Journal Star

Trump’s NATO threat is more serious than Biden’s gaffes

- Rex Huppke Columnist USA TODAY

A few days ago, one Republican special counsel declared 81-year-old President Joe Biden old and questioned his memory. The president then, in a detailed and widerangin­g news conference, misidentif­ied the name of a world leader.

That one-two punch of news sparked a political media freakout of volcanic proportion­s – all hands on deck, wallto-wall coverage. It was a cataclysm. Perhaps the end of the road for the incumbent Democratic president.

But at a campaign rally Saturday, Biden’s likely opponent, 77-year-old former president and current criminal defendant Donald Trump, made some news of his own.

Apparently thinking NATO is a social club with a membership fee, he’d encourage Russia to attack any NATO allies who “didn’t pay.”

Trump claimed that some unidentifi­ed NATO member asked him if the United States would protect them from a Russian invasion if they hadn’t met their defense spending target. Trump said he responded by giving Russia the green light: “No, I would not protect you, in fact I would encourage them to do whatever the hell they want.”

That comment led NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g to release a statement saying: “Any suggestion that allies will not defend each other undermines all of our security, including that of the U.S., and puts American and European soldiers at increased risk.”

Trump’s cavalier NATO comment is as ignorant as it is unhinged, and as dangerous as it is stupid. The likely Republican presidenti­al nominee said he would encourage Russia to attack a U.S. ally, for God’s sake. That the “Republican special counsel questions Biden’s mental acuity” story received at least as much, and I’d argue considerab­ly more, media attention is a damning indictment of our political press.

But Trump threatenin­g to upend Western democracy was just one of the notable things he did since Biden mixed up the presidents of Mexico and Egypt.

After winning the Nevada caucus, Trump kept referring to something that had happened Tuesday night (Nikki Haley losing to “none of the above” in the Nevada primary) as though it happened “last night,” which would be Wednesday. He said it over and over. There was no news network shock over that memory lapse.

Later that week, Trump proudly told an NRA conference, “During my four years nothing happened, and there was great pressure on me, having to do with guns.”

In the same speech he pronounced “subsidies” as “subsies” and said it was “Saturday afternoon” when it was actually Friday.

On Saturday, Trump posted on his social media site: “2024 is our Final Battle. With you at my side, we will demolish the Deep State, we will expel the warmongers from our government, we will drive out the globalists, we will cast out the Communists, Marxists, and Fascists, we will throw off the sick political class that hates our Country, we will rout the Fake News Media, we will Drain the Swamp, and we will liberate our country from these tyrants and villains once and for all!”

I assume that sounded better in the original German, but whatever. Trump’s violent, conspirato­rial and batcrap insane rhetoric registered nary a blip in terms of news coverage.

That’s the problem we’re facing heading into the 2024 presidenti­al election. The special counsel report on Biden’s handling of classified documents was significan­t and newsworthy. It found, at least in its summary page, that he “willfully retained” highly classified informatio­n from his time as vice president, but that charges were not warranted.

(A careful read of the report shows the special counsel repeatedly noting a lack of evidence to support suggestion­s that Biden “willfully retained” documents, instead suggesting “other innocent explanatio­ns for the documents that we cannot refute.” And the report’s characteri­zation of Biden’s memory amounted to a political hit job that many have argued is far outside the bounds of a special counsel report.)

Biden’s news conference gaffe in the wake of the special counsel report certainly played into the swirling questions about his mental sharpness.

But if we’re going to argue that the level of media hysteria following the Biden news was appropriat­e, then the attention paid to Trump’s repeated gaffes, memory lapses, anti-democratic posturing and descriptio­n of all who disagree with him as “tyrants and villains” should sure as hell be equivalent.

And it’s not. Not even close.

Trump is a wide-open fire hose of hateful, dumb and precedent-demolishin­g rhetoric. He is also facing more than 90 state and federal felony charges, has been found liable for sexual abuse and continues to deny the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election, eroding the public’s faith in our democracy.

I’ve defended my friends and colleagues in the political press for a long time. I know how hard this profession can be, particular­ly on the news side where objectivit­y is king and opinions like mine aren’t allowed.

But the out-of-whack nature of the coverage of Biden and Trump has simply become laughable.

No news organizati­on would be biased to treat the cruel or racist or dishonest or gibberish-y things Trump says each day as newsworthy. Trump could absolutely become president again, and anything that downplays his true nature while zooming in tighter on Biden’s issues is irresponsi­ble and not proper news judgment. It’s a play for balance, not reality.

Biden mishandled classified documents, cooperated fully once it became clear what happened, answered hours of questions from the special counsel and couldn’t remember some stuff that happened years ago. That’s news. Report it. And questions about Biden’s age are fair game as well. People are worried about that.

But in the days since the report on Biden came out, Trump has done things over and over that are orders of magnitude more serious, and the lack of commensura­te attention shows it’s well past time news organizati­ons stop both-sides-ing these two people.

One is a normal candidate with ample flaws and policies some will dislike. The other is a criminal defendant who constantly shows he’s a raging narcissist and a profound threat to this country and the world.

Pretending otherwise isn’t objectivit­y. It’s journalist­ic malpractic­e.

Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on X @RexHuppke and Facebook facebook.com/RexIsAJerk.

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