I know there’s a lot going on but we just had a media conspiracy implode that I think captures something important about the corporate press.
Did you hear about how Trump was allegedly going after John Bolton as retribution for his criticism?
Well…follow along ⤵️
We saw a week straight of media suggestions that Trump was abusing the powers of the state to deal out “retribution” to John Bolton following the news that the FBI (“Trump’s DOJ!” headlines rang out) raided his house.
We were in “unsettling” times, to hear @nytimes tell it.
The *Editorial Board* at @nytimes put out an even more dramatic statement, asking who Trump’s next payback victim after Bolton would be.
They dubbed the raid “revenge.”
Democracy was in truly troubled waters.
It wasn’t just the Times. This suggestion was everywhere.
At @NewYorker, the raid supposedly kicked off “the retribution phase of Trump’s presidency.”
It had “a certain awful perfectibility,” according to the subtitle.
Again. We’re at the door of dictatorship, per the press.
For @politico, it was proof that “Trump is weaponizing the government against his enemies.”
The indignation is a bit rich given how the government was weaponized BY the enemies of Trump AGAINST him, but the case made is clear: this was part of Trump’s “revenge tour.”
Same story at @ABC.
To hear the media tell it, the takeaway from the raid couldn’t possibly be that perhaps a high-ranking former government official had done something wrong — an occurrence one would think the media would care about! — but political “retribution.”
This was one of my favorites.
@washingtonpost admits that there’s “no evidence” suggesting “Trump ordered the FBI raid”…
And then the outlet published an entire piece about why MAYBE he actually did.
Hats off to them for at least stating a fact (more on that soon).
Of course there was a @CNN “analysis” piece on the Bolton news.
It was a “crusade” to hear @AaronBlake tell it. But the “game” was given away by the “public spectacle” that made clear the raid was “about retaliation.”
She gets shot down badly by @JDVance but @kwelkernbc on @NBCNews tried to push this conspiracy theory about Bolton and Trump, too.
Some of it was just ridiculous.
The “national-security officials” are “angry and afraid” @TheAtlantic warns us, in trembling terms.
Why—why—is this the framing?
Shouldn’t we have learned a lesson or two about pretending the feelings of the security state should compel policy?
But this story was everywhere and space is limited.
Here’s more Bolton fever dream coverage from @MSNBC, @washingtonweek, @thedailybeast and @Salon.
More from @AP, @BulwarkOnline (I mean cmon) and @washingtonpost’s editorial board.
Please put this on my tombstone. @thehill @MilesTaylorUSA
I would be remiss not to mention that the editorial board at @WSJ wasn’t any less blowhard-y than The NY Times.
On X, plenty of journalists, talking heads, and elected Democrats repeated this narrative.
@peterbakernyt did so repeatedly. But so did @PaulRieckhoff and @PattyMurray (just to give you the flavor of this micro-narrative).
The only problem, as @nytimes revealed at the end of the week, was that the premise of the story—that Trump weaponized the Feds against Bolton—was bogus.
The investigation into mishandling docs (for a book…really) “began to pick up momentum during the Biden administration.”
You know the media has egg on its face when the @nytimes, after breathlessly reporting to the contrary, backpedals to say things like “the new details of the case present a more complex chain of events.”
More complex than what? Fan fiction?
Rather than wait for any of the Bolton raid details to shake out, the press rushed headlong, in unison, to claim that Trump was some kind of tinpot dictator, steering America toward the end of democracy.
All based on supposition and supposed connections and insinuations.
If that sounds familiar, it’s because it’s the same thing that happened with the media’s “Russian collusion” narrative in Trump’s first term.
The single most self-destructive moment for faith in the corporate press. And yet they seem bent on repeating it. @MZHemingway
Because this “dictator” claim has become a media mantra in Trump’s second term—an article of faith. Examples here from @guardian (too rich not to include) @TheAtlantic @CNN (a real headline)
Waiting for those details, as the Times noted, “complicates” that.
(What it really is, to be clear, is a Democratic Party mantra that the press has been pushing, too. See: @RepRaskin)
And of course, this end-of-democracy claim isn’t new.
We saw all these same outlets — and in some cases, the same journalists and commentators — saying the same things in Trump’s first term. @CNN @nytimes @TheAtlantic @davidfrum @BernieSanders
We don’t yet know where the Bolton raid story will settle out. Maybe it really was payback! Maybe it was retribution!
But journalism isn’t about speculating with the news because it fits the narrative.
That’s hatchetwork, and it should embarrass these outlets and reporters.
I recognize this is a small story, in a universe of bigger ones, and even worse coverage thereof.
But the press acting in unison as hatchet men for a lefty fever dream should trigger alarm bells.
If nothing else, it sure captures why the American people don’t trust the media.
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A single poll has bootstrapped a media narrative that DC residents are outraged by Trump’s takeover.
I poked around the cross tabs of the poll — of 600 or so of DC’s more comfortable residents — and I think it’s pretty suspect.
How come? Follow along: ⤵️
Let’s start with the poll. The @washingtonpost talked to 604 people, of whom 90% — 90%! — self-described as living in “very good” or “good” neighborhoods.
So, fine. 80% of people who like where they live in DC are upset.
But even beyond that, it’s worth asking whether this poll really captures DC’s opinion.
In the poll, only 31% describe crime as a “serious” or “very serious” problem in DC.
When @washingtonpost asked this same question in May, *50%* said it was a serious problem.
I feel like I’m losing my mind about the Biden autopen pardons.
The former president said he made every decision. His staff says that he didn’t actually make the final call on thousands of them.
We’re supposed to treat this as normal?
I try to unpack. ⤵️
This got new life from a Biden interview w/ @nytimes.
NYT leads by repeating Biden’s claim that he made the calls…burying the admissions that 1) he really didn’t & 2) where he allegedly did, the aids sending details to the autopen weren’t in the room when the call was made…
…instead, they relied on what senior staff had allegedly heard, which was then passed along.
The piece ends with the revelation that Biden’s then-chief of staff gave the final sign off.
Given what the former admin has lied about, why should we trust this reporting of events?
The coverage of the anti-ICE riots in LA is perhaps the clearest example of advocacy “journalism” in Trump’s second term.
Reading the reporting, you would never know the most significant fact: the American people support Trump’s deportations.
Follow along ⤵️
First, the facts about the riots.
You’ve seen the burning cars, looting & clashes between police & protestors.
Demonstrators blocked the freeway, attacked ICE agents, all in an effort to prevent the deportations of illegal aliens. Trump deployed troops to allow ICE to operate.
As @MarkHalperin and @seanspicer discussed, the situation in LA is so tranquil that the mayor has instituted a curfew for the city.
The new book “Original Sin” from Jake Tapper & Alex Thompson recounts the effort to cover up Biden’s cognitive decline ahead of the election. The authors point to many guilty parties.
The one glaring omission? Their colleagues in the corporate press. Follow along ⤵️
There are numerous dramatic reveals. The Biden team considered condoning him to a wheelchair? Maybe in his fog he forgot about the border?
But as I worked on a review for @commonplc, the one thought that I kept coming back to was that you can’t tell this story without the press.
Perhaps no one was more vital to the continued fiction that Biden had it together than the media.
Tapper and Thompson even highlight some of the telling moments.
Biden’s cancer diagnosis is a tragedy I know first-hand.
But our sympathy can’t silence questions about Biden’s cognitive decline, clarified just days ago by the Hur tape.
The media tried to bury the story then. They’re trying again now.
I’ve got the receipts. ⤵️
When the report first came out in 2024, outlets rushed to demean Hur, accusing him of serving as a Republican hatchet man.
Just look at this take from @USATODAY, who assembled sympathetic voices to make the case that Hur “crossed the line.” They found an expert to call it a “disgrace” and then featured the obviously unbiased Eric Holder to lead a section titled “Way too many gratuitous remarks.”
The audio makes clear that Hur, if anything, played down how alarming the claims were.
(If you haven’t listened to the Hur audio yet, you should.)
It should go without saying, but the media cultivating this type of baseless hysteria about an admin for partisan reasons is much more of a threat to the underpinnings of our democracy than anything Trump has actually done.
Quick 🧵⤵️
A couple quotes:
“If you think that there’s this thing out there called America, and it’s exceptional, that means you don’t have to do anything” to stop fascism.
What? What does that even mean??
That if you, like millions of Americans!, believe in American exceptionalism…you’re a fascist?
Really?
“The powers that be can do whatever they want to you”
Trump can’t even deport people who have deportation orders against them without a federal judge stepping in.