- ‘The Media-Political Complex Bowed Down’
- Trump Suggests Ending Daily Briefings
- Trump Voting Panel to Push ‘Myth of Fraud’
- Readers Imagine Successors to Confederates
- ‘Cultural Anxiety’ Drove Many to Trump
- Too Many U.S. Moms Dying in Childbirth
- NABJ Names Four More Award Winners
- Honoring Mom Amid ‘Incarceration Epidemic’
- Short Takes
‘The Media-Political Complex Bowed Down’
“Lester Holt conquered the news on Thursday, and the media-political complex bowed down and acknowledged his sovereignty,” Lloyd Grove wrote that evening for the Daily Beast.”
Unsurprisingly, Grove’s verdict was not unanimous. Cristina López G. wrote Friday for Media Matters for America, “Right-wing and fringe media attacked NBC anchor Lester Holt”
“They claimed Holt was ‘disrespectful’ and a ‘rude Negro’ who ‘interrupted’ and ‘spoke over’ Trump, calling the interview ‘an interrogation’ during which the president was treated ‘like a damn criminal.’ . . .”
The “rude Negro” reference, one of few mentioning Holt’s race, came from infostormer.com, whose motto is “Destroying Jewish Tyranny.”
The website was correct to take the interview seriously, however. In its wake were questions about obstruction of justice, reports that Trump had sought a loyalty oath from Comey and even speculation about impeachment.
As Grove reported, “The biggest headline from the White House tête-à-tête — blazoned in an exclusive video clip that was judiciously released by NBC in a special report that preempted an afternoon soap opera (as opposed to the ongoing Trump soap opera) — was the president’s claim to have decided on his own to fire Comey after hosting him at a White House dinner (in which Comey, according to Trump, asked to keep his job).
“The president said that he repeatedly, if improperly, sought the director’s reassurance that he isn’t the target of the FBI’s investigation into Russia’s meddling in last year’s election and the Kremlin’s possible collusion with Trump campaign operatives.
Jim Rutenberg of the New York Times captured the reaction of many.
On social media, some criticized Holt for failure to follow up on some questions, but others noted that the anchor had to be strategic in the use of his time.
Grove wrote, “The anchor directed the president to a straight-back chair opposite his own. While Holt leaned back and crossed his legs in an attitude of alpha male sangfroid throughout their 31-minute encounter . . . Trump sat edgily forward on his chair, legs spread wide — looking for all the world like some giant, yellow-haired badger bracing for an attack.
“In a way, Trump was right to do so, as Holt relentlessly pressed him for a reason for sacking Comey that made even a little bit of sense, wondering repeatedly if the president was angry at the FBI director, as multiple news outlets have reported, because his agency was pursuing what he’d called the ‘hoax’ of the Russia investigation. . . .”
“Holt was the designated hit man in Thursday’s interview, expected to create and underline a ‘credibility crisis’ for the White House,” Graham wrote Friday. “But don’t they remember how Holt ‘winced’ to Hillary Clinton in January of 2016 at anyone [who] suggested she might be seen by someone as (gasp) dishonest…why that must hurt her feelings! . . .”
The interview did not touch on race-specific concerns such as historically black colleges and universities or immigration, but Trump did discuss Clinton’s emails, North Korea and health care.
Trump Suggests Ending Daily Briefings
“President Donald Trump told Jeanine Pirro that he thinks it is a ‘good idea’ to not have press conferences, unless he does them himself every two weeks,” Ted Johnson reported Friday for Variety.
“His comments came after he tweeted early Friday morning that perhaps the White House should do away with the daily press briefings, a long-time tradition in which the press secretary faces the gamut of reporters every day.
Trump Voting Panel to Push ‘Myth of Fraud’
“Two days after firing FBI director James Comey and creating a full-blown constitutional crisis, Donald Trump signed an executive order today creating a presidential commission on ‘election integrity,’ based on his debunked claims that millions voted illegally in 2016,” Ari Berman wrote Thursday for the Nation.
“Vice President Mike Pence will be the chair and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach will be the vice chair — two men with very long histories of making it harder to vote, especially Kobach. Given the lack of evidence of voter fraud, the commission seems designed for one purpose: to perpetuate the myth of fraud in order to lay the groundwork for enacting policies that suppress the vote.
“If you want to know what such voter intimidation looks like, take a look at Pence’s home state of Indiana, where state police in October 2016 raided the offices of a group working to register African-American and low-income voters. They seized thousands of voter-registration applications, even though only 10 were suspected to be fraudulent and no one has been charged.
“In Kansas, Kobach has been the driving force within the GOP behind policies that erect new barriers to the ballot box and the most fervent evangelist of unproven voter-fraud claims. . . .”
The Kansas City Star said in an editorial on Thursday, “Since the non-problem of in-person voter fraud — Kobach has convicted all of nine Kansans of this crime — is inflated to push through laws that disenfranchise, this whole commission isn’t just unnecessary but wrong. . . .”
- Wayne Bennett, the Field Negro: “Trump fatigue” has already set in.
- Lauren Victoria Burke, National Newspaper Publishers Association: President Trump Wages War on Obama’s Legacy in First 100 Days
- Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post: Trump couldn’t care less about the Comey mess he created. He cares about only himself.
- Editorial, Dallas Morning News: Donald Trump needs to get out more
- Editorial, Journal Sentinel, Milwaukee: Dismissal of FBI Director James Comey reinforces need for independent investigation
- Editorial, Kansas City Star: In search of Republican profiles in courage on Comey’s firing
- Editorial, Miami Herald: Appoint special counsel in Russia probe
- Editorial, News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C.: Bring on a special prosecutor
- Editorial, News & Record, Greensboro, N.C.: Burr must press on
- Editorial, St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Russian meddling? Move along. There’s no meddling here.
- Editorial board roundtable, Plain Dealer, Cleveland: Was President Trump trying to shut down FBI’s Russia probe in firing James Comey?
- Jill Geisler, Columbia Journalism Review: The lesson news managers can learn from Comey’s firing
- thegrio.com: Trump calls Don Lemon ‘the dumbest person in broadcasting’
- Michael M. Grynbaum, New York Times: Comey Firing Provides Bright Dividing Line for Media Coverage
- Emil Guillermo, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund: After firing Comey, Trump emerges the New Nixon
- Maggie Haberman, Glenn Thrush, Michael S. Schmidt and Peter Baker, New York Times: ‘Enough Was Enough’: How Festering Anger at Comey Ended in His Firing
- Chris Keller and Priya Krishnakumar, Los Angeles Times: The Comey firing has people concerned. Here’s where U.S. senators stand
- Indira A.R. Lakshmanan, Boston Globe: Trump can’t script his own ending
- Benjamin Mullin, Poynter Institute: Mother Jones is raising $500,000 to go after the Trump-Russia story
- Franco Ordoñez and William Douglas, McClatchyDC: April Ryan invites Donald Trump to dinner
- Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune: Let’s just call him ‘Crooked Donald’
- Charles P. Pierce, Esquire: This Feels Like a Turning Point
- Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: If you’re not appalled by Comey’s firing, you’re not paying attention
- Radio Television Digital News Association: RTDNA opposes President’s threat to end press briefings
- Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post: No good lawyer would have let Trump give Lester Holt this interview
- Fabiola Santiago, Miami Herald: They voted for disastrous Trumpcare over your health. Will they pay at the ballot box?
‘Cultural Anxiety’ Drove Many to Trump
“But his real victory was among members of the white working class: Twice as many of these voters cast their ballots for the president as for Clinton.
“In the wake of Trump’s surprise win, some journalists, scholars, and political strategists argued that economic anxiety drove these Americans to Trump.
“Besides partisan affiliation, it was cultural anxiety — feeling like a stranger in America, supporting the deportation of immigrants, and hesitating about educational investment — that best predicted support for Trump. . . .”