‘This is how you normalize a madman’: Scholars and press watchdogs urge corporate media to treat Trump like the authoritarian threat he is

AlterNet logo

Major news outlets failed the American people, critics say, when they chose to bury coverage of President Donald Trump’s Wednesday comment that he would not commit to a peaceful transition of power—a statement watchdogs say demanded above-the-fold, front-page headlines that simply did not materialize.

“Newsroom leaders made a considered, intentional decision not to panic after Trump was elected,” Dan Froomkin, editor of PressWatchers.orgwrote in a scathing rebuke of corporate media’s apparent nonchalant attitude towards the president’s rhetoric. “This was an epic, obvious mistake, and everything that has happened since was in some sense entirely predictable.”

Froomkin continued, “They should have gone on a war footing—and by that I don’t mean a partisan war against Trump, I mean a journalistic war against lies, ignorance, and intolerance.”

Critics weighed in on the relative non-importance corporate news outlets assigned—in print and online—to Trump’s latest suggestion that he may not cede the office of the presidency should he lose in November: Continue reading.

GOP lawmakers distance themselves from Trump comments on transfer of power

The Hill logo

Several high-profile Republicans on Thursday pushed back on President Trump’s refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses in November, though all stopped short of rebuking the president directly.

The criticisms, in a series of tweets that didn’t mention Trump by name, came from lawmakers like Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.), a former presidential rival of Trump four years ago, and Sen. Mitt Romney (Utah), the GOP’s presidential nominee in 2012.

Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.), the highest-ranking GOP woman in Congress, and Rep. Steve Stivers (Ohio), who previously headed the House GOP’s campaign operation, were among other Republicans who took to Twitter to reject Trump’s decision not to embrace a peaceful transfer of power 40 days before the election. Continue reading.