Building on a Poynter Report news-avoidance item earlier this week, and the natural “here we go again” vibe to a third indictment of former President Donald Trump in one calendar year, I wanted to look at some news coverage that might stand out amid reader fatigue. Which outlets are doing the needed explanatory, democracy-saving work around the former president’s charges? Which orgs are giving these charges their needed urgency?
A third-day piece that emphasizes that how this indictment is different was The New York Times’ David Leonhardt’s newsletter yesterday morning:
“For now, you can think of the new charges as being both more important and less solid than Trump’s previous federal indictment, which involved his refusal to return classified documents. In the latest case, he was subverting the very foundation of democracy — the peaceful transfer of power after an election. Yet it remains unclear whether he broke any specific law when he tried to do so.”
This line effectively lays out clear distinctions between the previous indictments and what went down this week in Washington. It points to the nuance that special counsel Jack Smith will have to bring to his charges – the piece points to how this indictment isn’t as cut and dry as previous ones. It gives readers a map of what to expect (and what will be unexpected) in the coming weeks.
The best indictment coverage can go big picture and small picture all at once. Both explaining the major implications on democracy of this indictment and talking about what specific parts of the document mean.
I submit humbly (I work there) the policy team at PolitiFact’s work explaining the document:
"Structurally, the indictment offers a unified narrative, dividing Trump and his allies’ activities into four major phases. The activities start shortly after Election Day in 2020 and end with the storming of the U.S. Capitol, with Trump trying to enlist the aid of everyone from state elected officials to Justice Department officials and his own vice president, Mike Pence."
At PolitiFact, we always emphasize primary documents. And our readers come to us for it. The first piece we published after the indictment was unsealed was the 45-page document in its entirety. Maybe the readers are avoidant or fatigued, but they’re not dumb. Poring over primary documents is a key part of PolitiFact’s fact-checking process, and we like for readers to have the same opportunity.
In addition to the basics on Day 1, we also put the charges in context with the news cycle the following day: What Donald Trump, Hunter Biden and Devon Archer have in common: a news cycle
I have to award The Washington Post most interesting day-of angle and best headline: Trump is charged under civil rights law used to prosecute KKK violence by investigative reporters Isaac Stanley-Becker and Spencer S. Hsu. They were ready – this story published minutes after the indictment was unsealed Tuesday night.
What a fascinating curiosity gap, one that both promises and delivers deep historical context alongside breaking news. This piece was in the top 5 of Google Trends Wednesday morning, I’m sure WaPo had tons of eyeballs on it.
"Even those who have prosecuted cases under the statute, or studied its terms, were surprised by its inclusion in the Trump indictment. It wasn’t among the offenses included in the December 2022 referral of Trump for criminal prosecution made by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol."
In this news market, it’s tough competition for reader eyeballs. And a third indictment will be a litmus test for coverage that delivers to, then transcends a weary news consumer’s expectations.
What standout indictment coverage did I miss? Let me know: [email protected]
By Josie Hollingsworth