Nearly two-thirds of all Americans “feel exhausted by the news,” according to
a new Pew Research Center study. After this past week, who could blame them?
The fallout from the G-7 summit in Canada, the summit
between President Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un in
Singapore, battles on immigration, and the report by the Justice
Department inspector general of FBI conduct in the Hillary Clinton email
investigation were just a few of the big stories of the week.
Toss in a
temper tantrum
by CNN staffers in the White House press room. Add in an F-bomb-tossing
celebrity and it was an ideal birthday week for a president who wars
with the media. President Trump turned 72 on Thursday.
The week was capped off by the Justice Department IG
report about possible political bias at the FBI. It’s doubtful anyone in
official Washington thought the IG would say there was bias. That would
have set off more fireworks than D.C. sees on the nation’s birthday. It
still came close, despite the protestations of many in the media.
Even
The Washington Post
wrote that the report “castigated former FBI director James B. Comey”
“and found that other senior bureau officials showed a ‘willingness to
take official action’ to prevent Donald Trump from becoming president.”
The paper added this would all help Trump’s narrative and that “the
report provides chapter upon chapter of fresh ammunition for his attacks
on the FBI.”
The Post’s editorial board
declared:
“It is not the report President Trump wanted. But there is enough in it
for him and his allies to twist and cherry-pick that its actual
findings are likely to be lost in partisan noise.”
The New York Times editorial board called the report
“something of a dud.”
Then there were the hot tweets, like this one from
NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd,
complete with similar wording as the Post: “The cherry picking of this
report is likely to only compound the credibility damage for the FBI and
DOJ, even as the report itself, taken in full, is a good faith attempt
to restore credibility. But political agendas are going to prevent some
from providing FULL context.
#sad.” Note, also, the mocking use of the Trump signature term, “sad” at the end.
Esquire’s Charles P. Pierce was already opining before he even finished reading the report,
admitting:
“I’ve only read a chunk of it at this point,” but declaring it an
“honest report.” Then he claimed “the executive branch is lying its a--
off about the report.”
Or there’s this tweet by
CNBC Editor at Large John Harwood,
commenting on a Trump tweet: “Justice IG report found no evidence that
Strzok’s disdain for Trump or any other improper consideration affected
conduct of Clinton email investigation,” Harwood wrote.
Only Harwood was trumped by
CNN Justice Reporter Laura Jarrett, who
tweeted that he was wrong. “Here's the problem - it's messy. While the
IG found no evidence that bias affected the *specific* investigative
actions reviewed pre-July 2016, he *does not* have confidence that the
delay in reviewing the Weiner laptop emails was ‘free from bias.’”
Thank Wall Street Journal Columnist Kimberley Strassel for added clarity in
a tweet thread that began:
“1) Don't believe anyone who claims Horowitz didn't find bias. He very
carefully says that he found no "documentary" evidence that bias
produced ‘specific investigatory decisions.’ That's different
#IGReport.”
2. Friends with Benefits: One item from the IG
report deserves special note because it directly involves journalists.
“The IG expressed ‘profound concerns about the volume and extent of
unauthorized media contacts by FBI personnel that we have uncovered our
review,’” wrote
The Daily Caller’s Joe Simonson.
He said the report “identified numerous FBI employees,
at all levels of the organization and with no official reason to be in
contact with the media, who were nevertheless in frequent contact with
reporters.”
So how did journalists work the FBI? The perked FBI
staffers ended up “improperly receiving benefits from reporters,
including tickets to sporting events, golfing outings, drinks and meals,
and admittance to nonpublic social events.”
Federalist Senior Editor Mollie Hemingway posted a
graphic showing the connections between one reporter and so many FBI
sources that it looked like
a Ferris wheel.
3. Give Peace a Chance: President Trump’s
on-off-on meeting with Kim Jong Un finally happened. Journalists, who
thought President Obama’s deal with Iran and rapprochement with Cuba
were cool, suddenly disliked peace talks.
Some in the media went all out. Forget peace, they
wanted a religious war. Over on MSNBC, the theme was that the GOP had
turned into a cult.
“Hardball” host Chris Matthews
teased:
“Anyway, the Republican Party becoming more like a cult than a
political party? Boy, that’s hard news for the Republicans. You’re in a
cult. This is Jonestown?”
Matthews compared the GOP to a cult that killed more than 900 people in
"revolutionary suicide" and also murdered Rep. Leo J. Ryan.
Perhaps Matthews was watching his own network. “Morning Joe” host Joe Scarborough was only slightly less insane with his
“cult” comment. “Primary voters in the Republican Party have devolved into a Trumpist cult,” he whined.
Leading up to the summit,
CBS Correspondent Bianna Golodryga criticized Trump, saying “the self-proclaimed dealmaker-in-chief has so far proven to be more of a deal-breaker.”
Afterward, Time magazine Contributing Editor
Jon Meacham engaged in Clintonian newspeak. “Just because something hasn't happened before, doesn't mean it's historic,” he told MSNBC.
Speaking of history, that’s a big part of what’s wrong
with all this reporting and commentary. It’s inconsistent with past
presidential outreach to dictators.
Take CNN Chief National Security Correspondent Jim Sciutto. Sciutto tweeted a blast at Trump for meeting with
North Korea. “.
@realDonaldTrump
is smiling next to a man who runs a gulag jailing some 200,000 North
Koreans and who oversaw the sinking of a South Korean Navy ship killing
46 & the hacking of Sony North America,” he wrote.
Only The Washington Examiner’s
Becket Adams
noticed a wee bit of inconsistency in Sciutto’s approach to bad guys.
When Sciutto worked for Obama’s State Department, he took a more
positive note of friendship. “Recall that in 2014,
as Obama restored the U.S.' formal relations with Cuba,
Sciutto’s tone was decidedly different. Reverential, even,” wrote
Adams. Here’s that tweet from 2014. “The call that changed half a
century of division: POTUS speaking with #Cuba Pres. Raul Castro
yesterday.”
You might say, Sciutto is only technically a former Obama staffer.
4. Get Him a Bar of Soap: Star actor and liberal
loon Robert De Niro kicked off the week with four letters the left
loves. DeNiro was a presenter at the “72nd Annual Tony Awards” on CBS
and
he F-bombed. “I’m gonna say one thing, f--- Trump!" and “It’s no longer ‘Down With Trump,’ it’s ‘F--- Trump.'”
No, it’s not a surprise that those in the entertainment
industry hate Trump. That much was obvious from the standing ovation
and the
support from celebs like Mark Hamill, Kathy Griffin and Rosie O’Donnell that he received.
What is surprising is how even MSNBCer
Scarborough
gets it and the Hollywood left doesn’t. Here’s Joe warning them:
“People that applauded De Niro's statement last night don't understand
that they are helping Donald Trump's re-election every time they do
something like that, they don't understand.”
Blow out the candles, Mr. President. Thanks to the left, this birthday was lit.