SUDDEN SHIFT IN MAJOR MEDIA'S
WAR ON TRUMP, News
agencies adjust strategy since 'enemy of the people' remark, by Garth Kant,
2/21/17, WND
WASHINGTON – What a difference a few
days makes. If the bulk of the major media had
been experiencing grief over the election of President Trump, it appears as
though the White House press corps has reached the stage of acceptance.
Acceptance that Trump is the
president, Sean Spicer is the White House press secretary, and that’s the way
it will be. A truce, of sorts. And a largely
amiable one at that.
It was just last Wednesday that the
establishment press appeared to be in an all-out war with the White House. When President Trump used a press
conference to attack what he called fake news coming from some major news
outlets, reporters complained bitterly and launched fiery exchanges with the
commander in chief.
(Although, as
WND reported, the president himself seemed more
amused than aggravated, with Rush Limbaugh remarking, “Folks, he’s enjoying
this like I’ve never seen a president enjoy a press conference. He’s toying
with these people.”)
Trump then followed up with a tweet
on Friday that read: “The FAKE NEWS media (failing @nytimes, @NBCNews, @ABC,
@CBS, @CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!”
Chris Wallace of Fox News took
umbrage with that on his Sunday show, complaining to White House chief of staff
Reince Priebus, “When the president says we’re the enemy of the American
people, it makes it sounds like if you are going against him, you are going
against the country.”
However, as Limbaugh pointed out on
his Monday radio show: “‘The press is the enemy of the people,’ is not what he said.
… He was talking about a subset of the media … He was talking about those
elements of the media that continue to report things that aren’t true.”
And, immediately upon assuming his
duties as White House press secretary a month ago, Sean Spicer’s initial
encounters with the press corps at the daily briefings were so combative, some
in the mainstream media wondered if he would last long in the job, while many
Trump supporters cheered the refusal of the administration’s spokesman, as they
saw it, to kowtow to the mandarins of the Fourth Estate.
How things have changed in those
four weeks.
Tuesday’s was the first daily press
briefing in a while, owing to the president’s travel to Florida and the federal
holiday Monday. Spicer began on a friendly and collegial
note, saying he had missed the press, evoking a ripple of gentle laughter. And that set the tone.
The daily White House briefings
appear to have settled into a groove of a mostly cordial, calm and professional
mutual respect. Reporters and Spicer alike seemed
relaxed and friendly, while always staying on point, pursuing their own agendas
and topics of interest.
There was a sense that
although most of the press and the administration are largely on opposite sides
of the fence, professionally, at least, everyone was in this together. After
all, everyone was crammed into one very, very, very small room – and they were
a captive audience. Just seven rows of seven seats. And packed to the walls
with standing room only.
That doesn’t mean there wasn’t the
occasional flare up of intensity. On a few occasions, Spicer refused to roll
over in the face of certain assumptions embedded into questions. One particularly striking, and
somewhat bizarre, instance occurred as reporter April Ryan of American Urban Radio
Networks asked what the president had gained from his tour that morning of the
National Museum of African American History & Culture.
“And the reason why I’m asking
this,” she added, “is because when he was candidate Trump, he said things like,
you know, ‘We made this country,’ meaning white America, not necessarily
black.” His voice rising, a visibly shocked
Spicer emphatically replied: “I don’t know why you would say that. What do you
mean–?” Ryan insisted: “No, no, no. He said that. I heard him say that.”
Mediate’s Alex
Griswold later reported, “I searched up and down for any evidence that
candidate Trump ever intimated that white America specifically deserved credit
for building America, or that he ever said something like ‘we made this
country’ in a context where ‘we’ obviously referred to white Americans.”
He concluded, “I came up short,”
and, “Given that this would’ve certainly caused an immediate uproar and
would’ve been seized on by the Clinton campaign, I have to conclude that my
memory isn’t failing and it never happened.”
Instead of continuing to take issue
with the apparently fake quote, Spicer simply proceeded to list the ways the
president was deeply moved and overwhelmed at what he saw at the museum,
particularly the exhibit on slavery. He said the president found the experience
“very eye-opening and powerful.”
Spicer also relayed how proud and
deeply moved the president was to be at the side of Dr. Ben Carson, the
secretary of Housing and Urban Development, as he saw his own exhibit in the
Smithsonian for the first time.
The very first question of the day
also contained an assumption that Spicer rejected. He was asked if the
president regretted calling the press the “enemy of the people.”
Echoing what Limbaugh had said
previously, Spicer pointed out that the president was referring only to
“certain outlets” in the media and their tendencies to “not be completely
accurate and fair in reporting what’s going on.”
Spicer also shot down an assertion
made by HBO’s Bill Maher, and repeated by a reporter, that claimed the
president was briefed on North Korea in front of dinner guests at his Mar a
Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.
An incredulous Spicer said just
because the president was photographed looking at a piece of paper at the
dinner table does not mean it was a briefing paper. It wasn’t, he said. He
chided a “disbelieving” press for jumping to such rash conclusions.
The press secretary said Trump had
been briefed on North Korea, both before and after dinner. But certainly not
during dinner. And, of course, not in front of guests.
The biggest news of the day
concerned memos issued by Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly to implement
changes in border enforcement ordered by Trump. They included a directive to
hire 10,000 Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, agents and 5,000
Border Patrol agents.
The memos put an end to the practice
of “catch and release” by law enforcement and specify categories of illegal
immigrants targeted for deportation.
The memos also authorized the
beginning of work to complete a U.S.-Mexico border wall. Asked to further
explain the memos, the main point Spicer returned to again and again was that
the objective was to carry out the laws already on the books.
The orders were needed, he said, to
provide clarification as to what the priorities were for ICE and Border Patrol
officers, and what they should actually do, because there was so much confusion
created by the Obama administration’s actions carving out exemptions for
certain classes of illegal immigrants. Spicer said agents had had their hands
tied with so many rules issued by the Obama administration.
The priority, he stressed
repeatedly, was to catch and deport those illegal immigrants who pose a threat
to public safety and those who have committed crimes in addition to entering
the country unlawfully. The new order “lays out the exact procedures for that
subset group of people. That’s it,” he said.
A reporter asked if that meant all
others in the country illegally should not worry. “No,” replied Spicer. “It
means we are focusing our resources on our priority.” He added, “Remember,
there is no right to be in this country illegally.”
However, when asked what would
become of the millions of illegal immigrants in the country without criminal
records, Spicer noted the president has said before he has “a big heart and
understands their plight.” Spicer said the administration will consider their
situation later as priorities evolve.
He also promised a new executive
order was coming soon that will institute a travel ban from seven countries
rife with terrorism. Spicer predicted it will stand because the Justice Department
has been tailoring the new order to make sure it will fit what the courts
require and recognizes their concerns.
At the same time, the administration
will not rescind the original executive order instituting a travel ban, now
tied up in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Spicer was confident that
original order ultimately will be upheld by the courts and the administration
will prevail.
When asked if Trump would send any
terrorists captured overseas to the prison in Guantanamo Bay, Spicer said the president
will continue to refuse to say what he will or will not do in that regard. But
he reiterated that Trump has said the prison is important.
Spicer was asked if newly appointed
national security adviser Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster will be more “hawkish”
toward Russia. The press secretary replied the new adviser will be “great,” but
it is the president who will decide the course of relations with Russia.
Spicer said the administration will
try to strike a deal with Russia on common grounds of interest, such as
expanding the two nations’ economies and fighting ISIS, but he suggested it
won’t be easy because others have tried before and failed.
Spicer said the president found the
wave of bomb threats against Jewish community centers “horrible and painful.” A reporter noted a statement from
the Anne Frank Center had accused the administration of xenophobia, and the
reporter asked why the president didn’t condemn anti-Semitism in even stronger
terms.
Spicer said the president has said
time and again that the U.S. must root out such prejudice and evil. And he
said Trump will continue to speak out against anti-Semitism, but that it
will be his actions that will ultimately convince people of his beliefs and
commitment to eliminating that evil.
An exasperated Spicer also noted
that now matter how many times the president condemns prejudice, for some,
“it is never good enough.”
http://www.wnd.com/2017/02/sudden-shift-in-major-medias-war-on-trump/
Comments
The liberal media has been part
of liberal seditionists who crafted political correctness around European
socialist secular humanist “values” for decades. They are the enemy within. They now have an
army of liberal robots in the streets spewing their nonsense, so they can
afford to back off in the Whitehouse press corps.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea
Party Leader
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