S. Congress than the White House — are managed by the parliament­ary press gallery, not the PMO.

But Canadian journalist­s are no strangers to political efforts to impede their work, or finding that demonstrat­ions of solidarity can be used to attack their objectivit­y.

“You won’t believe what the press gallery just did in Ottawa,” the Conservati­ves told supporters in a 2013 fundraisin­g email after the government refused to allow reporters — only photograph­ers and TV cameras — to cover one of then-prime minister Stephen Harper’s caucus speeches.

Most outlets chose to boycott Harper’s speech, instead ending up in the New Democrats’ caucus room when the NDP made a show of welcoming them with open arms.

“We knew they wouldn’t give us fair coverage,” the Conservati­ve email read, “but this is a new low for the Ottawa media elite.”

Liberals, too, have played the other side of the field for their political advantage. Leader Justin Trudeau made a show of taking media questions at length during his successful 2015 election campaign, an effort to set up a contrast with the notoriousl­y media-wary Harper.

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