Former U.S. President Donald Trump says he finally sees some truth emerging about “the fake news.”
More than six years after the media began covering the former president’s alleged collusion with Russia–which Trump calls “the Russia, Russia, Russia” hoax–has been dissected from within journalism.
Days later, Trump reacted with righteous indignation to the tactics of the press, as revealed in the CJR article.
Trump also decried the incalculable damage that dishonest coverage caused to his 2020 reelection bid.
Important but Too Long
CJR, in an introduction to its piece, wrote that the investigation’s findings “aren’t always flattering, either for the press or for Trump and his team.” CJR predicted that the article’s revelations would be “debated and maybe even used as ammunition in the ongoing media war being waged in the country.”CJR said its article raises issues that are “important, and worthy of deep reflection as the campaign for the presidency is about, once again, to begin.”
The publication also wrote: “No narrative did more to shape Trump’s relations with the press than Russiagate.”
That term refers to the FBI’s investigation of Trump, which began while President Barack Obama was in office and Trump was then running his first presidential campaign. Information later surfaced revealing that the federal government relied in large part on a “Trump-Russia dossier” to justify its investigation.
But that dossier was found to be of dubious origin. A former British spy, hired by people with connections to Trump’s political opponent, Hillary Clinton, used unverified information from people with ties to Russia.
Big Impact
Reporting on the allegations “resulted in Pulitzer Prizes as well as embarrassing retractions and damaged careers,” CJR noted. “For Trump, the press’s pursuit of the Russia story convinced him that any sort of normal relationship with the press was impossible.”When Trump first announced his run for president in 2016, the real estate magnate/media personality was laughed off as a joke. But then he morphed into somewhat of a media darling. Everything Trump-related became clickbait. Before long, however, the media put Trump in its crosshairs; reporters were “going all in on efforts to catalogue Trump as a threat to the country,” CJR wrote.
The publication said journalist Jeff Gerth took an “encyclopedic look at one of the most consequential moments in American media history.” Gerth is an investigative reporter who worked for almost three decades at The New York Times. His investigation for CJR required interviews with dozens of insiders connected to Trump and media organizations.
Gerth wrote that the U.S. news media’s coverage of Trump helped sink the American people’s trust in journalists.
Prior to the 2016 election, “most Americans trusted the traditional media, and the trend was positive, according to the Edelman Trust Barometer,” Gerth said. The phrase, “fake news” was little-known, and the notion that media were “enemies of the people” was “voiced only once ... on an obscure podcast, and not by Trump, according to a Nexis search.”
But those phrases later became fixtures in Trump’s contentious relationship with reporters, and his supporters embraced those labels as they watched how many members of the mainstream news media handled Trump coverage.
By 2021, a year after Trump left office, “83 percent of Americans saw ‘fake news’ as a ’problem,‘ and 56 percent—mostly Republicans and independents—agreed that the media were ’truly the enemy of the American people,’” Gerth wrote, citing Rasmussen Reports.