From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject For Elite Media, 'Oligarch' Is Just a Partisan Claim
Date January 24, 2025 11:05 PM
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For Elite Media, 'Oligarch' Is Just a Partisan Claim Janine Jackson ([link removed])


NYT: If Democrats Attack Trump’s Rich Pals as ‘Oligarchs,’ Will It Stick?

The New York Times' Jess Bidgood (1/17/25 ([link removed]) ) suggests Democrats should be wary of criticizing Donald Trump's wealthy friends, "given the popularity of some of those billionaires." (Elon Musk, pictured, is viewed unfavorably by 52% of poll respondents ([link removed]) , with 36% having a positive opinion.)

Sometimes the headline says it all, as with the New York Times on January 17 ([link removed]) : “If Democrats Attack Trump’s Rich Pals as ‘Oligarchs,’ Will It Stick?”

The piece presents Elon Musk ([link removed]) ’s influence on the new administration as something “Democrats…have suggested”; the role of Trump’s billionaire allies is something Democrats “plan to invoke” in the fight over tax cuts; and the idea that Musk, Mark Zuckerberg ([link removed]) and Jeff Bezos ([link removed]) might be front and center at the inauguration isn’t meaningful in itself, so much as something Democrats saw as “an irresistible opportunity to further highlight those connections.”

Is it true that the Trump administration, slated to be the richest presidential administration ([link removed]) in history, not even counting Elon Musk, represents "oligarchy ([link removed]) "? Not the point. The important question is: Will such a charge (clearly defined as partisan) “stick”? What it means for a charge to “stick,” and what role media like themselves have in making it stick, are not things the Times would have you consider.

For its part, AP went with the headline (1/20/25 ([link removed]) ): “Trump, a Populist President, Is Flanked by Tech Billionaires at His Inauguration,” over a piece noting it as a “shift from tradition, especially for a president who has characterized himself as a champion of the working class.” Is it a wacky juxtaposition—or a sign that elite media see the story as, not whether Trump actually is a champion of the working class ([link removed]) , but whether he characterizes himself that way?

It would be work enough to counter the actual things actually happening without news media dedicating themselves to putting up a rhetorical scrim between us and the things we need to understand and resist.
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