The final election-related accounting
Last month, just days before the general election, I walked us through historical election data in the Tracker and how to apply that information to understand the risks journalists face.
Relatively speaking, the period leading up to and after the election were without major incident for trackable aggressions against journalists. We documented zero assaults or arrests of journalists at election-related events in November. And that’s a good thing.
There were, however, plenty of accusations of wrongdoing against news outlets by candidates, notably from Donald Trump, now president-elect. On Election Day, journalists from news organizations — Axios, Mother Jones, Puck and Voice of America among them — were denied credentials for Trump’s watch party in West Palm Beach, Florida. Two days prior, he had told supporters at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania that he wouldn’t mind if a would-be assassin were to “shoot through” journalists in an attempt to kill him. Throughout the month of October, Trump threatened CBS with revoking its broadcast license after it aired an interview with Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris. He then threatened to sue, and days later, did sue.
We captured one year’s worth of how candidates — from all parties — treated the press in the run-up to the general election. Find it all here: Politics and the Press: Tracking how the media is treated on the road to Election 2024
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Best,
Kirstin McCudden
Managing Editor, U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
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