Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    Op-Ed
    Monday, April 29, 2024

    For many it's 'fake' if Trump says so

    All those media-trust studies have a tendency toward the rote. Yes, we already knew that the public had little trust in the country's journalistic organs. Yes, we knew that finding credible sources could be a harrowing pursuit for the public. Yes, we knew that an increasing portion of the U.S. public felt that the news was biased.

    Yet this nugget from a new Gallup-Knight Foundation survey just about knocked me out of a decade-long media-research torpor: "Four in 10 (or 42 percent of) Republicans consider accurate news stories that cast a politician or political group in a negative light to always be 'fake news.' (The corresponding figure for Democrats is 17 percent.)"

    Perhaps President Donald Trump's associates should place that data point in his daily briefing packet so that he can brag about it. There's precedent for that, after all: Back in September 2016, a Gallup poll found cratering public trust in the media. Asked about that situation, Trump despaired not.

    "I think I had a lot to do with that poll ... because I've exposed the media. If you look at the New York Times, and The Washington Post, and if you look at others: the level of dishonesty is enormous. It's so dishonest. I can do something that's wonderful and they make it sound terrible," Trump said in an interview.

    Along with tax cuts, Neil Gorsuch on the Supreme Court and a sizzling stock market, Trump can claim credit for hijacking the term "fake news" for his own political ends. Craig Silverman, the BuzzFeed journalist who played a pioneering role in hatching the term, says its redefinition was sealed on Jan. 11, 2017, during that unforgettable transition news conference in which Trump called out CNN as "fake news" - for accurately reporting on a Trump-Russia dossier that was circulating in the upper reaches of the U.S. government.

    Since then, "fake news" has performed a jack-of-all-trades role for Trump champions. A negative story with flimsy-appearing sources? "Fake news." A story that is challenged by Trump appointees? "Fake news." A story that ends up being corrected? "Fake news" all day long! A true but unflattering story? Heck, that's "fake news," too.

    Forget that the term sprang up to describe, essentially, fabrications - or, as Silverman defines it, "completely false information that was created and spread for profit." The appropriation of the term by Trump appears to be working, which is no surprise in light of his nearly 47 million Twitter followers and his status as the most powerful man in the world. The protestations of folks such as Silverman about the purity of the original definition - well, those will get a few retweets among the Poynter crowd.

    A likely result of Trump's much-hyped "Fake News Awards" is that more of his followers will migrate toward the understanding that "fake news" is essentially anything that portrays the president in a negative light. And the cause of body-slamming persistent reporters, the cause of sliming them, the cause of arresting them for doing their jobs - it'll surely advance.

    Erik Wemple writes the Erik Wemple blog, where he reports and opines on media organizations of all sorts.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.