Trump and CNN
Earlier this week, I wrote how I was OK with CNN’s choice to have a town hall with Donald Trump. Not because he’s the former president, but because he is, at the moment, the leading candidate to be the Republican nominee for president in 2024. As long as moderator Kaitlan Collins can fact-check him and keep him from rambling on with dangerous conspiracies and lies, CNN absolutely should be interested in having Trump on its airways.
I received plenty of pushback from readers who see it as CNN “normalizing” Trump, claiming that’s what the network did prior to the 2016 election.
Washington Post media reporter Paul Farhi writes about Trump going on CNN in “CNN and Trump set aside beef for ‘town hall,’ and both draw fire for it.”
Political scholar Norman Ornstein tells Farhi that Trump could end up the big winner out of this, saying the CNN invitation is “a godsend — a network he hates bowing down to him and giving him attention and airtime.”
Ornstein said that Trump can “bluster and filibuster” if he gets any tough questions from the audience and if things go wrong for him? Ornstein said, “He can blame the biased CNN.”
World Press Freedom Day
Wednesday was World Press Freedom Day. But as The Washington Post’s editorial board wrote, there is little to celebrate at the moment.
In 2022, 67 journalists and media workers across the globe were killed, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Nine journalists have already been killed this year, and nearly 600 are imprisoned, including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in Russia.
The Post editorial board wrote, “Besides Mr. Gershkovich, as of December 2022, at least 19 journalists are known to be imprisoned in Russia, many for their reporting on the war.” Meanwhile, Hong Kong has 13 journalists/media workers in prison.
And while we see the media punished, harmed and killed across the globe in the world in places such as Iran, China, Myanmar and Turkey, let’s not pretend the United States is a safe haven for the media.
The Post editorial board wrote, “The United States, despite its cherished First Amendment right to a free press, has not been immune from the global trend lines. The United States ranks only 42nd on the Reporters Without Borders index, as the group noted ‘press freedom violations are increasing at a troubling rate.’ The report said American reporters increasingly face unprovoked physical attacks, harassment and intimidation in the field. Former president Donald Trump’s verbal assaults against so-called fake news have fostered a climate of intimidation.”
They also mention all the financial struggles that have forced many media outlets to either shut down or have significant layoffs.
The board wrote, “So this is a sober 30th anniversary for World Press Freedom Day. The media industry is facing myriad threats and challenges. But a free press and access to truthful information remain essential to free societies, and journalists need to be respected and protected. Governments and citizens should be reminded of that not just on May 3 but every day, both overseas and right here at home.”
More World Press Freedom Day links
The mystery of George Polk’s murder
In honor of World Press Freedom Day, CBS News Radio released a trailer for an upcoming documentary about CBS News correspondent George Polk. The audio documentary will air on CBS News Radio stations over Memorial Day weekend.
It was 75 years ago this spring that Polk was executed — shot in the back of the head with his hands and feet tied and thrown into the Aegean Sea — while covering the Greek civil war. His bloated body was discovered a week later by a fisherman.
CBS News White House correspondent Steven Portnoy investigates the mystery behind the still-unsolved murder of Polk.
These days, Polk’s name lives on through the George Polk Awards, awarded by Long Island University in recognition of investigative and brave reporting.
Hurting without Tucker Carlson