Forget the soul-searching. The media counterattack is underway.
With harsh criticism
coming from the left as well as the right as Robert Mueller's probe
ends, the leaders of major news organizations, along with assorted
pundits, are defending their work and that of their colleagues.
And most of them aren't giving an inch.
Nope, they're basically saying we did everything right.
They're
not reflecting on whether they banged the drum so loudly that it
sounded like Donald Trump's presidency was headed toward collapse.
They're not addressing whether they raised expectations for the probe to
an absurd degree. They're not discussing whether reporting bled into
commentary as more of its practitioners simultaneously joined the cable
news parade.
The New York Times reached several of the news chiefs.
CNN President Jeff Zucker is "entirely comfortable" with the network's handling of the story:
"We
are not investigators. We are journalists, and our role is to report
the facts as we know them, which is exactly what we did. A sitting
president's own Justice Department investigated his campaign for
collusion with a hostile nation. That's not enormous because the media
says so. That's enormous because it's unprecedented."
Washington
Post Executive Editor Marty Baron: "The special counsel investigation
documented, as we reported, extensive Russian interference in the 2016
election and widespread deceit on the part of certain advisers to the
president about Russian contacts and other matters. Our job is to bring
facts to light. Others make determinations about prosecutable criminal
offenses."
And Dean Baquet, the Times' executive editor: "We wrote
a lot about Russia, and I have no regrets. It's not our job to
determine whether or not there was illegality."
Joe Scarborough
offered a high-decibel defense the coverage on his MSNBC show: "Don't
knock reporters for The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street
Journal, the broadcast networks for doing their job right." He also took
several shots at Fox opinion hosts.
Overall, I think there's something of a straw-man argument here.
Of
course a criminal investigation of the Trump campaign, which yielded 37
indictments, and led to convictions of top former Trump associates,
needed to be covered extensively and aggressively.
Of course the
fact that Mueller declined to bring further charges doesn't mean that
all the stories written about the allegations and Trump’s handling of
them — not to mention his constant attacks on the special counsel — were
wrong.
And of course politicians can behave unethically without explicitly violating the law.
So
the issue isn't coverage vs. no coverage. It's proportionate coverage
vs. Defcon 1 coverage, the drumbeat of here's-the-latest-outrage that
could sink the president vs. here-are-the-latest-developments and new
questions raised by our reporting.
While "journalists aren't
investigators" in the law-enforcement sense, they routinely submit their
investigative work for prizes, and promote it as "a New York
Times/Washington Post/CNN investigation has found ..."
And that's
without getting into the obliterated line between reporting, analysis
and cable punditry in an era when most of the reporters covering the
story have TV contracts. And that's without getting into commentary that
portrayed the president as a potential traitor orchestrating a coverup
that could lead to impeachment.
By the way, Fox News covered the
hell out of this story too, though often in a skeptical vein and with
more of a focus on possible wrongdoing within Mueller's office, the DOJ
and the FBI, especially on the opinion side.
But what's striking to me is how the condemnations are coming from both conservatives and liberals.
Here's a piece in The Federalist:
"For
the past two years, a large swath of the media engaged in a mass act of
self-deception and partisan groupthink. Perhaps it was Watergate envy,
or bitterness over Donald Trump's victory, or antagonism towards
Republicans in general — or, most likely, a little bit of all the above.
But now that Special Counsel Robert Mueller has delivered his report on
Russian collusion, it's clear that political journalists did the
bidding of those who wanted to delegitimize and overturn Trump's
election."
And here's one from Rolling Stone's Matt Taibbi:
"Nobody
wants to hear this, but news that Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller is
headed home without issuing new charges is a death-blow for the
reputation of the American news media."
Glenn Greenwald of the
Intercept told Fox that MSNBC "should have their top hosts on primetime,
go before the cameras and hang their head in shame, and apologize for
lying to people for three straight years ...
"There was a whole
slew, not just me, of left-wing journalists with very high journalistic
credentials far more than anyone on that network, like Matt Taibbi and
Jeremy Scahill and many others, including myself who were banned from
the network because they wanted their audience not to know that anybody
was questioning or expressing skepticism about the lies and the scam
they were selling because it was so profitable."
Alan Dershowitz,
the liberal Harvard law professor, sounded a similar note on Fox, saying
almost all the pundits "have just been dead wrong. It's time for them
to fess up, it's time for CNN to issue an apology. CNN banned me from
their air because I was being too fair. I was trying to assess what the
essential issue was, and I wasn't being partisan. They didn't want
that."
Of course, Dershowitz got more Fox invitations once he was regularly defending Trump.
The
president isn't exactly moving on, tweeting yesterday that "the
Mainstream Media is under fire and being scorned all over the World as
being corrupt and FAKE." After pushing the "Russian Collusion Delusion,"
he said, "They truly are the Enemy of the People and the Real
Opposition Party!" That’s the first time he's broadened the charge
beyond just the "fake news," and in my view goes too far.
But when
you have Ted Koppel saying Trump is right that "the establishment press
is out to get him" — singling out the Times and Post — and former Times
editor Jill Abramson saying its news coverage is "unmistakably
anti-Trump," that ought to give people in the profession some pause.
For its leading members to say they have no regrets misses why much of the country is losing confidence in the media.