EDITORIAL BOARD
Journalists are not the enemy
Replacing a free media with a state-run media has always been a first order of business for any corrupt regime taking over a country. Today in the United States we have a president who has created a mantra that members of the media who do not blatantly support the policies of the current US administration are the "enemy of the people." This is one of the many lies that have been thrown out by this president, much like an old-time charlatan threw out "magic" dust or water on a hopeful crowd.
For more than two centuries, this foundational American principle has protected journalists at home and served as a model for free nations abroad. Today it is under serious threat. And it sends an alarming signal to despots from Ankara to Moscow, Beijing to Baghdad, that journalists can be treated as a domestic enemy.
The press is necessary to a free society because it does not implicitly trust leaders — from the local planning board to the White House. And it’s not a coincidence that this president — whose financial affairs are murky and whose suspicious pattern of behavior triggered his own Justice Department to appoint an independent counsel to investigate him — has tried so hard to intimidate journalists who provide independent scrutiny.
There was once broad, bipartisan, intergenerational agreement in the United States that the press played this important role. Yet that view is no longer shared by many Americans. "The news media is the enemy of the American people," is a sentiment endorsed by 48 percent of Republicans surveyed this month by Ipsos polling firm. That poll is not an outlier. One published this week found 51 percent of Republicans considered the press "the enemy of the people rather than an important part of democracy."
Trump’s attack feedback loop helps explain why his faithful are following him into undemocratic territory. More than a quarter of Americans now say that "the president should have the authority to close news outlets engaged in bad behavior," including 43 percent of Republicans. Thirteen percent of those surveyed thought that "President Trump should close down mainstream news outlets, like CNN, The Washington Post and The New York Times."
Trump can’t outlaw the press from doing
its job here, of course. But the model of inciting his supporters in
this regard is how 21st-century authoritarians like Vladimir Putin and
Recep Tayyip Erdogan operate; you don’t need formal censorship to
strangle a supply of information.
Trump’s
apologists feebly insist that he is referring only to biased coverage,
rather than the entire fourth estate. But the president’s own words and
long track record show again and again just how deeply cynical and
dishonest this argument is.
The nation’s Founding Fathers took for
granted that the press would be biased and yet they still explicitly
enshrined the freedom of journalists and publishers in the Constitution. "Our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be
limited without being lost," wrote Thomas Jefferson.
American politicians of all parties
since the Founders have groused about the media, trying to work the refs
by arguing that the news is biased against their tribe. But there was
always respect for the press as an institution. It was not that long ago
that Ronald Reagan proclaimed, "Our tradition of a free press as a
vital part of our democracy is as important as ever."
"The
press was to serve the governed, not the governors," Supreme Court
Justice Hugo Black wrote in 1971. Would that it were still the case.
Today, the only media that Trump’s movement accepts as legitimate are
those that unquestioningly advocate for its leader personally.
Indeed, it is not just that the president is stoking domestic division
for political and personal gain, he’s asking his audiences to follow him
into Fantasia. "Just stick with us, don’t believe the crap you see from
these people, the fake news," he told an audience in Kansas last month. "Just remember, what you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not
what’s happening." George Orwell put it more gracefully in his novel "1984." "The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and
ears. It was their final, most essential command."
It is an essential endpoint to
Trump’s deluge of dishonesty that he now contests objective reality and
urges his supporters to do the same. In the first 558 days of his
presidency, Trump made 4,229 false or misleading claims, according to a
list compiled by The Washington Post. Yet among Trump supporters, only
17 percent think that the administration regularly makes false claims. "Alternative facts" have become de facto.
Lies are antithetical to an
informed citizenry, responsible for self-governance. The greatness of
America is dependent on the role of a free press to speak the truth to
the powerful. To label the press "the enemy of the people" is as
un-American as it is dangerous to the civic compact we have shared for
more than two centuries.
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