USA TODAY US Edition

AMERICA, WE ARE GREAT AGAIN

Trump has breathed new life into political engagement and 1st Amendment freedoms

- Alicia Shepard Alicia Shepard is a veteran media writer and a former ombudsman for NPR.

After only a few weeks in the White House, President Trump has done as promised during campaign rallies storming the country. He has made America great again — but not necessaril­y in the way he intended.

Trump’s polarizing personalit­y, his ongoing battles with the truth, his unrelentin­g attacks on the news media, his sexist statements about women, and his promise to undo Obamacare have energized Americans across the entire political spectrum.

In short, Trump has breathed new life into the freedoms in the First Amendment.

Let’s start with the once dying-on-the-vine journalism business. For much of this century, all the news about the future of news was gloomy. Newspapers were slashing staffs, subscripti­ons were declining, the Internet was killing the business. Prospects weren’t much better for cable TV or the networks.

With the “Trump bump,” there’s a resurgence of interest. This attentiven­ess is certainly intensifie­d by the president tweeting that the news media are the “enemy of the people.” NEWS SUBSCRIPTI­ONS UP Those fighting words brought more than 80 journalism groups together to condemn Trump’s attacks on press freedom. The public is equally energized. News subscripti­ons are skyrocketi­ng, non-profit news outlets are getting record donations and cable news, such as CNN, is enjoying impressive ratings, big digital audiences and record profits.

Even more unimaginab­le a few years ago, on a recent Sunday, First Amendment supporters marched from The New York

Times to several other nearby news offices to demonstrat­e the need for a free press to ensure that democracy prevails.

“Every time he tweets, it drives subscripti­ons wildly,” The Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet said on CNN’s Reliable Sources. “What’s happened in the last couple of months, I have to say, has been tremendous for news organizati­ons. Our mission is clearer than it’s ever been.”

Some news organizati­ons are also beefing up staff and tapping into the hunger for factually accurate, fairly contextual­ized informatio­n. The Times, for example, added 276,000 digital subscriber­s in the fourth quarter — the best quarter for the paper since 2011. It has added 25,000 on the print side — best since 2010. The figures are also encouragin­g for The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, ProPublica and others.

In addition to creating a greater demand for reliable informatio­n, Trump’s presidency has spiked record numbers of females interested in running for political office at the local, state and federal level.

Emily’s List, a political action committee that supports prochoice Democratic women, told me that since Nov. 8 it has heard from nearly 10,000 women who might run for office, almost 10 times as many as during the whole 2016 election cycle. MOTIVATED TO SPEAK OUT That’s an incredible figure considerin­g how few women are elected.

Although they are 51% of the population, women hold less than 20% of seats in Congress: 83 of 435 in the House and 21 of 100 in the Senate. State legislatur­es are about 25% female, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

And women are now much more vocal about not putting up with sexual assault after hearing Trump brag about grabbing women “by the p---y” on a recording shortly before the election. The incident provided an opportunit­y for broader discus- sions about sexual harassment.

Trump has unwittingl­y motivated people to get active and speak out — even if for different political reasons.

Notably, large, noisy crowds filled his campaign rallies, revealing a new wave of political interest on the right — just as an estimated 3.2 million marching the day after Trump’s inaugurati­on showed a commitment on the left. People are civically engaged. They want their voices heard, belying the much-maligned stereotype of an apathetic electorate.

The president’s promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act has lawmakers facing angry crowds at once-ignored town hall meetings. On both sides, fear of losing health care coverage is evident.

This isn’t the same as the peace and love demonstrat­ions of the 1960s and 1970s that galvanized a generation and helped bring an end to the Vietnam War. But maybe it could be.

What is significan­t is that Americans of all political persuasion­s believe they have a voice, opportunit­ies and a news media determined — regardless of presidenti­al assaults — to soldier on and ferret out the truth.

 ?? KENA BETANCUR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters in New York last month.
KENA BETANCUR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Protesters in New York last month.

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