Donald Trump is throwing out all the rules in this presidential campaign. But some journalists are doing the same thing.
Leave aside the volume of Trump coverage, which
drowns out most of the other candidates. Leave aside the pundits on the
right and left who regularly pound Trump and spent months mocking and
minimizing his chances.
What’s remarkable is the way that self-described
straight journalists have concluded that Trump is such a menace to
society that they must abandon their ordinary practices and call him
out.
Now I understand that emotions are running high in
the wake of the terror attacks in Paris and San Bernardino. And that
Trump ratcheted things up by proposing to bar all Muslims from entering
the country for some unspecified period of time. And that this has been a
political earthquake, uniting Dick Cheney and Hillary Clinton in harsh
criticism of the Republican front-runner and even drawing condemnation
from some European leaders.
But when we have Tom Brokaw stepping out of his anchor emeritus role to rip Trump, something has changed.
On “NBC Nightly News,” Brokaw compared Trump to such
demagogues of the past as Joe McCarthy—precisely as a New York Times
news story did in analyzing Trump’s “dark” language about terrorism.
“Trump’s statement, even in this season of extremes,
is a dangerous proposal that overrides history, the law and the
foundation of America itself,” Brokaw said. He added that “defeating
ISIS will be long, hard and expensive, perhaps even more so now because
ISIS is likely to use Donald Trump’s statements as a recruiting tool.”
Brokaw is entitled to say what he wants at this point
in his career—but he must have really felt that he was taking on a
mission by stepping out of his nonpartisan role.
The same goes for NBC’s Richard Engel, whose Middle
East expertise is such that George W. Bush once privately sought his
advice on Iraq. And yet Engel, talking to liberal host Rachel Maddow,
called Trump’s proposal “a black spot on our collective foreign policy
and our conscience” that “just feeds into the ISIS narrative.” He called
it “demagoguery” and “really not the country that I know.”
Now comes Buzzfeed Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith, with a
memo to his staff about Trump. Smith is a former Politico reporter and
not a partisan guy.
He told his staff in a memo that the popular
website’s policy is to ask staffers not to be “political partisans” in
social media.
But when it comes to Trump, Smith said, it is
“entirely fair to call him a mendacious racist, as the politics team and
others here have reported clearly and aggressively: He’s out there
saying things that are false, and running an overtly anti-Muslim
campaign. BuzzFeed News’s reporting is rooted in facts, not opinion;
these are facts.”
Trump’s a racist: that’s a fact. Not that people have
accused him of being racist, not that his comments about Muslims appear
racist. That is the mindset of much of today’s media.
Smith did add that it’s not fair to tar all Republicans with the same brush, as some have disagreed with Trump.
His memo reminded me of the Daily Beast’s executive
editor, who tweeted that Trump is a racist and neo-fascist and called on
people to boycott his businesses for that reason. His boss had no
problem with that.
In the opinionated precincts of the media, Trump is
Public Enemy No. 1. We see this in the New York Daily News cover
depicting him as chopping off the Statue of Liberty’s head.
The Washington Post opinion pages have launched a multi-pronged attack.
Columnist Ruth Marcus:
“Donald Trump has crossed an uncrossable line of
bigotry and xenophobia. The Republican front-runner presents a clearer,
more present danger to U.S. interests than the supposedly threatening
Muslims he seeks to exclude.”
Columnist Dana Milbank compared Trump to Mussolini.
From the right,
columnist Kathleen Parker
called Trump “the most dangerous person to emerge on the U.S. political
scene in decades. As president, he would be the most dangerous man on
the planet.”
And the
Post’s editorial page
said he “gains traction by spewing hatred, bigotry and rage.
Criticizing Mr. Trump is no longer sufficient. It is time to say clearly
he is anathema to the Republican Party, and to the nation.”
These are people paid for their views, and Trump
isn’t reticent about hitting back against media outlets that slam him.
Still, I would say the media’s war on Trump has now gone nuclear. His
detractors would undoubtedly say that he went nuclear first.
But if even some of its straightforward practitioners
are trying to stop Trump from winning the Republican nomination, the
news business could also wind up as collateral damage.