Graham: Pro-Biden newsrooms debate censoring Trump
Donald Trump’s early primary victories have started the “newsroom debates” again. Associated Press media reporter David Bauder penned a story headlined “Trump’s live appearances pose a riddle that news executives still haven’t solved.”
So, when a newsworthy event happens — like Trump’s victory speech after the New Hampshire primary — the pro-Biden networks worry “Trump will make false statements that are difficult, if not impossible, to correct in real time — or go completely off script with something entirely unexpected.”
Does Trump make false statements? Yes, starting with his refusal to concede he lost the 2020 election. Does Joe Biden make false statements? The name “Biden” never comes up in Bauder’s story. Biden lies and mangles facts on a regular basis, but none of these networks have the slightest resistance to airing him live. This makes them look like naked partisans.
On Jan. 24, the afternoon this AP story was posted, Biden spoke to accept the endorsement of the United Auto Workers union. CNN aired six minutes of the speech live, and there was no “fact-checking” to be done. They turned to CNN reporters who touted the endorsement as a big deal, and pointed out the UAW president called Trump a “scam.”
But with Trump, Bauder wrote nervously of “the responsibility of giving a potential future president the chance to be heard.” Then he mentioned “a disastrous town hall event with Trump on CNN last spring reminded everyone of the implications of airing his appearances live.”
How was it “disastrous”? Did anyone die? Did CNN fall apart? Or were they out of third place for an hour? It obviously rocked CNN to its core and marked the beginning of the end of CNN boss Chris Licht. Bauder hinted it was disastrous because “fact-checking on the fly can be extraordinarily hard, and many of Trump’s supporters are more inclined to believe what comes out of the former president’s mouth than what a news organization declares is true.”
The problem here, then, is that the media are frustrated that anyone doubts their “fact-checking,” as if it’s completely factual and not influenced by their red-hot partisan loathing of their subject.
“I don’t know why anyone has to take him live,” former CNN President Jon Klein told Bauder. They’re so opposed to it that Bauder hints that newsrooms are already faced with a “particularly hard decision” over whether to air Trump’s convention acceptance speech live if he’s nominated.
What remains is the other unspoken, apparent nonissue in newsrooms of access to the candidates. While they are all agitated over granting Trump any access, none of these networks have seemed to offer the slightest public critique of Biden refusing to do news conferences or grant interviews to even liberal outlets.
As the public observes this flaming double standard, the media elites keep wondering why no one trusts them. In the end, it’s clear they think too many voters are stupid, and won’t listen to their sweet reason. That’s not helping them gain trust.
Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center